The Sanctuary at Kiawah lives up to its name, with a sense of seclusion and serenity in luxurious beachfront surroundings. See our full review.
claudia mancino, #storie, #spiriti, senza rumore. libro, #viaggio, #amicizia, #neve
Read our kid-friendly hotel review of Schloss Elmau. Get best pricing for luxury hotels in Bavaria with Ciao Bambino today!
Kid and family-friendly review of Castello di Casole in Tuscany. Our family travel experts can help book a fantastic luxury family vacation to Italy.
The JW Marriott Venice Resort & Spa sits on a private island in Venice with olive groves, lush gardens and knockout pools. Read our full review for families
Der Stil ist zeitlos, die Materialien sind langlebig und die Details werden mit Sorgfalt gefertigt. Das Bett lässt sich dem Wachstum des Kindes entsprechend ausziehen. Ein Platz für viele schöne Träume – und für viele Generationen.
Ontsnap naar de wildernis met de Safari Retreat fotobehang. Dit meesterwerk wordt op maat gemaakt volgens jouw exacte specificaties, zodat je verzekerd bent van een unieke toevoeging aan je ruimte. Of het nu de kamer van je kind is of het hart van je huis, deze fotobehang brengt de schoonheid en het avontuur van de safari naar je muren. Met levendige kleuren en ingewikkelde details is het onmogelijk om niet gefascineerd te raken door de levensechte dieren en weelderige landschappen. Laat je verbeelding de vrije loop en ga op een visuele reis telkens als je de kamer binnenkomt. Maak je klaar om de roep van de wildernis te horen en de sensatie van de safari te voelen met deze exclusieve fotobehang die elke ruimte in een waar toevluchtsoord zal veranderen.
The seclusion of Careyes, Mexico has made it popular with the jet set, but families are frequent guests. Read why we love Careyes with kids.
Have your kids ever asked you why it rains? Making a rain cloud in a jar is a great way to teach them about the weather system and how ...
Features EcoSystem™ 600D Fabric made from 100% recycled post-consumer water bottles Tonal stripe EcoSystem™ Liner made from 100% recycled post-consumer water bottles Padded and fleece lined floating sleeve fits a 15"/16" laptop Easy U-pull drawcord closure Carry comfortably with adjustable EVA-padded shoulder straps Compatible with a sternum strap for added support Magnet fastened straps with metal pin buckles Back entry zipper offers easy access Dual water bottle pockets expand to fit different sizes Front storage sleeve Put Yourself Out There™ internal label Internal Herschel Supply stripe DNA tab
Ontdek de Kuko Wieg Prisca, een elegante en praktische wieg met matras inbegrepen van het merk Charlie Crane . Geniet van optimaal comfort voor je baby dankzij het meegeleverde kwaliteitsmatras. Ideaal voor de eerste maanden van baby's en gemakkelijk te vervoeren, het is een verstandige keuze voor ouders die zich zorgen maken over het welzijn van hun kind. Te gebruiken vanaf de geboorte totdat het kind zelfstandig kan zitten, staan of kruipen Afmetingen gemonteerde wieg: 73 x 43 x H28 cm Voldoet aan de Europese norm EN 1466:2014 Stevig, honingraatvormig en ademend schuim Matras inbegrepen – Hoeslaken niet inbegrepen Afneembare en machinewasbare stof Ontwerp: Gaspard Tiné-Bérès voor Charlie Crane Gedeponeerd model Hoes: stof van 100% biologisch katoen Vulling: 100% polyetherschuim Matras: 100% katoen en 100% polyetherschuimvulling, bedbodem van polypropyleen De Kuko wieg kan alleen of samen met de wieg worden gebruikt Kuko wiegsteun - apart verkocht Certipur Schuim Mozes.Hoes van 100% biologisch katoen. Onderhoud: Wassen op 30° delicaat Maximaal centrifugeren 800 tpm Niet in de droger Bekijk alles Charlie Crane Paris Bekijk alle wiegjes
Our visit to Schloss Elmau in Bavaria was the best combination of family fun and vacation relaxation we have found to date.
With views of the Grand Canal, Hotel Londra Palace makes for a restful escape from the Venice crowds. Read our full review for families.
Le feste di Natale sono la scusa migliore per trascorrere più tempo in famiglia e provare a decorare le nostre case con il fai da te, tenendo impegnati i bambini nei lunghi e freddi pomeriggi che precedono la magica giornata. Le decorazioni di Natale possono essere realizzate con tantissimi materiali diversi: plastica, feltro, panno, legno, carta. Con un buon esercizio di fantasia ogni materiale che abbiamo in casa può infatti essere riciclato per gli addobbi di Natale. Tra i materiali più utilizzati c'è la tela di juta o rafia, utilizzata spesso come imballaggio dei prodotti agricoli. Invece di gettare il sacchetto delle patate appena svuotato, tenetelo da parte: lo potrete riutilizzare in un pomeriggio di libertà da impegni. Come? Realizzando delle magnifiche decorazioni per il vostro Natale! Scopriamo insieme 10 idee strepitose.
Basic skills practice with this dinosaur printables packet! Free worksheets packet for preschool children featuring coloring, cutting, pre-writing, and more
This DIY Treasure Chest for Toddlers is made using recycled household materials! And the pieces are large enough they don't pose a choking hazard!
Water absorption makes for an easy water experiment for kids! Investigate what absorbs water with simple materials found around the house!
If pumpkin spice lattes, muffins, and ice cream aren’t enough, now there is Pumpkin Spice Yoga for Kids! I love using mini-pumpkins as a fun prop for kid’s yoga. They are an inexpensive and natural way to spice up (sorry, couldn't resist!) your class. Look for ones that have short stems. Here’s
Who hasn't ever dreamed of living in a tree house when they were a kid?Well, this 312 sq ft home in the woods may be your dream coming true!
Free printable preschool letter worksheets for learning the alphabet. You'll find hundreds of free preschool printables for students to learn all about the alphabet A-Z. Print our free alphabet tracing worksheets, coloring pages, handwriting pages, letter recognition sheets, color by number and more!
I stopped taking math courses after my sophomore year in college, so I'm aware that there is a lot about math I don't know, and even more that I don't know I don't know. By the time I hit those final years of formal math education, my main strategy was to sit next to the prettiest girl in class, under the assumption that I'd need help from my peers to survive, and being a hormonally driven teen, figured I'd have the most fun with an attractive study mate. That's how I met my friend Renae, the girl who got me through calculus, and who has since made a career serving as chief financial officer for several highly profitably enterprises. Renae was, in fact, the best math teacher I'd had since elementary school because she was smart, helpful, and I had fun being with her. Out of sheer stubbornness, I continued to register for math courses that I didn't need for my degree: refusing to be defeated by the cliche, "Math is hard." That said, I saw the beginning of the end coming when I rearranged my entire schedule to follow Renae into the "Calculus for Business Majors" course series, rather than stick with the straight-ahead, pure mathematics of regular calculus, where a typical day in the classroom involved a TA with a poor command of English, solving problems on the blackboard. I might not have been willing to admit that math was hard, but that action of following Renae convinced me that math without smart, pretty girls, was no fun. I later tried a discrete mathematics course on my own. It hurt my head and I dropped the course after 3 mind-numbing sessions. I can't speak for college level math education, but as a preschool teacher, I know that there is no reason that math shouldn't be fun, even without smart, pretty girls helping you. All it is, after all, is a process of learning increasingly complex and wonderful ways to do things that give us great pleasure as human animals: patterning, classifying, and sorting. At bottom, when we boil it down, that's the entirety of math -- patterning, classifying, and sorting -- which is ultimately the foundation of analytical thinking. We enter the world as mathematicians, exploring all the ways we can order our world, craving an understanding of the logic of things. We repeat our mathematical inquiries over and over. This boy spent 10 minutes repeating the pattern of putting a small, pink detergent bottle lid into the mailbox, closing the mailbox, opening it, removing the pink lid, then putting it back inside, repeating the pattern over and over. Tom Hunter wrote a brilliant, simple song, which he later turned into a children's book, entitled Build It Up and Knock It Down: Build it up And knock it down And build it up again. Knock it down And build it up And knock it down again. Subsequent verses echo the same circular, two-step pattern, so familiar to the natural play of young children: Turn it on and turn it off and turn it on again. Pick it up and put it down and pick it up again. Put it in and take it out and put it in again . . . It might drive us crazy as adults, it might seem to us like they're stuck, but really the children are simply testing their formula, practicing it until it's second nature: A-B-A-B-A-B . . . Young children, in the course of their play, go on to discover increasingly complex patterns all around them. And then use those discoveries to do important things like take turns in a board game . . . Or engage in a meaningful process of many steps. Play itself is impossible without the ability to think logically. That's why we're driven to mathematical play. These are things we really must know in order to satisfy our curiosities. There is no greater motivator than the prospect of discovery. They're all ponies -- it's a discovery! Let's put them together, and to make sure we understand this, let's put blocks around them. And even within this classification of ponies, it gets more complex as we notice that some of them have "warm" manes and tails, while others have "cool" manes and tails. It's another discovery! Let's group them within their group, two at this end and three at the other. When we explore a shape . . . . . . or put blocks in a box . . . . . . or only the cars . . . . . . when we line things up . . . . . . or create one-to-one correspondence . . . . . . we are mathematicians discovering for ourselves the classifications and patterns of the world, and using them for our own pleasure be it great beauty, great truth, or just horsing around with friends. Math is not hard, but at some point, for many of us, it stops being about discovery, which makes it no fun. The opposite of play isn't work, it's rote. ~Edward Hallowell I don't know if we, as adults, need to know more math than we already know. Maybe higher math turns us off, not because its hard, but because its boring to those of us with a particular learning style. Maybe this kind of complex patterning, classifying, and sorting can really only live on paper and doesn't have a place in the rest of the world where we can use all of our intelligences to play with it. Maybe at that level it's just a playground for a certain type of human brain. And that would be okay with me, although I hope I'm wrong. But I don't know. These are undoubtedly the musings of an idiot because of all the things I admittedly don't know I don't know. Maybe we already typically know enough math to live our gratifying lives. And still I'm certain that the number of exciting mathematical discoveries that I could potentially make is a number approaching infinity. I put a lot of time and effort into this blog. 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