Prior Lake Daycare Center | Infant Daycare | Little Saints Early Childhood Center
Early Childhood Center
Little Saints ECC, a ministry of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, offers a safe, loving Christian environment for children ages 6 weeks to school age in a center that is dedicated to the smallest we serve.
What we do
Our Christian early childhood center is inviting and stimulating. The atmosphere is loving supportive and accepting. We encourage independence, problem solving with peers, self help skills, working together to solve problems and being a valuable part of a group. Each day is viewed as an opportunity for ongoing learning and discovery with activities to enhance individual growth; physically, mentally and spiritually.
Little Saints is a full service Christian Learning Center Licensed by the state of Minnesota
We’re #1
Little Saint’s Early Childhood Center won Southwest Newspapers Readers’ Faves & Raves for Favorite Child Care Center!
Preschool & Pre-K
We offer:
Full & Part-time Childcare
Flexible Schedules
Pre-School Core Knowledge Curriculum
Experienced Staff
Indoor & Outdoor Play
Hot Lunch Program
Security Entrance
Registration forms are found on the Enrollment page.
Want to help?
Little Saints is always looking for caring people who are interested in being aides or substitutes. If you are interested please contact us.
Support our Church & School
Please consider supporting our community by making donations via the programs below. We thank you for your support!
MAKE A SECURE DONATION →
“Our children have gone to St. Paul’s since kindergarten. We love the teaching staff and the loving, creative, Christian environment that they learn in every day. We also really enjoy the small class sizes for any extra attention that may be needed. Our kids have grown in their faith and their learning and it’s been a wonderful experience for us. St. Paul’s has been a great ‘school’ home for us since the start. ”
— Abby, parent
“My kids are mentally, spiritually and physically fulfilled. They are excited about school every day!”
— Molly, parent
“Knowing that my children are in a loving Christian environment makes for a family feel to the school. Parent and family participation is excellent.”
— Kari, parent
“SPLS has offered our children a solid foundation to their educational journey.”
— Brittany, parent
Follow St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center on Facebook
St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center
Cathedral Hill Montessori School – Saint Paul, MN
A Montessori school for children ages 16 months to 6 years
SCHEDULE A TOUR →
Why Cathedral Hill Montessori School?
We Individualize Learning.
We honor your child’s individuality and focus on curiosity, independence, compassion, collaboration, and critical thinking, preparing him or her to take on the future with confidence, propelled by the gift of self knowledge and a passion for learning.
We’re Backed by Research.
Montessori education has been successfully serving children around the world for over a century for good reason. Our successful methods are consistently backed by current research in neurology and human development.
We’re a Community.
Our school is a community for more than just the children. We view our relationship with you as a partnership, working together for the benefit of your child
–
because children thrive when home and school work in harmony.
Welcome to CHMS
Cathedral Hill Montessori is a family-founded nonprofit private school providing a year-round authentic Montessori education to children from infancy through six years of age. We offer half-day and full-day Montessori education for children 16 months to 6 years, all-day kindergarten, and the option of extended childcare. Our school serves families in St. Paul, Minnesota and the surrounding area.
We are proud to announce that we are 4-Star rated by Parent Aware and accept CCAP from Ramsey County. We also offer additional tuition aid to qualifying families.
Our Programs
Journey to Independence
16 – 36 months
Some refer to this developmental period as “The Terrible Twos.” We disagree; toddlers are terrific. We love everything about them – their energy, determination and curiosity – and purposefully created a very special place for your toddler to learn.
Learn more
A Love for Learning
3 – 6 years
The Children’s House program is truly a gift to your child. Designed for children between the ages of 3 to 6 years, it is an opportunity to nurture his individual development within the context of a group setting. The result? Self-confidence, joy and a lifelong love-for-learning.
Learn more
Learning How to Think
5 years – 6 years
Our Montessori kindergarten takes place in the Children’s House in two distinct cycles: the morning work cycle in a mixed-age classroom, and the afternoon work cycle for children between the ages of 5-6. By the end of their Montessori kindergarten experience children have figured out how they learn best, are able to self-correct, and are not afraid of making mistakes because they know it is a natural part of the learning process.
Learn more
Option offers the flexibility of an All Day Program with extended hours for both toddlers and preschoolers
2.5- 6 years
The All Day Children’s House is a unique model that supports children (ages 2.5-6) in an authentic Montessori environment. It is a “home away from home” providing a consistent, engaging and inspiring place for children to live out their day, while extending the Montessori learning experience.
Learn More
Our mission is to provide a safe, beautiful and authentic Montessori learning environment; to serve an inclusive community of multicultural and economically diverse families; and to support children in becoming confident, independent, and compassionate members of society.
How to Apply
1
Schedule a Tour
View our classrooms and learn more about Montessori education.
2
Submit an Application
After your tour you’re invited to apply for your child.
3
Join the Community!
Meet other new parents and connect with us on social media to get acquainted with our community.
Parent Reviews
quotes2Artboard 2
“Our son, Auggie, was lucky to be one of CHMS’s first students when it opened its doors with welcoming arms in 2011. He progressed from the Toddler Community into Children’s House over the course of 4 years where he was gifted a beautiful, calm, organized & nurturing space which cultivated a confident, independent and respectful individual. The authentic Montessori experience was one that helped our son develop his love for learning and our world.
He established valuable lifelong friendships and learned several life skills that continue to serve him well today. We will forever be grateful to CHMS, thank you!”
Melissa, a former parent
Button
Wow! What a school! We are so thankful to have found and enrolled our 2 year old at such a top-notch, quality Montessori program. When I pick my son up he is literally beaming. The guides in our son’s class are loving, thoughtful, and exceptional with children. We are very lucky. We love CHMS.
Becky, Toddler Community parent
Button
Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”: Main page
Welcome!
We are glad to welcome you on the official website of MBDOU-Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”. The site is addressed to everyone who is interested in knowing how our educational organization lives.
Announcements
Water safety
Dear parents, during the summer holidays it is necessary to observe safety on the water, watch the children.
Day of Russia
Activities dedicated to the holiday took place in the kindergarten. Russia Day is an excellent opportunity to tell children once again about the history of our vast and most beautiful multinational country in the world, about the diversity of folk traditions.
3rd place of the regional stage of the competition “Teacher-defectologist of Russia-2023”
Teacher – speech therapist Patrina Yulia Viktorovna became the winner of the regional stage of the VI All-Russian Competition of professional skills “Teacher-defectologist of Russia – 2023”
Russian Language Day
In children garden events dedicated to the Russian language were held. Projects “Poetic action”, “Poetic living room” and others.
Children’s Day
Congratulations to the children on the holiday of childhood and the first day of summer! On this festive day, there were a lot of gifts and events for our beloved children, everyone was satisfied.
Graduation
Congratulations to the children on their first graduation from the kindergarten “Medvezhonok”.
We wish parents and children a good rest! With joy and desire to prepare for 1st grade!
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The Queen’s Jubilee began with a service at St. Paul’s Cathedral
”Context”: it will help you understand the events.
A thanksgiving service dedicated to the 90th birthday of Queen Elizabeth II was served at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London.
Image copyright AFP
Image caption
Elizabeth II appeared in the cathedral wearing a lemon yellow dress, summer coat and hat
95th birthday, Duke and Duchess of Cornwall, Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry.
The author of the photo, AP
Photo caption,
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby led the service.
“We thank Her Majesty, as well as Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, and the entire royal family for mutual love and support, for serving the country and the Commonwealth of Nations,” Ison said.
Photo copyright, AP
Photo caption,
More than 2,000 guests attended the thanksgiving service at St. Paul’s Cathedral
The service was led by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who noted that the reign of Elizabeth II went through wars and hardships, turmoil and change.
Prime Minister David Cameron recited a passage from the Bible, and renowned TV presenter David Attenborough read a poetic passage about the passage of time written by Michael Bond, author of a book about Paddington Bear.
Photo copyright, PA
Photo caption,
Thousands of enthusiastic subjects awaited the queen at the cathedral
Thanksgiving service at St. Paul’s Cathedral in Britain
Three-day official celebrations began on the occasion of the royal jubilee.
Photo copyright, AP
Photo caption,
The ceremony was honored by the presence of the heir to the throne, Prince Charles, wife
The Queen
turned 90 on April 21, however, according to a tradition spanning a quarter of a millennium,
The birthday of the British monarch is celebrated twice.
Image copyright Reuters
Image caption,
Prince William and his wife and Prince Harry will also appear on Sunday at a grand street celebration
Elizabeth II arrived at the cathedral to much fanfare and cheers from her subjects, dressed in a lemon yellow dress, summer coat and hat by designer Angela Kelly.
More than 2,000 guests were reported to attend the thanksgiving service at St. Paul’s Cathedral, including well-known politicians, public and religious figures, and the governors general of Commonwealth countries.
Photo copyright, PA
Photo caption,
More than 50 members of the royal family attended the service
Politicians, among others, were spotted
Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn
the new mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, the first minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, and several cabinet ministers.
Image copyright, AP
Image caption,
David Attenborough, himself recently celebrating his 90th birthday, read a passage of poetry written by Michael Bond about the passage of time
At the end of the service, the Queen hosted a luncheon for her Governors General at Buckingham Palace.
The traditional parade in honor of the monarch’s birthday will take place in central London on Saturday, after which aircraft of the Royal Air Force will fly over Buckingham Palace.
Image copyright, AFP
Image caption,
The service was attended by many well-known politicians, including the Prime Minister and the Treasury Secretary
On Sunday, Queen Elizabeth II will host a street party near Buckingham Palace for around 10,000 invited activists from 600 different charities and public organizations working under the patronage of the Queen.
Prior Lake Daycare Center | Infant Daycare | Little Saints Early Childhood Center
Early Childhood Center
Little Saints ECC, a ministry of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, offers a safe, loving Christian environment for children ages 6 weeks to school age in a center that is dedicated to the smallest we serve.
What we do
Our Christian early childhood center is inviting and stimulating. The atmosphere is loving supportive and accepting. We encourage independence, problem solving with peers, self help skills, working together to solve problems and being a valuable part of a group. Each day is viewed as an opportunity for ongoing learning and discovery with activities to enhance individual growth; physically, mentally and spiritually.
Little Saints is a full service Christian Learning Center Licensed by the state of Minnesota
We’re #1
Little Saint’s Early Childhood Center won Southwest Newspapers Readers’ Faves & Raves for Favorite Child Care Center!
Preschool & Pre-K
We offer:
Full & Part-time Childcare
Flexible Schedules
Pre-School Core Knowledge Curriculum
Experienced Staff
Indoor & Outdoor Play
Hot Lunch Program
Security Entrance
Registration forms are found on the Enrollment page.
Want to help?
Little Saints is always looking for caring people who are interested in being aides or substitutes. If you are interested please contact us.
Support our Church & School
Please consider supporting our community by making donations via the programs below. We thank you for your support!
MAKE A SECURE DONATION →
“Our children have gone to St. Paul’s since kindergarten. We love the teaching staff and the loving, creative, Christian environment that they learn in every day. We also really enjoy the small class sizes for any extra attention that may be needed. Our kids have grown in their faith and their learning and it’s been a wonderful experience for us. St. Paul’s has been a great ‘school’ home for us since the start. ”
— Abby, parent
“My kids are mentally, spiritually and physically fulfilled. They are excited about school every day!”
— Molly, parent
“Knowing that my children are in a loving Christian environment makes for a family feel to the school. Parent and family participation is excellent.”
— Kari, parent
“SPLS has offered our children a solid foundation to their educational journey.”
— Brittany, parent
Follow St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center on Facebook
St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center
Cathedral Hill Montessori School – Saint Paul, MN
A Montessori school for children ages 16 months to 6 years
SCHEDULE A TOUR →
Why Cathedral Hill Montessori School?
We Individualize Learning.
We honor your child’s individuality and focus on curiosity, independence, compassion, collaboration, and critical thinking, preparing him or her to take on the future with confidence, propelled by the gift of self knowledge and a passion for learning.
We’re Backed by Research.
Montessori education has been successfully serving children around the world for over a century for good reason. Our successful methods are consistently backed by current research in neurology and human development.
We’re a Community.
Our school is a community for more than just the children. We view our relationship with you as a partnership, working together for the benefit of your child
–
because children thrive when home and school work in harmony.
Welcome to CHMS
Cathedral Hill Montessori is a family-founded nonprofit private school providing a year-round authentic Montessori education to children from infancy through six years of age. We offer half-day and full-day Montessori education for children 16 months to 6 years, all-day kindergarten, and the option of extended childcare. Our school serves families in St. Paul, Minnesota and the surrounding area.
We are proud to announce that we are 4-Star rated by Parent Aware and accept CCAP from Ramsey County. We also offer additional tuition aid to qualifying families.
Our Programs
Journey to Independence
16 – 36 months
Some refer to this developmental period as “The Terrible Twos.” We disagree; toddlers are terrific. We love everything about them – their energy, determination and curiosity – and purposefully created a very special place for your toddler to learn.
Learn more
A Love for Learning
3 – 6 years
The Children’s House program is truly a gift to your child. Designed for children between the ages of 3 to 6 years, it is an opportunity to nurture his individual development within the context of a group setting. The result? Self-confidence, joy and a lifelong love-for-learning.
Learn more
Learning How to Think
5 years – 6 years
Our Montessori kindergarten takes place in the Children’s House in two distinct cycles: the morning work cycle in a mixed-age classroom, and the afternoon work cycle for children between the ages of 5-6. By the end of their Montessori kindergarten experience children have figured out how they learn best, are able to self-correct, and are not afraid of making mistakes because they know it is a natural part of the learning process.
Learn more
Option offers the flexibility of an All Day Program with extended hours for both toddlers and preschoolers
2.5- 6 years
The All Day Children’s House is a unique model that supports children (ages 2.5-6) in an authentic Montessori environment. It is a “home away from home” providing a consistent, engaging and inspiring place for children to live out their day, while extending the Montessori learning experience.
Learn More
Our mission is to provide a safe, beautiful and authentic Montessori learning environment; to serve an inclusive community of multicultural and economically diverse families; and to support children in becoming confident, independent, and compassionate members of society.
How to Apply
1
Schedule a Tour
View our classrooms and learn more about Montessori education.
2
Submit an Application
After your tour you’re invited to apply for your child.
3
Join the Community!
Meet other new parents and connect with us on social media to get acquainted with our community.
Parent Reviews
quotes2Artboard 2
“Our son, Auggie, was lucky to be one of CHMS’s first students when it opened its doors with welcoming arms in 2011. He progressed from the Toddler Community into Children’s House over the course of 4 years where he was gifted a beautiful, calm, organized & nurturing space which cultivated a confident, independent and respectful individual. The authentic Montessori experience was one that helped our son develop his love for learning and our world.
He established valuable lifelong friendships and learned several life skills that continue to serve him well today. We will forever be grateful to CHMS, thank you!”
Melissa, a former parent
Button
Wow! What a school! We are so thankful to have found and enrolled our 2 year old at such a top-notch, quality Montessori program. When I pick my son up he is literally beaming. The guides in our son’s class are loving, thoughtful, and exceptional with children. We are very lucky. We love CHMS.
Becky, Toddler Community parent
Button
Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”: Main page
Welcome!
We are glad to welcome you on the official website of MBDOU-Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”. The site is addressed to everyone who is interested in knowing how our educational organization lives.
Announcements
Water safety
Dear parents, during the summer holidays it is necessary to observe safety on the water, watch the children.
Day of Russia
Activities dedicated to the holiday took place in the kindergarten. Russia Day is an excellent opportunity to tell children once again about the history of our vast and most beautiful multinational country in the world, about the diversity of folk traditions.
3rd place of the regional stage of the competition “Teacher-defectologist of Russia-2023”
Teacher – speech therapist Patrina Yulia Viktorovna became the winner of the regional stage of the VI All-Russian Competition of professional skills “Teacher-defectologist of Russia – 2023”
Russian Language Day
In children garden events dedicated to the Russian language were held. Projects “Poetic action”, “Poetic living room” and others.
Children’s Day
Congratulations to the children on the holiday of childhood and the first day of summer! On this festive day, there were a lot of gifts and events for our beloved children, everyone was satisfied.
Graduation
Congratulations to the children on their first graduation from the kindergarten “Medvezhonok”.
We wish parents and children a good rest! With joy and desire to prepare for 1st grade!
We use cookies to give you the best experience on our website,
as well as for Yandex Metrika web analytics services.
You can disable cookies in your browser settings.
By clicking I AGREE, you acknowledge that you are aware of the use of cookies on our website.
AGREE
This site uses the Yandex Metrika web analytics service provided by YANDEX LLC, 119021, Russia, Moscow, st. L. Tolstoy, 16 (hereinafter – Yandex).
The Yandex Metrica service uses “cookie” technology – small text files placed on users’ computers in order to analyze their user activity.
The information collected by the cookie cannot identify you but may help us improve our site.
Information about your use of this site, collected using cookies, will be transmitted to Yandex and stored on Yandex’s server in the EU and the Russian Federation.
Yandex will process this information to evaluate your use of the site, compile reports for us on our site activity, and provide other services.
Yandex processes this information in the manner prescribed in the terms of use of the Yandex Metrica service.
You may refuse the use of cookies by selecting the appropriate settings on your browser. You can also use the Yandex Metrica Blocker. However, this may affect the operation of some functions of the site.
By using this site, you agree to the processing of data about you by Yandex in the manner and for the purposes specified above.
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important in St.
July 10, 2023
PHOTO Pixabay
To confuse debtors?
Residents of the Frunzensky and Vyborgsky districts from July will receive uniform receipts for rent from the EIRC. We are talking about houses under the management of housing services. The usual “pink” accounts of the VTsKP will no longer be in circulation.
The debts in the “pink” receipt were listed in the additional information section. The EIRC will include debts in the amounts of current payments, broken down by lines for different services or resources. If there is a debt for water, it will become an element of the corresponding payment without specifying what is the main part of it and what is the debt part.
The hotline for consumers operates at a single number 679‑22‑22. You can ask questions on this number. You can clarify the incomprehensible at any client office of the EIRTs (former points of Petroelectrosbyt).
From July, the payment document of the EIRC will also reflect a single scheme for calculating penalties for all service providers. The amount of penalties will also be included in the total payment – without explaining what its size is.
Catch the Black Night Express
An unusual branded train “Night Express” will start running between Moscow and St. Petersburg in July. The train is equipped with new black carriages with a map of the starry sky – compartment and SV, manufactured at the Tver Carriage Works.
The train will depart from Moscow daily at 22.20 with a stop in Tver and arrive in the northern capital at 5.39. From St. Petersburg – except for Monday and Thursday – will leave at 1.05 (with stops at Bologoye and Tver), arrive in the capital at 9.47. On Mondays and Thursdays, the train will proceed from St. Petersburg without stops.
Since 2006, the Tverskoy Express company has been serving the long-distance train No. 19/20 Megapolis, which runs between St. Petersburg and Moscow. He leaves the capital at 00.20 and arrives in the city on the Neva at 8.53, stopping in Tver and Chudovo. From St. Petersburg leaves at 22.50 to arrive in Moscow at 7.07.
Road restrictions
The State Administrative and Technical Inspectorate (GATI) informs citizens about new restrictions that will come into force on July 10, 2023.
So, from July 10 to July 13, traffic is limited along Bolshaya Porokhovskaya Street from Sredneokhtinsky Prospekt to Metallistov Avenue and for a day (from 8 am on July 10) travel at the intersection of Stachek Avenue and Trefoleva Street is complicated (with the closure of the through passage along Trefoleva Street) . In addition, the work on laying the electrical cable from July 10 to July 19 will “slow down” transport on Entuziastov Avenue near the house 49, and in the Kurortny district, the construction of a water supply system in the village of Repino from July 10 to November 4 will restrict traffic along the Primorsky highway from Lermontovsky Prospekt to Novoderevenskaya Street . In addition, due to the reconstruction of the gas pipeline in Strelna, from July 10 to July 13, traffic will be closed near house number 2 on Tarkhovskaya street, and in the Primorsky district, the reconstruction of the traffic light will complicate it near house number 4 (building 1) on Marshal Novikov street.
Big School for Little Karlin
In the village of Maloye Karlino, Lomonosovsky District, final preparations are underway for the opening of two educational institutions – a kindergarten for 240 children and a school for 450 children.
The current school has two shifts. The new school building will allow all children to study in one shift. The new school will have two sports halls with a total area of more than 700 square meters. meters, an assembly hall for 320 seats, workshops for boys and girls, a modern library and an information center, and a football field with three running tracks, playgrounds for sports and outdoor games and long jumps on the school grounds.
The area of the kindergarten is more than 4 thousand square meters. meters. The institution has rooms for classes, music and sports halls, sports, play and walking areas with shady canopies and rubber flooring are equipped in the courtyard. The opening of the new kindergarten will make it possible to fully provide all children of Maly Karlin preschool age with places in the kindergarten.
Young Artists Competition
Until July 24, a competition for young artists is being held to participate in the 4th blazar contemporary art fair, which is scheduled for September 20-24 at the Museum of Moscow. The competition is open to artists under the age of 35, working in various fields of art from painting to performance, from any city and country in the world. Based on the results of reviewing applications, the expert council will select 60 authors, the results of the competition will be announced on August 4.
To the beach with a sketchbook
The Museum-Apartment of Isaac Brodsky (Arts Square, 3) hosts the exhibition “I want to go to the sea …”, presenting 30 little-known studies and sketches by famous Russian painters from the funds of the Museum of the Academy of Arts. They are united by the theme of the summer seascape. Among them are “The Boy on the Beach” by Valentin Serov, a series of sketches with views of Alupka by Pavel Schillingovsky, “Old Boats” by Isaac Brodsky. In the center of the exhibition – the work of Yevsey Moiseenko 191950s – 1970s: “Fisherman’s longboat”, “Gurzuf. Street”, “By the Sea” and others, which represent bright impressionistic works of the famous Leningrad artist. The exhibition is open until September 3rd.
How Plan Staff
Failed
On July 11, the Children’s Library of the History and Culture of St. Petersburg (Marata St., 72) will host a presentation of the book by local historian Konstantin Karpov “The Unknown Oranienbaum Bridgehead”. The publication tells about the hostilities that took place on the bridgehead – the most important sector of the defense of Leningrad. According to Konstantin Karpov, while working on the book “The Village of Lebyazhye” he had to make sure once again that it was necessary to bring some clarity to the information about the legendary events on the Oranienbaum Primorsky patch. The author tells in detail how Hitler’s “Staff” plan to destroy the bridgehead failed, about how its defenders did not allow the Nazis to break through to the Gulf of Finland.
Prior Lake Daycare Center | Infant Daycare | Little Saints Early Childhood Center
Early Childhood Center
Little Saints ECC, a ministry of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, offers a safe, loving Christian environment for children ages 6 weeks to school age in a center that is dedicated to the smallest we serve.
What we do
Our Christian early childhood center is inviting and stimulating. The atmosphere is loving supportive and accepting. We encourage independence, problem solving with peers, self help skills, working together to solve problems and being a valuable part of a group. Each day is viewed as an opportunity for ongoing learning and discovery with activities to enhance individual growth; physically, mentally and spiritually.
Little Saints is a full service Christian Learning Center Licensed by the state of Minnesota
We’re #1
Little Saint’s Early Childhood Center won Southwest Newspapers Readers’ Faves & Raves for Favorite Child Care Center!
Preschool & Pre-K
We offer:
Full & Part-time Childcare
Flexible Schedules
Pre-School Core Knowledge Curriculum
Experienced Staff
Indoor & Outdoor Play
Hot Lunch Program
Security Entrance
Registration forms are found on the Enrollment page.
Want to help?
Little Saints is always looking for caring people who are interested in being aides or substitutes. If you are interested please contact us.
Support our Church & School
Please consider supporting our community by making donations via the programs below. We thank you for your support!
MAKE A SECURE DONATION →
“Our children have gone to St. Paul’s since kindergarten. We love the teaching staff and the loving, creative, Christian environment that they learn in every day. We also really enjoy the small class sizes for any extra attention that may be needed. Our kids have grown in their faith and their learning and it’s been a wonderful experience for us. St. Paul’s has been a great ‘school’ home for us since the start. ”
— Abby, parent
“My kids are mentally, spiritually and physically fulfilled. They are excited about school every day!”
— Molly, parent
“Knowing that my children are in a loving Christian environment makes for a family feel to the school. Parent and family participation is excellent.”
— Kari, parent
“SPLS has offered our children a solid foundation to their educational journey.”
— Brittany, parent
Follow St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center on Facebook
St. Paul’s Lutheran Early Childhood Center
Cathedral Hill Montessori School – Saint Paul, MN
A Montessori school for children ages 16 months to 6 years
SCHEDULE A TOUR →
Why Cathedral Hill Montessori School?
We Individualize Learning.
We honor your child’s individuality and focus on curiosity, independence, compassion, collaboration, and critical thinking, preparing him or her to take on the future with confidence, propelled by the gift of self knowledge and a passion for learning.
We’re Backed by Research.
Montessori education has been successfully serving children around the world for over a century for good reason. Our successful methods are consistently backed by current research in neurology and human development.
We’re a Community.
Our school is a community for more than just the children. We view our relationship with you as a partnership, working together for the benefit of your child
–
because children thrive when home and school work in harmony.
Welcome to CHMS
Cathedral Hill Montessori is a family-founded nonprofit private school providing a year-round authentic Montessori education to children from infancy through six years of age. We offer half-day and full-day Montessori education for children 16 months to 6 years, all-day kindergarten, and the option of extended childcare. Our school serves families in St. Paul, Minnesota and the surrounding area.
We are proud to announce that we are 4-Star rated by Parent Aware and accept CCAP from Ramsey County. We also offer additional tuition aid to qualifying families.
Our Programs
Journey to Independence
16 – 36 months
Some refer to this developmental period as “The Terrible Twos.” We disagree; toddlers are terrific. We love everything about them – their energy, determination and curiosity – and purposefully created a very special place for your toddler to learn.
Learn more
A Love for Learning
3 – 6 years
The Children’s House program is truly a gift to your child. Designed for children between the ages of 3 to 6 years, it is an opportunity to nurture his individual development within the context of a group setting. The result? Self-confidence, joy and a lifelong love-for-learning.
Learn more
Learning How to Think
5 years – 6 years
Our Montessori kindergarten takes place in the Children’s House in two distinct cycles: the morning work cycle in a mixed-age classroom, and the afternoon work cycle for children between the ages of 5-6. By the end of their Montessori kindergarten experience children have figured out how they learn best, are able to self-correct, and are not afraid of making mistakes because they know it is a natural part of the learning process.
Learn more
Option offers the flexibility of an All Day Program with extended hours for both toddlers and preschoolers
2.5- 6 years
The All Day Children’s House is a unique model that supports children (ages 2.5-6) in an authentic Montessori environment. It is a “home away from home” providing a consistent, engaging and inspiring place for children to live out their day, while extending the Montessori learning experience.
Learn More
Our mission is to provide a safe, beautiful and authentic Montessori learning environment; to serve an inclusive community of multicultural and economically diverse families; and to support children in becoming confident, independent, and compassionate members of society.
How to Apply
1
Schedule a Tour
View our classrooms and learn more about Montessori education.
2
Submit an Application
After your tour you’re invited to apply for your child.
3
Join the Community!
Meet other new parents and connect with us on social media to get acquainted with our community.
Parent Reviews
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“Our son, Auggie, was lucky to be one of CHMS’s first students when it opened its doors with welcoming arms in 2011. He progressed from the Toddler Community into Children’s House over the course of 4 years where he was gifted a beautiful, calm, organized & nurturing space which cultivated a confident, independent and respectful individual. The authentic Montessori experience was one that helped our son develop his love for learning and our world.
He established valuable lifelong friendships and learned several life skills that continue to serve him well today. We will forever be grateful to CHMS, thank you!”
Melissa, a former parent
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Wow! What a school! We are so thankful to have found and enrolled our 2 year old at such a top-notch, quality Montessori program. When I pick my son up he is literally beaming. The guides in our son’s class are loving, thoughtful, and exceptional with children. We are very lucky. We love CHMS.
Becky, Toddler Community parent
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Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”: Main page
Welcome!
We are glad to welcome you on the official website of MBDOU-Kindergarten “Medvezhonok”. The site is addressed to everyone who is interested in knowing how our educational organization lives.
Announcements
Water safety
Dear parents, during the summer holidays it is necessary to observe safety on the water, watch the children.
Day of Russia
Activities dedicated to the holiday took place in the kindergarten. Russia Day is an excellent opportunity to tell children once again about the history of our vast and most beautiful multinational country in the world, about the diversity of folk traditions.
3rd place of the regional stage of the competition “Teacher-defectologist of Russia-2023”
Teacher – speech therapist Patrina Yulia Viktorovna became the winner of the regional stage of the VI All-Russian Competition of professional skills “Teacher-defectologist of Russia – 2023”
Russian Language Day
In children garden events dedicated to the Russian language were held. Projects “Poetic action”, “Poetic living room” and others.
Children’s Day
Congratulations to the children on the holiday of childhood and the first day of summer! On this festive day, there were a lot of gifts and events for our beloved children, everyone was satisfied.
Graduation
Congratulations to the children on their first graduation from the kindergarten “Medvezhonok”.
We wish parents and children a good rest! With joy and desire to prepare for 1st grade!
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important in St.
July 10, 2023
PHOTO Pixabay
To confuse debtors?
Residents of the Frunzensky and Vyborgsky districts from July will receive uniform receipts for rent from the EIRC. We are talking about houses under the management of housing services. The usual “pink” accounts of the VTsKP will no longer be in circulation.
The debts in the “pink” receipt were listed in the additional information section. The EIRC will include debts in the amounts of current payments, broken down by lines for different services or resources. If there is a debt for water, it will become an element of the corresponding payment without specifying what is the main part of it and what is the debt part.
The hotline for consumers operates at a single number 679‑22‑22. You can ask questions on this number. You can clarify the incomprehensible at any client office of the EIRTs (former points of Petroelectrosbyt).
From July, the payment document of the EIRC will also reflect a single scheme for calculating penalties for all service providers. The amount of penalties will also be included in the total payment – without explaining what its size is.
Catch the Black Night Express
An unusual branded train “Night Express” will start running between Moscow and St. Petersburg in July. The train is equipped with new black carriages with a map of the starry sky – compartment and SV, manufactured at the Tver Carriage Works.
The train will depart from Moscow daily at 22.20 with a stop in Tver and arrive in the northern capital at 5.39. From St. Petersburg – except for Monday and Thursday – will leave at 1.05 (with stops at Bologoye and Tver), arrive in the capital at 9.47. On Mondays and Thursdays, the train will proceed from St. Petersburg without stops.
Since 2006, the Tverskoy Express company has been serving the long-distance train No. 19/20 Megapolis, which runs between St. Petersburg and Moscow. He leaves the capital at 00.20 and arrives in the city on the Neva at 8.53, stopping in Tver and Chudovo. From St. Petersburg leaves at 22.50 to arrive in Moscow at 7.07.
Road restrictions
The State Administrative and Technical Inspectorate (GATI) informs citizens about new restrictions that will come into force on July 10, 2023.
So, from July 10 to July 13, traffic is limited along Bolshaya Porokhovskaya Street from Sredneokhtinsky Prospekt to Metallistov Avenue and for a day (from 8 am on July 10) travel at the intersection of Stachek Avenue and Trefoleva Street is complicated (with the closure of the through passage along Trefoleva Street) . In addition, the work on laying the electrical cable from July 10 to July 19 will “slow down” transport on Entuziastov Avenue near the house 49, and in the Kurortny district, the construction of a water supply system in the village of Repino from July 10 to November 4 will restrict traffic along the Primorsky highway from Lermontovsky Prospekt to Novoderevenskaya Street . In addition, due to the reconstruction of the gas pipeline in Strelna, from July 10 to July 13, traffic will be closed near house number 2 on Tarkhovskaya street, and in the Primorsky district, the reconstruction of the traffic light will complicate it near house number 4 (building 1) on Marshal Novikov street.
Big School for Little Karlin
In the village of Maloye Karlino, Lomonosovsky District, final preparations are underway for the opening of two educational institutions – a kindergarten for 240 children and a school for 450 children.
The current school has two shifts. The new school building will allow all children to study in one shift. The new school will have two sports halls with a total area of more than 700 square meters. meters, an assembly hall for 320 seats, workshops for boys and girls, a modern library and an information center, and a football field with three running tracks, playgrounds for sports and outdoor games and long jumps on the school grounds.
The area of the kindergarten is more than 4 thousand square meters. meters. The institution has rooms for classes, music and sports halls, sports, play and walking areas with shady canopies and rubber flooring are equipped in the courtyard. The opening of the new kindergarten will make it possible to fully provide all children of Maly Karlin preschool age with places in the kindergarten.
Young Artists Competition
Until July 24, a competition for young artists is being held to participate in the 4th blazar contemporary art fair, which is scheduled for September 20-24 at the Museum of Moscow. The competition is open to artists under the age of 35, working in various fields of art from painting to performance, from any city and country in the world. Based on the results of reviewing applications, the expert council will select 60 authors, the results of the competition will be announced on August 4.
To the beach with a sketchbook
The Museum-Apartment of Isaac Brodsky (Arts Square, 3) hosts the exhibition “I want to go to the sea …”, presenting 30 little-known studies and sketches by famous Russian painters from the funds of the Museum of the Academy of Arts. They are united by the theme of the summer seascape. Among them are “The Boy on the Beach” by Valentin Serov, a series of sketches with views of Alupka by Pavel Schillingovsky, “Old Boats” by Isaac Brodsky. In the center of the exhibition – the work of Yevsey Moiseenko 191950s – 1970s: “Fisherman’s longboat”, “Gurzuf. Street”, “By the Sea” and others, which represent bright impressionistic works of the famous Leningrad artist. The exhibition is open until September 3rd.
How Plan Staff
Failed
On July 11, the Children’s Library of the History and Culture of St. Petersburg (Marata St., 72) will host a presentation of the book by local historian Konstantin Karpov “The Unknown Oranienbaum Bridgehead”. The publication tells about the hostilities that took place on the bridgehead – the most important sector of the defense of Leningrad. According to Konstantin Karpov, while working on the book “The Village of Lebyazhye” he had to make sure once again that it was necessary to bring some clarity to the information about the legendary events on the Oranienbaum Primorsky patch. The author tells in detail how Hitler’s “Staff” plan to destroy the bridgehead failed, about how its defenders did not allow the Nazis to break through to the Gulf of Finland.
Beautiful Flowers Daycare Home Preschool – Syracuse, NY 13219
Daycare in Syracuse, NY
NY license #892720, background
checked, curriculum-based, real-time parent updates
Health & safety certified
NY license #892720
Background checked
Offers curriculum
Photo & video updates
Welcome to Beautiful Flowers Daycare! We offer childcare for families looking to provide their child with a loving and safe environment that’s just like home. At our home daycare, our goal is to help children learn important social, emotional, and behavioral skills that prepare them for a successful and happy future. We offer an environment that advances curiosity and inquisitiveness through Developmental Play-based activities. We offer programs for a wide variety of ages from 6 months to 12 years. At our daycare, we provide a culturally diverse learning environment by offering programs in Spanish. We look forward to hearing from you! Please contact us to schedule a tour for you and your family.
I am excited about delivering quality childcare and helping children in achieving important developmental milestones.
With my professional experience and certifications in First Aid and CPR, I’m highly accomplished in teaching both educational and intentional play activities designed to develop children’s’ psychological, emotional, behavioral, and social skills.
6 months to 2 years
5 days/week
6:00am-11:00pm:
$310
2 years to 5 years
5 days/week
6:00am-11:00pm:
$294
5 years to 12 years
5 days/week
6:00am-11:00pm:
$248
Deposit Amount:
$25
Registration Amount:
$0
At Beautiful Flowers Daycare, our home daycare is designed for play, creativity, and learning! Our daycare has a driveway for parking. Within the space, we have a backyard, a nap room, an art area, and a reading area to create a comfortable environment for all of our activities.
Our family-oriented neighborhood has convenient street parking.
NY license #892720, background
checked, curriculum-based, real-time parent updates
Health & safety certified
NY license #892720
Background checked
Offers curriculum
Photo & video updates
Syracuse, NY
13219
Location is approximate
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Weekly rates
$248 – $310 / wk
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Government Subsidies and the American Families Plan
Childcare is a crucial aspect of a child’s development, and it has been a challenge for parents to find affordable and reliable childcare options. The government recognizes the importance of childcare and is considering various subsidies to support daycare homes and centers. In this article, we will discuss the current subsidies being considered for daycare homes and centers, their potential benefits, and the challenges they may face…….
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Traveling with Children – Winter Edition
Vacationing in Hawaii! Warm tropical winds, the beach, swimming pools with incredible water slides, awesome sunsets, mouth-watering sea food, fresh delectable fruit, and the Castello Familyscenery and terrain of the beautiful islands were all so welcoming. It was a trip the we will fondly remember forever. Anything and everything that you could want was available for the entire family. We first stayed on beautiful Maui and next ventured to the big Island of Hawaii during our 11 day visit……
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The Daycare Interview
As a parent looking for childcare, it’s crucial to find a daycare center or a childminder who will provide a safe and nurturing environment for your child. One of the most critical steps in this process is the interview with potential childcare providers. The interview is a chance for you to get to know the provider, ask questions, and evaluate whether or not they are a good fit for your family. To help you prepare for your interview, we’ve gathered some member comments from the Daycare.com forum to provide insights on what to expect and how to make the most of this crucial step…….
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Provider Burn Out – It’s Problems and Solutions
Provider burnout is a major concern in the daycare industry. The constant demands of caring for young children can be exhausting, both physically and emotionally, and can take a toll on providers over time. Burnout can negatively impact not only providers, but also the children in their care and the families who depend on them. In this essay, we will explore the causes and effects of provider burnout and discuss strategies for preventing and managing burnout in the daycare industry. …….
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The Daily Walk
Many years ago I decided to add a daily walk around our neighborhood to our morning schedule. We started out small by walking around our long block. We clocked it in the car and found that it was six-tenth of a mile. That took about seventeen to twenty minutes depending on the skill set and age of the walkers…..
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I know there are many types of agreements between parents and providers when it comes to having children in the provider’s vehicle. There are parents who want it for their kids and many who pay providers to transport their child to and from school and preschool. Some providers transport their own children to school and have field trips as a major selling point of their business…….
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How to take care of indoor plants?
01/18/2023
Contents
Home flower care: the main rule
Flower care: things to consider
Plant care: how to choose the right temperature?
Features of the selection of lighting
Humidity and watering
The specifics of nutrition and top dressing
Protection against pests
Potted flowers are an incredible decoration for a house, apartment, office, shop, school office or any other room. Caring for indoor plants is a set of principles and rules that should be followed for a healthy and beautiful appearance of the home garden. Simple tips from ArtFlora specialists have already been collected in this article. Competent recommendations will help you learn the basics of caring for and growing indoor plants, even for beginners in this business.
Home flower care: the main rule
First of all, it is worth remembering that each indoor plant requires an individual approach. There is no single technique suitable for all, without exception, colors. It is worthwhile to first observe the plant and its well-being, soil, leaves and flowers.
Avoiding extremes becomes a universal rule. Excessive watering or, conversely, lack of moisture, excess sunlight or darkness are detrimental to most home plants. It is always worth remembering that extreme conditions adversely affect flowers. It is best to stick to the golden mean and always focus on the condition of the plant.
Flower care: things to consider
Among the myriad of principles and recommendations, there are only five main points that should be constantly monitored. Among them:
temperature regime;
lighting;
humidity;
food;
pests.
Let’s deal with each of the parameters separately.
Plant care: how to choose the right temperature?
Warmth is one of the fundamental factors influencing the growth and development of flowers. Plants in pots got their name: “indoor” for a reason. This suggests that the flowers are comfortable in normal home conditions. Most plants thrive at temperatures ranging from 13 to 24 degrees. Higher rates are required for exotic varieties. At the same time, there are plants that grow better in the cold. For them, the maximum is 16 degrees.
Almost all plants are able to withstand slight temperature fluctuations without visible damage. The main condition is to avoid sudden drops and drafts. Only cacti and succulents are able to cope with such differences without any problems. This is due to the conditions of their natural growth. In nature, such plants withstand intense heat during the day, as well as a serious drop in temperature at night.
Features of the selection of illumination
The required amount of light is the basis for the correct flow of photosynthesis processes. Violation of this regime leads to a slowdown in processes and death of the flower. The easiest way to provide the necessary insolation is to place the pot near the window. But in this case it is also important not to overdo it.
Be aware that some plants require bright sunlight. Others grow better in the shade. Among the main signs of lack of illumination:
pale leaves;
strong tilt towards the light source;
no colors;
excessive stem elongation;
dryness of lower leaves.
An excess of insolation is indicated by:
the appearance of dark or red spots on the leaves;
lethargy;
faded color.
In winter, experts recommend placing flowers on the windowsill. Due to the short daylight hours, even those plants that usually prefer shade will not suffer.
Humidity and watering
How often and how much water plants require depends on several factors:
flower type;
room temperature;
soil moisture capacity;
lighting;
growth or flowering phase;
features of the root system and the number of leaves;
drainage specifics.
In general, the irrigation regime can be represented as follows:
summer – daily;
spring – once every two days;
autumn – once every three or four days;
winter – once a week or two.
If you have any doubts about the intensity of watering, it is worth remembering that it is better to water the plant more often and a little bit than once, but abundantly. With this approach, it is possible to track the needs of the flower and form your own watering rules.
Feeding and feeding specifics
Flower fertilization is one of the main actions that the owner should take. In their natural habitat, plants are able to independently vary their diet. Houseplants require care from a person. Conventionally, all fertilizers can be divided into the following categories:0003
Nitrogen. They activate the growth of stems and leaves, but can delay flowering and provoke fungal diseases if applied excessively.
Phosphate. Increase the number of buds and are responsible for the duration of flowering.
Potash. Apply when buds appear.
It is important to understand that an excess of nutrients can negatively affect flowers, so it is important to correctly select the amount of fertilizer.
Pest control
Parasites love houseplants as much as the hosts themselves. Among the most common pests:
Spider mite. It is practically invisible due to its miniature size, but causes noticeable white spots on the leaves.
Aphid. It is characterized by somewhat large sizes. The danger of this parasite is its rapid reproduction and the ability to infect all the flowers around.
Mealy beetle. Outwardly, it looks like a white pile or fluff.
Noticing the appearance of pests on the plant, do not panic. Modern manufacturers offer means to combat any parasites. The main thing is to act quickly. Then there is an opportunity to save the flower.
Having figured out how to care for flowers and what to pay attention to, you can safely start creating your own greenhouse at home.
Section:
Flower care
Author:
Nikitina Victoria
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How to keep cut flowers longer?
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How to keep cut flowers longer? 🌹
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A gifted flower arrangement can please the hostess if properly cared for. Cut flowers experience some stress after we deprive them of their natural source of moisture and nutrition, so it is important to provide them with comfortable conditions. More often, plants wither due to lack of water or a decrease in sugars. This usually happens if the vessels of the plant are clogged with air bubbles.
In order to prevent such a nuisance, it is important to cut the stem correctly before placing the flowers in water. There are still a lot of nuances, having familiarized with which even a non-professional florist will know – how to keep cut flowers fresh for a long time?
How to properly prepare flowers?
Caring for cut flowers requires care and knowledge. Before putting flowers in a vase, they need to be prepared. The presented bouquet will have fresh and correct cuts. To refresh them, just hold them under running cold water. Pay attention to the bottom of the bouquet – remove the lower leaves from the stem. If the composition is made up of flowers with a soft stem, the cut should be long and oblique, and in the case of a hard stem, a more even cut is made. To preserve the fresh aroma, the flowers are sprayed with cold water from a spray bottle. Also, florists recommend crushing the bottom of the stem (about 2 cm) with a hammer – this will increase the moisture absorption surface and allow the flowers to delight you with their beauty for a longer period. If you are doing everything right and cannot understand why cut flowers still wither, pay attention to the following recommendation.
Don’t forget to feed. Depending on the flower, a special top dressing is added to the vase with water – useful vitamins, which also affect the “service life” of the donated plant.
Water disinfection
Spring water does not flow in taps, it would be unreasonable to put a fresh bouquet in it. Let’s analyze the question of how to keep fresh flowers longer with the help of water purification. No need to use expensive filters and special chemicals. Boil running water and cool it – this will save it from harmful substances. You can go the opposite way by turning the liquid into ice – melt water is good for plants. You can disinfect water with a piece of charcoal – just put it in the bottom of a vase and it will do its job. Florists can afford to add one drop of whiteness or any detergent – this will stop the growth of bacteria in the water.
Top dressing of flowers
Next, let’s look at how to prolong the life of cut flowers with the power of special top dressings.
Tulips and lilacs last much longer if a few cubes of sugar or sugar syrup are added to the water.
Aspirin helps keep roses fresh – drop one tablet into the vase after changing the water.
Plants with thick stems (chrysanthemums, gerberas, calla lilies) love acid, so a moderate dose of lemon juice in water will be a top dressing for such cut flowers.
Shrub flowers (alstroemeria, lisianthus, peonies, daffodils) are perfectly preserved in water with a drop of potassium permanganate.
For a bouquet of asters, a teaspoon of alcohol per liter of water will be a good top dressing.
Where to put the bouquet?
Finding a location is very important if you want to know how to keep your cut flowers fresh.
Roses are picky. You should not put the bouquet in a place that is too hot – it is necessary to provide a temperature of 20-22 degrees. Also note that the flowers should not be exposed to direct sunlight.
Tulips love sunlight, so if you are wondering how to store cut flowers in a vase, put the composition on the windowsill – you will immediately notice how the flower buds continue to grow, feeding on daylight and warmth.
Gerberas, daisies, carnations and chrysanthemums are not picky in nature, so they can be placed anywhere you like.
Bouquets of cut peony or lisianthus flowers are also best protected from the sun and provide a slight coolness.
How to care for cut flowers?
To summarize, we have identified the principles of how to care for cut flowers:
Plants should be cut every day
Change the water in the vase regularly and don’t forget to feed
Don’t forget to pick off wilted buds and petals so they don’t rob viable ones of moisture
Spray large leaves with a spray bottle
Observe color compatibility
By following simple rules, you can keep a fragrant composition for 1-2 weeks.
Thank you for your interest in summer camps at Fox Valley Tech!
Register Now For Summer Camps
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Please note: Payment for each camp is due upon registration. Online payment can be made by credit card,debit card, or with a PayPal account. If you are unable to pay with these methods, please email: Jennifer Van Thiel or call 920-560-1439.
Wait List Sign Up: We’re sorry we can’t serve the volume of interest for all the Techknowledge College events we offer. However, sometimes plans change and a spot for an event that was full opens up. If you’d like to express your interest in an event which has already reached its capacity, please add your info below.
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2023 Camps (listed by date)
This youth camp provides high-level exploration in technical education with a focus on campus engagement, and representation, and includes culturally relevant practices. Camp LYT2E serves Black/African American 6th-10th graders enrolled in any of the 28 school districts served by Fox Valley Technical College.
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
In this camp, participants will look into the design of parts using CAD/CAM software, the measuring of parts with precision measuring instruments, the machining of parts on a CNC machine, and the assembly of the parts. Participants will get to experience the aspects of a product from its beginning stages of design all the way through the manufacturing processes to the finished assembled product. Once completed with this camp participants will be able to take home their finished product.
Learn how to manage crime scenes from real-world crime scene investigators. Students work in teams, while also building individual knowledge and confidence, as they investigate crime scene scenarios. Through lectures and hands-on experiences, students will learn how to use an alternative light source to identify evidence, collect impressions (fingerprints, footwear, tool markers), trace evidence (hairs, fibers, paint, building materials), DNA, and biologicals. They will also learn how to properly document and preserve the evidence that will be shared in a mock courtroom testimony.
Date: June 12-16 Ages: 14-18 Time: June 12-15: 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m., June 16: 8:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Location: Public Safety Training Center – PS118 Cost: $90
Camp H.E.R.O. is designed specifically for Hmong students entering grades 6-10. Participants learn about careers through hands-on, interactive sessions such as digital fabrication, paralegal careers, public safety, aircraft piloting, culinary arts, advanced manufacturing, health care, and many others. Students develop self-esteem and leadership skills through daily journaling, presentations, peer-to-peer contact, and a final graduation ceremony.
Age: 12-16 June 12-16 Time: 12:30-4:30 p.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus – HS301 (use entrance 16) Cost: Free
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
The purpose of this camp is to expose participants to basic healthcare knowledge, skills and tasks performed by various healthcare professionals. Participants will take part in exciting hands-on experiences. Sessions will include learning and practicing first aid skills, infection control, taking vital signs, and laboratory procedures.
Learn how to drive several pieces of landscape equipment and explore many great garden “Hacks” that turn Trash into Treasure.
NOTE: Students should bring empty plastic 2-liter bottles, half-gallon and one-gallon milk/water containers if available.
Ages: 10-14 June 14-15 Time: 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG111 Cost: $25
L. E.T.T.I.E. is designed for Hispanic girls entering grades 6-10. The camp helps participants see career options in various Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) programs.
L.E.T.T.I.E.’s five-day camp offers academic improvement, career exploration, and personal enrichment in order to close the achievement gap between Hispanic girls and their peers. L.E.T.T.I.E. camp gives these girls and their parents the necessary information, knowledge, and confidence to envision college after high school. Participants’ families are invited to participate in the full program, which includes tours of the college, sessions on financial aid, and a graduation ceremony that recognizes the students’ efforts.
Age: 12-16 Date: June 19-23 Time: 12:30-4:30 p.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus – Room HS301 (use entrance 16) Cost: Free
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
Put the pedal to the floor and let the rubber burn! Welcoming students ages 12 to 15 to join us in a multifaceted experience called “Wheels on Fire”. Assemble, personalize and take home your very own RC car! Additionally, learner will assemble a 90 foot drag racing track, work with industrial equipment including sensors and PanelViews to measure, calculate and display race stats. Finally, individuals will compete against each other by racing their personalized RC cars, as well as, an alternative car designed using an angle-grinder. Lunch, snacks, and drinks will be provided.
Age: 12-15 Dates: June 20-22 Time: 8:30 a.m-3 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus, J.J. Keller Transportation Building Cost: $110
Do you think you want to be a police officer, firefighter or crime scene investigator someday? Here is your chance to get a glimpse at all three in one place! Get hands-on experiences like performing a traffic stop, being part of a SWAT team, firefighting training exercises, to collecting evidence and preserving a crime scene! Each day students will get to learn from real life officers, firefighters and crime scene investigators as they learn some of the skills necessary to be successful in these public safety careers
Ages: 14-16 Date: June 28-30 Time: 8 a. m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center, Room PS106 Cost: $100
Challenge yourself, make new friends and learn about the firefighter life: Join us for this outstanding firefighting camp! Get hands-on experiences by performing tasks and training exercises alongside local firefighters and get a sneak peek behind the scenes at a local fire department. Students will be transported to local fire departments by college vans. More details to come regarding field trips.
Ages: 12-17 Date: July 17-20 Time: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center Cost:$100
Age: 12-18 Date: July 18-19 Time: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus J.J. Keller Transportation Building T121 Cost: $50
Put the pedal to the floor and let the rubber burn! Welcoming students ages 12 to 15 to join us in a multifaceted experience called “Wheels on Fire”. Assemble, personalize and take home your very own RC car! Additionally, learner will assemble a 90 foot drag racing track, work with industrial equipment including sensors and PanelViews to measure, calculate and display race stats. Finally, individuals will compete against each other by racing their personalized RC cars, as well as, an alternative car designed using an angle-grinder. Lunch, snacks, and drinks will be provided.
Age: 12-15 Dates: July 18-20 Time: 8 a.m-3 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus, J.J. Keller Transportation Building Cost: $110
Learn how to maintain and repair small two and four stroke engines used on today’s outdoor power equipment. Bring in your lawn mower or other small engine equipment that you and your son or daughter can work on together. We will learn how to sharpen and balance blades, complete oil changes and tune up your engines. You will even be introduced to new hand-held battery-powered equipment.
Ages: 9-18 July 24-25 Time: 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG122, AG124 and AG130 Cost: $85 per child (no cost to adult participants)
Participate in hands-on, minds-on STEM activities including welding, soldering, engineering and computer programming and much more. Registration fee includes a t-shirt, daily snacks and take-home projects.
Ages: 9-13 Date: July 24-28 Time: 7:45-11:50 a.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus Cost: $55
Learn about careers in heavy-duty diesel truck repair. Students will gain hands-on, minds-on experience working in a heavy truck repair shop. Tour a local shop, meet real Technicians and have a lot of fun, while learning how to turn what you love into a career!
NOTE: Participants will be transported in college vans to a local shop. More details to come, as we get closer.
Age: 12-18 Date: July 25-26 Time: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus J.J. Keller Transportation Building T121 Cost: $50
Learn how to maintain and repair small two and four stroke engines used on today’s outdoor power equipment. Bring in your lawn mower or other small engine equipment that you and your son or daughter can work on together. We will learn how to sharpen and balance blades, complete oil changes and tune up your engines. You will even be introduced to new hand-held battery-powered equipment.
Ages: 9-18 July 31-August 1 Time: 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG122, AG124 and AG130 Cost: $85 per child (no cost to adult participants)
Challenge yourself, make new friends and learn about the firefighter life: Join us for this outstanding firefighting camp! Get hands-on experiences by performing tasks and training exercises alongside local firefighters and get a sneak peek behind the scenes at a local fire department. Students will be transported to local fire departments by college vans. More details to come regarding field trips.
Please note: This camp will be for the student who has firefighting experience as an explorer or has previously attended the Basic Fire Camp.
Ages: 15-18 Date: July 31-August 3 Time: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center Cost: $100
Are you interested in coding, basic electronics, automation, and robotics? Do you love all things STEM? If so, then don’t miss this tremendous opportunity to design, build, program, and wire different automated devices that replicate similar items used in local companies.
Ages: 11-14 Date: August 8-10 Time: 8:30-11:30 a.m. Location: Clintonville Regional Center Cost: $25
2022 Summer Camp Photos
Summer Learning / Camps
Overview
Summer Camps and Activities
Camps
Locations
Virtual Experiences
Family Activities & Resources
Parent Resources
Camps are located in every community and offered by the School District, community agencies, and private organizations across Palm Beach County. There are also special programs for students of all ages.
Have fun this summer at one of the summer camps in Palm Beach County. The School District runs camps at school locations from June to July/August, depending on location. Other camps in the area have special programs for a variety of interests, such as art, science, sports, aquatics, theater, and more, for all ages.
School District Summer Camps
Achievement Centers Ages 5-18 (Delray)
Band Camp in PBC
Boys and Girls Club Summer at Home
CROS Ministries Summer Camp
Cultural Camp Guide
Delray Beach Playhouse
Delray Beach Summer Camps / Classes
Delray Camps in the City
Frost Museum of Science Summer Camp
Junk Camp at Resource Depot
Jupiter Daily Summer Camp Guide
Jupiter Outdoor Center
Lighthouse Art Camp
Loggerhead Marinelife Center Summer Camp
Mounts Botanical Garden Explorers Camp
The Palm Beaches Summer Camp Guide
PBC Summer Camp
PB Parenting Camp List
Palm Beach Zoo Camp
Pine Tree Camp (Lynn University)
Sea Turtle Adventures Camp
Science and Tech Camps – Cox Science Center
South Florida Summer Camps Roundup
Summer Camp Guide – Macaroni Kid
West Palm Beach – City Fun Summer Camp
Special programs are run during the summer for young children, youth, and teens
Summer Science Programs in Palm Beach County
Apple Summer Programs (students age 8-12 have options that include music, coding, moviemaking, or art and design)
Discovery Science – MLB Sustainability Challenge (students can login through their portal for additional resources)
FAU Pine Jog Summer Day Camp
FAU Sports Camps
iD Tech Camps (FAU)
Mandel Summer Programs for Children
Milagro Center (call for summer information)
Palm Beach State Youth College (Science, Literature, Arts, Math)
Compass Youth Program (ages 12-18)
Discovery Education – Virtual Day Trips
Prime Time Palm Beach County Virtual Summer Camp
Varsity Tutor – Virtual Summer Camps
Wild About Wildlife Virtual Summer Camp – Partnership with Manatee Lagoon, Loggerhead Marinelife Center, Lion Country Safari, and Palm Beach Zoo
Wellington Black Dog Productions Virtual Summer Camp
Wide Open School from Common Sense Media
Top 25 summer schools for children in Moscow in 2023 – IT for children on vc.
ru
We present the rating of summer schools and city day camps in Moscow in 2023, where children will have fun and acquire a hobby.
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views
Summer is just around the corner – it’s time to think over leisure time for the student so that the holidays will be remembered with new skills, acquaintances and hobbies. A suitable option would be a city school or a day camp for children in Moscow for the summer.
To attend such a school, the child does not need to leave the city – the participants are in the day camp in the morning and afternoon, and in the evening they meet with their relatives and return home. The program is combined with spending time at home with loved ones and familiar activities.
City day camp “Pixel”
Age: 8–15 years old
Format: day camp
At the Pixel city day camp in Moscow, children learn IT languages, assemble and train robotic products, implement games and websites, and design 3D objects.
The program is suitable for both experienced coders and just discovering the world of development. The shift lasts 5 days, and during this period the future coder will create a personal blog or an online store, implement a computer game, design a robot or a 3D model.
In their free time, schoolchildren fill up with energy on exercises, have fun with board games, walk, pay attention to healthy snacks and communicate with each other.
Clever Summer Camp
Age: 7-14
Format: city camp
In the bilingual day camp in Moscow 2023, children will immerse themselves in English, creativity, sports, theater and chess. The child will develop conversational speech and conduct language experiments, take up modeling and drawing, work out in the gym and basketball court, and play the role of an artist.
Also on Clever shifts, children and teenagers will have fun at games and street quests, visit field trips.
City summer shifts in KANT
Age: 7–14 years
Format: day camp
Schoolchildren are waiting for sports sessions from the Kant sports complex. Skateboard, trampoline, climbing wall, billiards: the child chooses directions of interest or tries everything in turn.
At the children’s summer camp in Moscow, the daytime stay promises to be entertaining: spray painting graffiti, cooking classes, soap bubble shows, board games.
Contests and mini-competitions are held to improve the leadership qualities of schoolchildren, develop the ability to work in a team and the ability to concentrate.
Summer club “Movement”
Age: 6-14 years old
Format: day club
The Movement summer club is designed to ensure that the child indulges in physical activity throughout the day. Dance exercises, outdoor games, swimming pool, roller skating – there will be no time to be bored. The program takes place next to Sokolniki Park, which allows you to spend a lot of time outdoors.
The guys will also open the chest of adventures, prepare performances, and build armor for the jousting tournament. The shifts differ in topics: from yard games to the battle of bloggers.
Sports camp “Nogivruki”
Age: 5–12 years old
Format: city camp
In the sports camp “Nogivruki” from the trampoline gymnastic club Ogo, the guys pour out their energy, make friends and get impressions.
Children’s day camp in Moscow offers trampoline training, sports games, gymnastics and acrobatics for the summer. Classes are taught by professional trainers. Participants will also spend time outdoors, attend creative master classes, and play themed games.
During the shift, children will develop strong-willed qualities and self-discipline skills, communicate with children of different ages, show creative abilities, learn to speak and listen carefully to others.
Children’s Day Camp MiniDomini
Age: 2-11 years old
Format: city camp
Children’s day camp MiniDomini in Moscow will embark on adventures involving time travel. Children will go on a journey through the galaxies, cook dishes from different eras, and move into the era of dinosaurs.
The camp participant will broaden his horizons: learn more about the solar system, talk with Leonardo da Vinci, conduct experiments with Einstein.
Climbing wall, 3D physical education, dancing, experimentarium: the program is going to be intense.
Summer club from the children’s art school “Youth”
Age: 7–14 years old
Format: meetings 3 times a week for half a day
In the summer club from the children’s art school “Youth” schoolchildren are offered classes with a theatrical or artistic bias – depending on the chosen program.
Participants will be engaged in staging numbers and developing stage movements, listen to art history lectures and sing in the choir, practice drawing and composition, visit the MK and excursions.
FFC Sports Academy
Age: 5–16 years
Format: day camp
According to the plan of the children’s day camp in Moscow from the FFC sports academy – chess and football, art and English classes, drawing and acting lessons.
Football training is provided by licensed football coaches. Each participant receives a personal set of uniforms.
Recreation is also planned: quizzes, board games, creative workshops, “Mafia” and watching educational films.
City Summer School “Coalition”
Age: 5-11 grades
Format: city school
Children are waiting for intensive training at the school “Coalition”. You can choose from 2 directions or combine both: Olympiad preparation or studying English with a native speaker.
Biology, mathematics, social studies: the student chooses the right subject and prepares to win: 3 profile pairs a day, Olympiad coaches as teachers, mind games.
There will also be time for rest – the child will go in for sports, visit excursions and quizzes, take part in debates and quests, and communicate with like-minded people.
Theater fees from the studio “Irbis”
Age: 7–16 years old
Format: urban theater intensives
At the summer theatrical gatherings from the Irbis studio, children are expected to have lessons in artistic play, speech, and dance. The participant will learn to manage emotions, get rid of the clamps, be able to move naturally on stage, master a clear confident speech.
Children will also visit excursions, take part in entertaining games, relax at a disco, and perform a performance.
AMAkids Summer Day Camp
Age: 6-13 years old
Format: city camp
At the summer day camp in Moscow in 2023, AMAkids will provide children with daily lessons in writing, reading, and mathematics. If you wish, you can do English, speed reading, memory or mental arithmetic.
The children will practice modeling and decoupage, perform theatrical scenes, put on physical and chemical experiments.
During the breaks, sports minutes, walks, game libraries, themed quests and quizzes are planned.
Bunny Hop Children’s Day Camp
Age: 5-17 years old
Format: city club
At the Bunny Hop children’s day camp, young adventurers learn a stunt scooter, skateboard and longboard, roller skates and a bmx stunt bike.
Suitable for all levels of riding. In training, beginners and guys with experience work out separately, but they walk and play all together. In addition to classes, children are waiting for meals, games and city walks.
Sky Trampoline Center
Age: 6-14 years old
Format: city camp
Day camp for children in Moscow from the Nebo trampoline center offers shifts on a variety of topics – from talent shows to choosing a profession. Athletics and acrobatics training, publishing a newspaper and writing a business plan, learning tricks and acting, time travel and encounters with dinosaurs: there are plenty to choose from.
Trampolining, rock climbing, action games and gladiator fights are also expected. Participants will visit scientific and creative MCs, practice cooking, and enjoy picnics.
English Summer Career Camp
Age: 12–16 years old
Format: city camp
In the English-career-guidance camp, teenagers will test themselves in different professions, improve their soft skills, learn how to make business presentations and make decisions.
Shifts at a day camp for teenagers in Moscow are thematic: ecology and culture, PR and social networks, media and education, science and cooking.
The child will plunge into the language environment, as daily communication in English is expected. Schoolchildren will attend master classes, get acquainted with representatives of professions, go in for sports in picturesque parks.
Colibri Camp
Age: 7-12 years old
Format: children’s city club
ColibriCamp announced a rich program for the summer. The guys will comprehend the art of graffiti and street art, perform street dances, learn modern trends in drawing, visit creative MCs.
Participants will master Morse code and practice power tricks, improve communication skills and draw sketches, learn to express emotions through dance and play board games, participate in flash mobs and quests.
Day Camp CTRL PLAY Camp
Age: 10-16 years old
Format: day camp
At CTRL PLAY Camp, the child will learn acting skills, understand gaming and eSports, learn about digital professions and prove himself in online games. Also according to the plan – MK, games, fitness, sports.
The camp will appeal to young bloggers, streamers and game fans: there is a computer class with gaming computers. A psychologist works with children.
Summer City Club “Summer of Victories”
Age: 8–13 years old
Format: city summer club
In the Summer of Victory club, children and teenagers have an exciting time: attend quests and excursions, participate in sports games and creative festivals, meet with representatives of professions. You can choose a shift according to your interests: media, creativity, technology.
On the territory there is a cinema and a concert hall, a rope town and a summer stage, lecture halls and platforms with military equipment.
Day camp in Moscow “City holidays”
Age: 7-13 years old
Format: city camp
In a day camp in Moscow for schoolchildren, children practice English, learn to speak publicly, dance and blog. MK and excursions, competitions and promenades, competitions and adventure quests, entertainment are planned – a trampoline, a climbing wall, laser tag.
Schoolchildren will be engaged in painting and interior design, master oratory and information literacy, learn the basics of marketing and sales, take part in photo shoots and intellectual games. At the end of the week of “City Holidays” – a reporting concert.
Children’s sports club FARTEAM
Age: 4–12 years old
Format: day club
The FARTEAM Children’s Sports Club invites schoolchildren to improve their health, broaden their horizons, acquire combat and communication skills.
Children will learn orienteering, master martial arts, practice yoga in hammocks, get acquainted with the basics of kickboxing, learn to dance hip-hop.
Summer city camp “Makarun”
Age: 6–13 years old
Format: city camp
At the summer day camp in Moscow in 2023, children develop soft skills, have fun with educational games, engage in creative workshops, conduct scientific experiments. The program includes 4 creative activities every day: the child learns new things and broadens his horizons.
Changes in “Makarun” are thematic: sports, space, fantasy, adventure. The participant will try himself as a blogger, attend a jousting tournament, fight evil and discover a wonder of the world.
Happy Travel Club
Age: 6–12 years old
Format: day camp
City day camp in Moscow “Fun Travel Club” will allow children to go on exciting journeys around their native country, city, district. Holidays will help to expand the horizons of the child, find new friends and feel the desire to learn foreign languages.
Participants will find language classes and musical flash mobs, performances and parties, quests and filming of copyright films.
Children will take part in creative MC and research laboratories, play active and educational games.
Chulanchik Educational Center
Age: 6–12 years old
Format: day camp
During week-long shifts of summer city day camp in Moscow from the Chulanchik educational center, children go on scientific expeditions and explore nature, become financial experts and plan their future business, perform on stage and learn how to cook.
Children set up tents and experiment with plants, practice sword fighting and conquer deserts, delve into investment and learn to avoid fraud, comprehend circus gymnastics and consider table etiquette.
Holidays from the club “Chalet”
Age: 7-14 years old
Format: day club
During the holidays from the club “Chalet”, schoolchildren are engaged in creativity, sports, dancing and English. The guys go for walks and practice eco-hiking, participate in quests and intellectual quizzes, arrange fairs and picnics.
Among 60 workshops, children choose what they like: carpentry or cooking, fluid art or acrylic painting, felting from wool or beading, candle making or soap making. Twice per shift, creative classes are held in English.
Theatrical holidays at Skazkadarium
Age: 6-12 years old
Format: day camp
During the theatrical holidays at the Skazkadarium, children explore the types and specifics of theaters, make costumes and props, learn how to apply makeup and perform on the stage.
The program includes educational meetings and active games, lessons in acting and public speaking, teaching plasticity and stage movements. In the final, the participants will put on a performance.
Sciencely Summer Laboratories
Age: 7–15 years old
Format: city laboratories
In the Sciencely summer laboratories from the ZIL cultural center, the child will create a model of his own ecosystem, see himself as a traumatologist, delve into the nuances of working in a chemical laboratory, explore social mechanisms, get acquainted with the natural sciences.
Schoolchildren will take tests, participate in educational and outdoor games, go on quests and promenades.
Summer schools and day camps for children in Moscow in 2023 are a compromise between countryside or seaside vacations and spending time with a smartphone in your hands in your own room. Sign up your child for developmental classes – give him a summer full of emotions, amazing discoveries and new acquaintances.
City summer health camps – School 489
City summer health camps
03/06/2023
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in the summer of 2023 for the period from 05/30/2023 to 08/25/2023
for the 2nd shift 19.04.2023-21.06.2023
for the 3rd shift 19.04.2023-19.07.2023
No.
Educational institution
Shifts
Shift duration
Operating mode
1
GBOU secondary school No. 353 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
2
GBOU secondary school No. 355 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30. 05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
3
GBOU secondary school No. 358 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
4
GBOU secondary school No. 362 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days 30.05.2023-28.06.2023
since 09.00 to 18.00
5
GBOU secondary school No. 376 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
II
III
21 working days 06/29/2023-07/27/2023
07/28/2023-08/25/2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
6
GBOU secondary school No. 489 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
7
GBOU secondary school No. 496 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
8
GBOU secondary school No. 525 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
II
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
06/29/2023-07/27/2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
9
GBOU secondary school No. 613 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
10
GBOU secondary school No. 536 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
I
21 working days
30.05.2023-28.06.2023
from 09.00 to 18.00
11
GBOU secondary school No. 684 of the Moskovsky district of St. Petersburg
Thank you for your interest in summer camps at Fox Valley Tech!
Register Now For Summer Camps
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Please note: Payment for each camp is due upon registration. Online payment can be made by credit card,debit card, or with a PayPal account. If you are unable to pay with these methods, please email: Jennifer Van Thiel or call 920-560-1439.
Wait List Sign Up: We’re sorry we can’t serve the volume of interest for all the Techknowledge College events we offer. However, sometimes plans change and a spot for an event that was full opens up. If you’d like to express your interest in an event which has already reached its capacity, please add your info below.
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2023 Camps (listed by date)
This youth camp provides high-level exploration in technical education with a focus on campus engagement, and representation, and includes culturally relevant practices. Camp LYT2E serves Black/African American 6th-10th graders enrolled in any of the 28 school districts served by Fox Valley Technical College.
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
In this camp, participants will look into the design of parts using CAD/CAM software, the measuring of parts with precision measuring instruments, the machining of parts on a CNC machine, and the assembly of the parts. Participants will get to experience the aspects of a product from its beginning stages of design all the way through the manufacturing processes to the finished assembled product. Once completed with this camp participants will be able to take home their finished product.
Learn how to manage crime scenes from real-world crime scene investigators. Students work in teams, while also building individual knowledge and confidence, as they investigate crime scene scenarios. Through lectures and hands-on experiences, students will learn how to use an alternative light source to identify evidence, collect impressions (fingerprints, footwear, tool markers), trace evidence (hairs, fibers, paint, building materials), DNA, and biologicals. They will also learn how to properly document and preserve the evidence that will be shared in a mock courtroom testimony.
Date: June 12-16 Ages: 14-18 Time: June 12-15: 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m., June 16: 8:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Location: Public Safety Training Center – PS118 Cost: $90
Camp H.E.R.O. is designed specifically for Hmong students entering grades 6-10. Participants learn about careers through hands-on, interactive sessions such as digital fabrication, paralegal careers, public safety, aircraft piloting, culinary arts, advanced manufacturing, health care, and many others. Students develop self-esteem and leadership skills through daily journaling, presentations, peer-to-peer contact, and a final graduation ceremony.
Age: 12-16 June 12-16 Time: 12:30-4:30 p.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus – HS301 (use entrance 16) Cost: Free
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
The purpose of this camp is to expose participants to basic healthcare knowledge, skills and tasks performed by various healthcare professionals. Participants will take part in exciting hands-on experiences. Sessions will include learning and practicing first aid skills, infection control, taking vital signs, and laboratory procedures.
Learn how to drive several pieces of landscape equipment and explore many great garden “Hacks” that turn Trash into Treasure.
NOTE: Students should bring empty plastic 2-liter bottles, half-gallon and one-gallon milk/water containers if available.
Ages: 10-14 June 14-15 Time: 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG111 Cost: $25
L. E.T.T.I.E. is designed for Hispanic girls entering grades 6-10. The camp helps participants see career options in various Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) programs.
L.E.T.T.I.E.’s five-day camp offers academic improvement, career exploration, and personal enrichment in order to close the achievement gap between Hispanic girls and their peers. L.E.T.T.I.E. camp gives these girls and their parents the necessary information, knowledge, and confidence to envision college after high school. Participants’ families are invited to participate in the full program, which includes tours of the college, sessions on financial aid, and a graduation ceremony that recognizes the students’ efforts.
Age: 12-16 Date: June 19-23 Time: 12:30-4:30 p.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus – Room HS301 (use entrance 16) Cost: Free
Please note: This camp is made possible at no charge to families, thanks to DPI grant funding. In order for this camp to qualify for DPI grant funding, additional paperwork is required from each family after submitting the initial registration. This information will be emailed to families and must be submitted prior to children attending camp. Please watch your email for additional information.
Put the pedal to the floor and let the rubber burn! Welcoming students ages 12 to 15 to join us in a multifaceted experience called “Wheels on Fire”. Assemble, personalize and take home your very own RC car! Additionally, learner will assemble a 90 foot drag racing track, work with industrial equipment including sensors and PanelViews to measure, calculate and display race stats. Finally, individuals will compete against each other by racing their personalized RC cars, as well as, an alternative car designed using an angle-grinder. Lunch, snacks, and drinks will be provided.
Age: 12-15 Dates: June 20-22 Time: 8:30 a.m-3 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus, J.J. Keller Transportation Building Cost: $110
Do you think you want to be a police officer, firefighter or crime scene investigator someday? Here is your chance to get a glimpse at all three in one place! Get hands-on experiences like performing a traffic stop, being part of a SWAT team, firefighting training exercises, to collecting evidence and preserving a crime scene! Each day students will get to learn from real life officers, firefighters and crime scene investigators as they learn some of the skills necessary to be successful in these public safety careers
Ages: 14-16 Date: June 28-30 Time: 8 a. m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center, Room PS106 Cost: $100
Challenge yourself, make new friends and learn about the firefighter life: Join us for this outstanding firefighting camp! Get hands-on experiences by performing tasks and training exercises alongside local firefighters and get a sneak peek behind the scenes at a local fire department. Students will be transported to local fire departments by college vans. More details to come regarding field trips.
Ages: 12-17 Date: July 17-20 Time: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center Cost:$100
Age: 12-18 Date: July 18-19 Time: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus J.J. Keller Transportation Building T121 Cost: $50
Put the pedal to the floor and let the rubber burn! Welcoming students ages 12 to 15 to join us in a multifaceted experience called “Wheels on Fire”. Assemble, personalize and take home your very own RC car! Additionally, learner will assemble a 90 foot drag racing track, work with industrial equipment including sensors and PanelViews to measure, calculate and display race stats. Finally, individuals will compete against each other by racing their personalized RC cars, as well as, an alternative car designed using an angle-grinder. Lunch, snacks, and drinks will be provided.
Age: 12-15 Dates: July 18-20 Time: 8 a.m-3 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus, J.J. Keller Transportation Building Cost: $110
Learn how to maintain and repair small two and four stroke engines used on today’s outdoor power equipment. Bring in your lawn mower or other small engine equipment that you and your son or daughter can work on together. We will learn how to sharpen and balance blades, complete oil changes and tune up your engines. You will even be introduced to new hand-held battery-powered equipment.
Ages: 9-18 July 24-25 Time: 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG122, AG124 and AG130 Cost: $85 per child (no cost to adult participants)
Participate in hands-on, minds-on STEM activities including welding, soldering, engineering and computer programming and much more. Registration fee includes a t-shirt, daily snacks and take-home projects.
Ages: 9-13 Date: July 24-28 Time: 7:45-11:50 a.m. Location: Appleton Main Campus Cost: $55
Learn about careers in heavy-duty diesel truck repair. Students will gain hands-on, minds-on experience working in a heavy truck repair shop. Tour a local shop, meet real Technicians and have a lot of fun, while learning how to turn what you love into a career!
NOTE: Participants will be transported in college vans to a local shop. More details to come, as we get closer.
Age: 12-18 Date: July 25-26 Time: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Location: Appleton Campus J.J. Keller Transportation Building T121 Cost: $50
Learn how to maintain and repair small two and four stroke engines used on today’s outdoor power equipment. Bring in your lawn mower or other small engine equipment that you and your son or daughter can work on together. We will learn how to sharpen and balance blades, complete oil changes and tune up your engines. You will even be introduced to new hand-held battery-powered equipment.
Ages: 9-18 July 31-August 1 Time: 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Location: FVTC Appleton Campus, Service Motor Company Agriculture Center AG122, AG124 and AG130 Cost: $85 per child (no cost to adult participants)
Challenge yourself, make new friends and learn about the firefighter life: Join us for this outstanding firefighting camp! Get hands-on experiences by performing tasks and training exercises alongside local firefighters and get a sneak peek behind the scenes at a local fire department. Students will be transported to local fire departments by college vans. More details to come regarding field trips.
Please note: This camp will be for the student who has firefighting experience as an explorer or has previously attended the Basic Fire Camp.
Ages: 15-18 Date: July 31-August 3 Time: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Location: FVTC Public Safety Training Center Cost: $100
Are you interested in coding, basic electronics, automation, and robotics? Do you love all things STEM? If so, then don’t miss this tremendous opportunity to design, build, program, and wire different automated devices that replicate similar items used in local companies.
Ages: 11-14 Date: August 8-10 Time: 8:30-11:30 a.m. Location: Clintonville Regional Center Cost: $25
2022 Summer Camp Photos
Summer Academy Camps at University of Georgia
Summer Academy at the University of Georgia is an exciting series of STEAM and career-prep summer camps in Athens for middle and high schoolers who crave amazing things. Whether you’ve always dreamt of becoming a doctor, scientist, or artist, we have the perfect summer camp to make your dream a reality. Our mission is to provide you with an unforgettable summer where you can learn new skills and apply them to your future career goals.
See the complete list of 2023 Summer Academy camps below and, if you’re ready to explore the fun and engaging camps we have for you, have your parents or guardians download the English Handbook or Spanish Handbook. It contains all the information they need to know to sign you up for this exciting opportunity: from the different camps we offer to what to bring to camp, our health and safety policies, and important information about financial aid. They’ll find answers to all their questions inside!
To see a camp’s full description, simply click on its name. Keep in mind that camps labeled “Session A, B, C, etc.” are multiple sessions of the same camp, while those labeled with “1, 2” (for example, Mini Med 1 & Mini Med 2) are introductory and advanced camps in the same subject area.
JUNE 5-9 | JUNE 12-16 | JUNE 19-23
JUNE 26-30 | JULY 10-14 | JULY 17-21
June 5 – 9, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
Genomic Sleuthing: Session A
12-15
Science
Mini Medical School 1: Session A
11-13
Pre-professional
Ocean Discovery 1: Session A
11-14
Science
University Prep Program: Session A
16-17
Pre-professional
Voice: For Actors, Singers, and Beyond
13-17
Performance
B. L.A.C.K. Engineering – Full
15-17
Engineering
Drone Legends: Session A – Full
11-14
Engineering
Jewelry Making and Metal Working – Full
14-17
Design
Photography – Full
13-17
Storytelling
Zoology – Full
12-15
Science
June 12 – 16, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
Broadcast Journalism
13-17
Media & Communication
Mini Medical School 1: Session B
11-13
Pre-professional
Modeling and Personal Development
14-17
Performance
Ocean Discovery 1: Session B
11-14
Science
2D Animation: Session A – Full
13-17
Storytelling
Advertising & Public Relations – Full
13-17
Media & Communication
American Sign Language: Session A – Full
12-17
Performance
Creative Writing: Plot and Structure – Full
13-17
Storytelling
Legal – Full
13-17
Pre-professional
Women ExCEL In Engineering – Full
15-17
Engineering
June 19 – 23, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
Ocean Discovery 2: Session A
11-14
Science
Photojournalism
13-17
Media & Communication
3D Animation: Session A
13-17
Storytelling
Acting – Full
13-17
Performance
Drawing – Full
13-17
Design
Entertainment & Media Studies –Full
13-17
Media & Communication
Introduction to Digital Film: Session A – Full
11-15
Storytelling
Introductory Engineering: Session A – Full
11-14
Engineering
Mini Medical School 2: Beyond the Basics Session A – Full
14-16
Pre-professional
Multimedia Journalism – Full
13-17
Media & Communication
June 26 – 30, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
2D Animation: Session B
13-17
Storytelling
American Sign Language 2
13-17
Performance
Environmental Science
11-14
Science
Fashion Design: Session A
13-17
Design
Genomic Sleuthing: Session B
12-15
Science
Graphic Logo Design
13-17
Design
Mini Medical Junior: Session A
8-10
Pre-professional
Screenwriting
13-17
Storytelling
Advanced Engineering: Session A – Full
15-17
Engineering
Robotics: Session A – Full
11-14
Engineering
University Prep Program: Session B – Full
16-17
Pre-professional
July 10 – 14, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
3D Animation: Session B
13-17
Storytelling
Genomic Sleuthing: Session C
12-15
Science
Introduction to Digital Film: Session B
11-15
Storytelling
Introductory Engineering: Session B
11-14
Engineering
Ocean Discovery 1: Session D
11-14
Science
Creative Writing: Worldbuilding
13-17
Storytelling
Architecture & Design – Full
13-17
Design
Financial Planning Academy – Full
13-17
Pre-professional
Mini Medical School 2: Beyond the Basics Session B – Full
14-16
Pre-professional
July 17 – 21, 2023 Camps
Summer Camp Name
Ages
Interest
Advanced Digital Film School
14-17
Storytelling
Creative Writing: Creative Writing Workshop
14-17
Storytelling
Fashion Design: Session B
13-17
Design
Mini Medical School 2: Beyond the Basics Session C
14-16
Pre-professional
Ocean Discovery 2: Session B
11-14
Science
UGA Mock Trial Academy
13-17
Pre-professional
Advanced Engineering: Session B – Full
15-17
Engineering
Architecture: Urban Design – Full
13-17
Design
Drone Legends: Session B – Full
11-14
Engineering
Robotics: Session B – Full
11-14
Engineering
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Top 25 summer schools for children in Moscow in 2023 – IT for children on vc.
ru
We present the rating of summer schools and city day camps in Moscow in 2023, where children will have fun and acquire a hobby.
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Summer is just around the corner – it’s time to think over leisure time for the student so that the holidays will be remembered with new skills, acquaintances and hobbies. A suitable option would be a city school or a day camp for children in Moscow for the summer.
To attend such a school, the child does not need to leave the city – the participants are in the day camp in the morning and afternoon, and in the evening they meet with their relatives and return home. The program is combined with spending time at home with loved ones and familiar activities.
City day camp “Pixel”
Age: 8–15 years old
Format: day camp
At the Pixel city day camp in Moscow, children learn IT languages, assemble and train robotic products, implement games and websites, and design 3D objects.
The program is suitable for both experienced coders and just discovering the world of development. The shift lasts 5 days, and during this period the future coder will create a personal blog or an online store, implement a computer game, design a robot or a 3D model.
In their free time, schoolchildren fill up with energy on exercises, have fun with board games, walk, pay attention to healthy snacks and communicate with each other.
Clever Summer Camp
Age: 7-14
Format: city camp
In the bilingual day camp in Moscow 2023, children will immerse themselves in English, creativity, sports, theater and chess. The child will develop conversational speech and conduct language experiments, take up modeling and drawing, work out in the gym and basketball court, and play the role of an artist.
Also on Clever shifts, children and teenagers will have fun at games and street quests, visit field trips.
City summer shifts in KANT
Age: 7–14 years
Format: day camp
Schoolchildren are waiting for sports sessions from the Kant sports complex. Skateboard, trampoline, climbing wall, billiards: the child chooses directions of interest or tries everything in turn.
At the children’s summer camp in Moscow, the daytime stay promises to be entertaining: spray painting graffiti, cooking classes, soap bubble shows, board games.
Contests and mini-competitions are held to improve the leadership qualities of schoolchildren, develop the ability to work in a team and the ability to concentrate.
Summer club “Movement”
Age: 6-14 years old
Format: day club
The Movement summer club is designed to ensure that the child indulges in physical activity throughout the day. Dance exercises, outdoor games, swimming pool, roller skating – there will be no time to be bored. The program takes place next to Sokolniki Park, which allows you to spend a lot of time outdoors.
The guys will also open the chest of adventures, prepare performances, and build armor for the jousting tournament. The shifts differ in topics: from yard games to the battle of bloggers.
Sports camp “Nogivruki”
Age: 5–12 years old
Format: city camp
In the sports camp “Nogivruki” from the trampoline gymnastic club Ogo, the guys pour out their energy, make friends and get impressions.
Children’s day camp in Moscow offers trampoline training, sports games, gymnastics and acrobatics for the summer. Classes are taught by professional trainers. Participants will also spend time outdoors, attend creative master classes, and play themed games.
During the shift, children will develop strong-willed qualities and self-discipline skills, communicate with children of different ages, show creative abilities, learn to speak and listen carefully to others.
Children’s Day Camp MiniDomini
Age: 2-11 years old
Format: city camp
Children’s day camp MiniDomini in Moscow will embark on adventures involving time travel. Children will go on a journey through the galaxies, cook dishes from different eras, and move into the era of dinosaurs.
The camp participant will broaden his horizons: learn more about the solar system, talk with Leonardo da Vinci, conduct experiments with Einstein.
Climbing wall, 3D physical education, dancing, experimentarium: the program is going to be intense.
Summer club from the children’s art school “Youth”
Age: 7–14 years old
Format: meetings 3 times a week for half a day
In the summer club from the children’s art school “Youth” schoolchildren are offered classes with a theatrical or artistic bias – depending on the chosen program.
Participants will be engaged in staging numbers and developing stage movements, listen to art history lectures and sing in the choir, practice drawing and composition, visit the MK and excursions.
FFC Sports Academy
Age: 5–16 years
Format: day camp
According to the plan of the children’s day camp in Moscow from the FFC sports academy – chess and football, art and English classes, drawing and acting lessons.
Football training is provided by licensed football coaches. Each participant receives a personal set of uniforms.
Recreation is also planned: quizzes, board games, creative workshops, “Mafia” and watching educational films.
City Summer School “Coalition”
Age: 5-11 grades
Format: city school
Children are waiting for intensive training at the school “Coalition”. You can choose from 2 directions or combine both: Olympiad preparation or studying English with a native speaker.
Biology, mathematics, social studies: the student chooses the right subject and prepares to win: 3 profile pairs a day, Olympiad coaches as teachers, mind games.
There will also be time for rest – the child will go in for sports, visit excursions and quizzes, take part in debates and quests, and communicate with like-minded people.
Theater fees from the studio “Irbis”
Age: 7–16 years old
Format: urban theater intensives
At the summer theatrical gatherings from the Irbis studio, children are expected to have lessons in artistic play, speech, and dance. The participant will learn to manage emotions, get rid of the clamps, be able to move naturally on stage, master a clear confident speech.
Children will also visit excursions, take part in entertaining games, relax at a disco, and perform a performance.
AMAkids Summer Day Camp
Age: 6-13 years old
Format: city camp
At the summer day camp in Moscow in 2023, AMAkids will provide children with daily lessons in writing, reading, and mathematics. If you wish, you can do English, speed reading, memory or mental arithmetic.
The children will practice modeling and decoupage, perform theatrical scenes, put on physical and chemical experiments.
During the breaks, sports minutes, walks, game libraries, themed quests and quizzes are planned.
Bunny Hop Children’s Day Camp
Age: 5-17 years old
Format: city club
At the Bunny Hop children’s day camp, young adventurers learn a stunt scooter, skateboard and longboard, roller skates and a bmx stunt bike.
Suitable for all levels of riding. In training, beginners and guys with experience work out separately, but they walk and play all together. In addition to classes, children are waiting for meals, games and city walks.
Sky Trampoline Center
Age: 6-14 years old
Format: city camp
Day camp for children in Moscow from the Nebo trampoline center offers shifts on a variety of topics – from talent shows to choosing a profession. Athletics and acrobatics training, publishing a newspaper and writing a business plan, learning tricks and acting, time travel and encounters with dinosaurs: there are plenty to choose from.
Trampolining, rock climbing, action games and gladiator fights are also expected. Participants will visit scientific and creative MCs, practice cooking, and enjoy picnics.
English Summer Career Camp
Age: 12–16 years old
Format: city camp
In the English-career-guidance camp, teenagers will test themselves in different professions, improve their soft skills, learn how to make business presentations and make decisions.
Shifts at a day camp for teenagers in Moscow are thematic: ecology and culture, PR and social networks, media and education, science and cooking.
The child will plunge into the language environment, as daily communication in English is expected. Schoolchildren will attend master classes, get acquainted with representatives of professions, go in for sports in picturesque parks.
Colibri Camp
Age: 7-12 years old
Format: children’s city club
ColibriCamp announced a rich program for the summer. The guys will comprehend the art of graffiti and street art, perform street dances, learn modern trends in drawing, visit creative MCs.
Participants will master Morse code and practice power tricks, improve communication skills and draw sketches, learn to express emotions through dance and play board games, participate in flash mobs and quests.
Day Camp CTRL PLAY Camp
Age: 10-16 years old
Format: day camp
At CTRL PLAY Camp, the child will learn acting skills, understand gaming and eSports, learn about digital professions and prove himself in online games. Also according to the plan – MK, games, fitness, sports.
The camp will appeal to young bloggers, streamers and game fans: there is a computer class with gaming computers. A psychologist works with children.
Summer City Club “Summer of Victories”
Age: 8–13 years old
Format: city summer club
In the Summer of Victory club, children and teenagers have an exciting time: attend quests and excursions, participate in sports games and creative festivals, meet with representatives of professions. You can choose a shift according to your interests: media, creativity, technology.
On the territory there is a cinema and a concert hall, a rope town and a summer stage, lecture halls and platforms with military equipment.
Day camp in Moscow “City holidays”
Age: 7-13 years old
Format: city camp
In a day camp in Moscow for schoolchildren, children practice English, learn to speak publicly, dance and blog. MK and excursions, competitions and promenades, competitions and adventure quests, entertainment are planned – a trampoline, a climbing wall, laser tag.
Schoolchildren will be engaged in painting and interior design, master oratory and information literacy, learn the basics of marketing and sales, take part in photo shoots and intellectual games. At the end of the week of “City Holidays” – a reporting concert.
Children’s sports club FARTEAM
Age: 4–12 years old
Format: day club
The FARTEAM Children’s Sports Club invites schoolchildren to improve their health, broaden their horizons, acquire combat and communication skills.
Children will learn orienteering, master martial arts, practice yoga in hammocks, get acquainted with the basics of kickboxing, learn to dance hip-hop.
Summer city camp “Makarun”
Age: 6–13 years old
Format: city camp
At the summer day camp in Moscow in 2023, children develop soft skills, have fun with educational games, engage in creative workshops, conduct scientific experiments. The program includes 4 creative activities every day: the child learns new things and broadens his horizons.
Changes in “Makarun” are thematic: sports, space, fantasy, adventure. The participant will try himself as a blogger, attend a jousting tournament, fight evil and discover a wonder of the world.
Happy Travel Club
Age: 6–12 years old
Format: day camp
City day camp in Moscow “Fun Travel Club” will allow children to go on exciting journeys around their native country, city, district. Holidays will help to expand the horizons of the child, find new friends and feel the desire to learn foreign languages.
Participants will find language classes and musical flash mobs, performances and parties, quests and filming of copyright films.
Children will take part in creative MC and research laboratories, play active and educational games.
Chulanchik Educational Center
Age: 6–12 years old
Format: day camp
During week-long shifts of summer city day camp in Moscow from the Chulanchik educational center, children go on scientific expeditions and explore nature, become financial experts and plan their future business, perform on stage and learn how to cook.
Children set up tents and experiment with plants, practice sword fighting and conquer deserts, delve into investment and learn to avoid fraud, comprehend circus gymnastics and consider table etiquette.
Holidays from the club “Chalet”
Age: 7-14 years old
Format: day club
During the holidays from the club “Chalet”, schoolchildren are engaged in creativity, sports, dancing and English. The guys go for walks and practice eco-hiking, participate in quests and intellectual quizzes, arrange fairs and picnics.
Among 60 workshops, children choose what they like: carpentry or cooking, fluid art or acrylic painting, felting from wool or beading, candle making or soap making. Twice per shift, creative classes are held in English.
Theatrical holidays at Skazkadarium
Age: 6-12 years old
Format: day camp
During the theatrical holidays at the Skazkadarium, children explore the types and specifics of theaters, make costumes and props, learn how to apply makeup and perform on the stage.
The program includes educational meetings and active games, lessons in acting and public speaking, teaching plasticity and stage movements. In the final, the participants will put on a performance.
Sciencely Summer Laboratories
Age: 7–15 years old
Format: city laboratories
In the Sciencely summer laboratories from the ZIL cultural center, the child will create a model of his own ecosystem, see himself as a traumatologist, delve into the nuances of working in a chemical laboratory, explore social mechanisms, get acquainted with the natural sciences.
Schoolchildren will take tests, participate in educational and outdoor games, go on quests and promenades.
Summer schools and day camps for children in Moscow in 2023 are a compromise between countryside or seaside vacations and spending time with a smartphone in your hands in your own room. Sign up your child for developmental classes – give him a summer full of emotions, amazing discoveries and new acquaintances.
Summer camps at the Gnome’s House and KIT Author’s School.
Summer programs Gnome houses and schools KIT
We invite you to spend the summer in the city with benefit in a friendly company!
Give your child a magical summer!
On this page you can find out about all our summer programs. We are currently recruiting for August 2023.
Summer shifts (2): August 21-25 and August 28-31.
For more information, prices and availability see the full camp pages below.
For children 4-6 years old
Detailed information on a separate page
Family co-working Gnoma’s House – Family group “Lynx” 4-6 years old It is cozy and interesting for children and parents here. Classes are held from 11:00 to 17:00 (6 hours) with a walk. We have been working since August 21!
For children 5-7 years old
City camp for future first-graders.
Summer program at KIT for children aged 5-7 in August. Suitable for soft adaptation to school.
For children 7-11 years old
City summer camp Minecraft.
The camp for children 7-12 years old will be held from August 21 to 25 in the format of immersion in the world of programming and robotics.
Harry Potter City Camp in England.
City camp – immersion in the world of your favorite hero will allow the child to speak English.
For children aged 10-15
Summer program “Drones” for children aged 10-15.
Quadcopter manufacturing and piloting camp will be held on August 28-31 at KIT school..
Out of town, family
Engineering Country Camp KIT from 21 to 25 August 2023.
We invite you to take part in a family camp and for five days to become part of the research institute. KIT in the Leningrad region.
Where are the city’s summer programs?
The camps take place in the Gnoma House family coworking and KIT school in the very center of St. Petersburg.
4419 Teravista Club Dr. Round Rock, TX 78665 512-704-0500 Website | Directory | About
Union Hill
Elementary School
1511 Gulf Way Round Rock, TX 78665 512-424-8700 Website | Directory | About
Voigt Arts
Integration Academy
1201 Cushing Dr. Round Rock, TX 78664 512-428-7500 Website | Directory | About
Wells Branch Arts
Integration Academy
14650 Merriltown Dr. Austin, TX 78728 512-428-3400 Website | Directory | About
School of Rock – Official website of the School of Rock in St. Petersburg
School of Rock
Seven branches in St. Petersburg
11 years of successful work | 24 halls | 2 rehearsals | studio | concert club
School of Rock South
m.
metro station Ozerki Esenina, 1/1
School of Rock Center
metro station Vosstaniya Ligovsky, 21B
School of Rock Outbuilding
m. Chernyshevskaya
School of Rock Vaska
m. Vasileostrovskaya
School of Rock Birzhevaya
Sportivnaya metro station Birzhevaya line V.O., 10
Alex Sigmer’s workshop
metro station Baltiyskaya
UNIQUE
Unique services
Available to all students of the School of Rock
Rehearsals
The School of Rock has more than 20 halls in all branches. When the hall is free, you can rehearse absolutely free. Just call your administrator.
Studio recording
We have two partner recording studios. Any student of the School of Rock can record his track at our studio after a year of classes, or earlier on the recommendation of the Mentor.
Creation of groups
More than 500 people study at the School of Rock. We have a specialist who will help create a real musical group.
Artistic director
Do you have or will you have your own group? We will provide you with an artistic director for rehearsals absolutely free of charge.
Workshops
We regularly hold master classes and open lessons. By tradition, for students of the School of Rock, admission to these events is free.
Competitions
Our students take part in School of Rock competitions, battles of vocalists, drummers or guitarists, in which they can win valuable prizes, for example, a video clip.
Concerts
Regular concert practice (at least once every two weeks) at the School of Rock. At the best concert venues in St. Petersburg and at the largest festivals.
Producer
School of Rock can help you put together a band, we will provide you with a place for rehearsals, record at the studio, shoot a video and organize a concert.
Do you want to perform at the Live festival next summer?
On the same stage with such bands as: AnimalJaz, Pilot, Dolphin, Kirpichi, NoizeMC, Affinage, Curara, 7B, Stigmata and many others.
School of Rock is not a movie:
Over eleven years we have achieved amazing results: more than 5 branches in different districts of the Northern capital, specialized workshops, a recording studio, rehearsal rooms, more than 25 equipped halls for music lessons, our own concert club in the city center, an annual festival, battles of vocalists and drummers, professional mentors, sensitive administrators, a large art department , which includes the position of a bandmaker (a specialist in creating musical groups) and a team of artistic directors – all this ensures the best result, regardless of your goal: hobby or professional growth.
What inspires us:
Our main difference and pride in working with students are the goals that we set when we understand the true reason why this or that musician came to us.
For those who have chosen music as a hobby, we select a training program based on the student’s desired tempo, level of initial preparation, and create the most comfortable conditions for our ward to enjoy the process, relax after a hard day’s work and gradually improve their voice or instrument skills. We are pleased to see the result of our work: the student becomes more self-confident, enjoys small victories and gets real pleasure from his new hobby – making music.
For those who set themselves great goals, want to go on stage, record their first track or even an entire video clip, the School of Rock provides a full staff of professionals and several targeted events that gradually prepare the student for his future accomplishments. This includes concert practices twice a month on the stage of a real concert club, during which work is being worked out on stage, with the public, with a sound engineer. At these events, we learn to hear ourselves on stage, conduct a sound check, work with professional stage equipment and choose our image. This includes free rehearsals in the halls of the School of Rock, and assistance in creating your own musical band, and artistic directors, and more than 10 major events annually. We are looking forward to our regular Festivals, where each guest sees the result of our work – we thank each of our students for the opportunity to see him on stage, hear his newly recorded tracks, watch the presentation of a new video. It is this feeling of gratitude that inspires us (the whole large team of the School of Rock) to work daily with everyone who has expressed a desire to grow in their improvement, to look for new ways for development, to open new opportunities for our students!
What else is unique about the School of Rock?
Over the years, we have made a lot of trial and error and came up with the ideal formula for working with students: – We eliminated all subscriptions in order to focus solely on the process. You get one lesson and already become our student. No need to think about the validity period of the subscription, no need to buy “strictly 4 lessons per month.” Attend the School of Rock at your own pace: once a month or three times a week – think about creativity and process, not about payment and deadlines. – We refused additional fees for such basic services for a beginner musician as: rehearsals, studio recording, concert practices, bandmaker, artistic director. All these bonuses are free as long as you have paid for only one next lesson. – We do not charge organizational fees from students for performing at School of Rock events – at small parties or large festivals. This is the base. This is not discussed. The artist does not pay for his performance. — We went further and made all our concerts free of charge for the guests of our students — solely so that the student of the School of Rock could not think about how to invite more friends to his first performance.
Then, think about how much of your household income you can spare for child care. When you get to crunching the numbers, you might find you have more available in your budget than you initially thought. Plus, tax credits, tuition subsidies, and more can help you find an affordable daycare provider.
Use a combination of these strategies — some potentially obvious, others more creative — to find a high-quality and affordable daycare for your child. And, as always, keep waitlists in mind and start your search as early as possible.
Ask Around
The first thing you should do is simply ask around your community. The best recommendations often come from people you know. Friends, family members, coworkers, neighbors, and even that friendly clerk at the grocery store can point you in the right direction.
Get a Subsidy
You might qualify for a child care subsidy. Each year, federal, state, and even local authorities allocate a certain amount of funds to help families with child care expenses. Qualification requirements vary by state, so be sure to check yours.
Apply for Assistance
Child care assistance — similar to a subsidy — is another state-run program you might qualify for. Most states provide financial assistance for child care to low-income families. With child care assistance, you’ll typically pay a portion of the expenses, while the program pays for the rest.
Start a DCFSA
Some employers offer a Dependent Care Flexible Spending Account (DCFSA), which allows you to contribute part of your pre-tax income to an account used to pay for child care expenses. And this has an added bonus of lowering your tax liability! Keep in mind that a DCFSA must be used to pay for work-related child care expenses — it can’t be used for child care provided outside of your work schedule.
Take Advantage of a Tax Credit
When tax season comes around, you might be able to cash in on the Child and Dependent Care Credit. It’s income-based, so the lower your income, the higher the credit will be.
Plus, your tax liability might get reduced so much that you end up with a refund!
However, note that you can’t open or fund a DCFSA and use the child care tax credit in the same tax year, so be strategic.
Ask About Rates and Discounts
Your child’s daycare center or potential future center might offer sibling discounts or discounts for paying the tuition in full, up front. They might also offer discounts for veterans, active-duty military service members, teachers, first responders, and more. Special rates and discounts can help you find a much more affordable daycare.
Explore Your Benefits
Take a look at the child care benefits your employer offers and/or talk to an HR rep at work to see if there’s anything your company can do to help with child care costs. Some employers offer subsidized child care, affordable daycare in on-site or near-site centers, nanny placement, and more.
Do a Daycare Comparison
Are you looking at more than one center in your area? Affordability shouldn’t be the only factor — you also want to be sure the daycare you choose meets your child’s needs, makes your family feel comfortable, and more. Tour different centers to find an affordable daycare that’s high-quality, too.
Full Day Daycare and Childcare rates/prices in Florence for infants
I have been calling a handful of childcare/daycare prices/rates for my 1 year old since May 2017. I think the rates are safe to apply for any child between the ages of 3 months – before kindergarten (between 4 or 5 years old). This is for full day care. To save you some trouble, here are my findings.
Saint Paul United Methodist Church – Their all day care is between 6:45am – 6pm and the cost is $125 per week so that equates to about $500 per month, per child. This includes breakfast, lunch and all snacks. (843) 669-3134
Central United Methodist Church Preschool – Edit for 2018: Central United Methodist Preschool’s regular program is from 9AM – Noon and you can extend the care to 2:30pm as part of their lunch brunch program and until 4:30PM for another additional cost. Please call them to double check if anything has changed. Their program gets full very quickly! This is maybe not the best place for full time day care if you work beyond 4pm. La Petite Academy – Their all day childcare is from 6AM – 6PM with breakfast, morning snack, lunch, and afternoon snack included. This is a chain and they are located all over the US. They follow a great preschool structure that’s appropriate by age and the chain itself has been around for decades. They also provide an after school program for kids in elementary school. The quote I was given was $154 per week for full time care for my little ones for Mon-Fri. This rate might have increased a bit. They are located in West Florence. Address: 3501 Pine Needles Rd, Florence, SC 29501 Tel: (843) 662-9808. Price is around $616 a month.
South Florence Baptist Daycare – Their all day care is from 6:30am – 6pm and cost is $111 per week. It is for ages 6 weeks old – 4 years old. They have individual classrooms for each age level and offer the A-Beka Christian Curriculum. They provide a hot breakfast, lunch, and snacks – all included in your child’s tuition cost. They also use separate age-specific fenced playgrounds.
Charlie Brown Day Care – Their all day care is $125 a week so that is about $500 a month. (843) 665-1226. They are the closest to FDTC (about 10 min) in the group of daycares that I researched. Address: 1800 Gregg Ave., Florence, SC 29501.
Sunshine House – Their full time care is $155 a week, so that is about $620 a month. Address: 2009 Second Loop Rd., Florence, SC 29501. Meals and snacks are all included.
First Presbyterian Church Child Development Center – From 7am – 6pm year round, the child development center provides all day care for $135 a week, which is about $540 a month. Mid-morning snacks, lunches and afternoon snacks are included. It is for ages 6 weeks – 4k. Address: 700 Park Ave., Florence, SC 29501 Immanuel Baptist Church Child Care – Their full time care is $122 a week from 7am – 6pm, which is approximately $488 per month. Address: 306 Cherokee Rd., Florence, SC 29501 Tele: (843) 665-9004
I will update this page with more details as I continue my search for the right daycare for my child. I hope this is helpful! Note that prices may have increased since I’ve called these places. Please note that each month has more than 4 weeks but I used 4 weeks as my calculation to compare the rates with each other.
ZhK Polyarnaya 25, prices for apartments in the new building Polyarnaya 25 on the official website of PIK 5, available
Studio
1
2
3+
from
6 547 860
to
900 06 27 072 670
225 offers
About the project
The residential quarter “Polyarnaya 25” is located in the north of Moscow. Babushkinskaya metro station is 15 minutes away by public transport or by electric scooter — there are four scooter parking lots next to the project. The project includes ten residential buildings, two kindergartens, a school, underground and multi-level parking lots.
This is a cozy residential quarter, where there is everything for a comfortable life. From each house there is an exit to a closed courtyard-park, where cars do not drive and random passers-by do not walk. This is a peaceful place to relax, read a book and practice yoga. There are sports grounds with exercise machines in the yard – it is convenient to do exercises in the fresh air right next to the house. And for children, we will build playgrounds from natural and safe materials.
Shops, cafes and other services will open on the first floors. To go grocery shopping, buy a coffee or take a pizza to go, it will be enough to go down the elevator.
From Polyarnaya 25 you can walk to the Yauza park, the longest in Europe, in half an hour. And on a scooter to the park – only 12 minutes. There are walking and bicycle paths, playgrounds, playgrounds, picnic areas and a dog training area. The park has unusual sports facilities, such as a skate park and a go-kart track. And in 15 minutes by car there is a picturesque estate Sviblovo.
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Project features The height of the houses in Polyarnaya 25 and the distance between them are chosen so that there is a lot of sunlight in the apartments and yards. Shops and cafes are located on the ground floors.
There is a lot of greenery in the park yards, there are benches, tables and playgrounds. For cars, there are two multi-level above-ground parking lots.
Polyarnaya 25 will have two kindergartens, one of which is already working for 300 kids, and a school with an IT lab.
Life in Polyarnaya 25
Everything is nearby: there are shops, shopping centers, the Ladoga cinema and the Mechta Ice Palace around Polyarnaya 25. On foot you can walk to a landscaped park near the Chermyanka River – this is a great place for outdoor recreation. There are also four parking lots for electric scooters – they can quickly get to the metro, the Yauza park or the Globus hypermarket.
Layouts
Polar 25 offers a wide range of layouts: from compact studios to apartments for large families. You can buy an apartment with a finished finish – and immediately move. 9View 4 offers
Tours
Visit the project, get to know our building standards and imagine your life in the new area.
Sign up for a tour
You can choose the date and time, the tour lasts about an hour.
You will be met by a guide
Will show you courtyards, children’s and sports grounds, an apartment with decoration and furniture.
Construction progress
Nearest settlement: August 15, 2023, Building 3
Watch the construction of live
Video review
Filmed on July 12, 2023
900 06
In addition to apartments
281 premises leftStorage premises
Premises with an area of 72 m²Commercial real estate
Project news
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May 25, 2023
Start of sales of pantries in building 2. 1
On May 24, sales of pantries with finishing in building 2.1 of the Polyarnaya 25 project began.
May 17, 2023
A kindergarten for 220 children will appear in Polyarnaya 25
The construction of a kindergarten for 220 children has begun in the residential area of Polyarnaya 25.
April 28, 2023
Subscribe to the auction for the sale of storerooms in the Polyarnaya 25 project
On May 5, the sale of storerooms in the Polyarnaya 25 project will begin.
Developer documentation
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from 9 206 030 ₽
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from 7 412 750 ₽
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My district. Biryulyovo East and West, Moskvorechye-Saburovo, Tsaritsyno
My district. Biryulyovo East and West, Moskvorechye-Saburovo, Tsaritsyno
Four districts in the south that became part of Moscow in 1960th year. Industrial, with a rich history and its own identity.
Home for over 450,000 Muscovites. Improving their quality of life is the main goal of the development programs carried out in these areas over the past decade.
* * * *
Transport
For many years, the main problem of Biryulyovo East and West, Moskvorechye-Saburov and Tsaritsyn was the lack of transport links. And not only with the city center, but also among themselves.
To improve the situation, we have implemented several major projects.
We built overpass across the Paveletsky direction of Moscow Railways , connecting streets of Podolsky Kursantov and Elevatornaya . But in fact, it connected East and West Biryulyovo.
The overpass became the key structure of the new highway Elevatornaya Street – Podolskikh Kursantov Street – Krasny Mayak Street , which connected Lipetskaya Street with Varshavskoye Highway and became an alternate for Moscow Ring Road in the southern sector of the city.
Previously, in order to get from one area to another, drivers had to go to the Moscow Ring Road, making a detour through traffic jams 5-7 km long. Thanks to the new understudy, the travel time between neighboring areas has been reduced by 3-4 times.
At Lipetskaya Street – the main thoroughfare of Biryulyovo Vostochny – a 600-meter flyover of direct running was opened. Side passages were created along it for a comfortable exit to Lipetskaya Street from Elevatornaya and 6th Radialnaya Streets. U-turns and exits were organized in the underpass space.
The construction of the overpass increased the capacity of Lipetskaya Street by 25-30%, thus reducing the intensity of traffic congestion and simplifying the exit from Moscow to the Don federal highway.
In the area of st. Lipetskaya, 34/25, the noise barrier was updated – instead of old panels, modern ones with improved sound insulation were installed.
Podolskikh Kadsantov Street was extended to MKAD with a modern interchange. Thus, residents of Biryulyovo Zapadny received an additional entrance/exit to the Moscow Ring Road.
Reconstructed Kashirskoe shosse from MKAD to Varshavskoe shosse.
Three more large projects are underway, which will radically improve the traffic situation in the south of the city. Two of them are chord highways that form a new transport frame of the capital.
This is Southern Rocade , already built from MKAD to Proletarsky Prospekt.
This is Moscow high-speed diameter – we plan to complete the construction of the southern direction this year.
The opening of the Southern Rokada and the southern direction of the MSD will provide residents of Biryulyovo, Moskvorechye-Saburov and Tsaritsyn with many new – fast and convenient – options for traveling around the city. The most important effect is that the metropolis will become closer.
Finally, the third large-scale project that is currently underway is the reconstruction of interchange at the intersection of Lipetskaya Street and MKAD . The most complicated transport hub – in total it is planned to build almost 19 km of roads, including 8 artificial structures.
In January of this year, the first section was opened – the outer side of the Moscow Ring Road with an exit to the M-4 highway. In general, we plan to commission the interchange in 2024. As a result, traffic will be improved on one of the busiest sections of the Moscow Ring Road, as well as in Biryulyovo and other adjacent areas.
Rail transport is actively developing.
On the basis of the Kursk direction of the Moscow Railway, traffic was launched along MCD-2 . Passengers are accepted by stations Moskvorechye , Tsaritsyno , Pokrovskoe , Krasny Stro At rush hour, new, comfortable surface metro trains run every 5-7 minutes.
This spring, Big Circle Line of the metro was fully launched. It included stations “ Kashirskaya ” and “ Varshavskaya “, previously serving the Kakhovskaya branch. This was preceded by their reconstruction.
Specialists preserved the historical appearance of the stations as much as possible, while modernizing the infrastructure, replacing utilities, rails, wall cladding and platforms. In fact, the stations were dismantled and reassembled, completely updating the main structures and equipment, taking into account advanced engineering technologies.
“ Kashirskaya “,
“ Warsaw “.
Territories adjacent to the stations have been landscaped – it is convenient to go to the metro and just take a walk.
Our plans include the construction of Biryulyovskaya metro line, which will stretch south from the former ZIL industrial area. The prospective radius will be connected by interchanges with BKL, MCC, Zamoskvoretskaya and Troitskaya metro lines.
29 new urban land transport routes serve to develop inter-district transport links. For the convenience of passengers, 165 modern stopping pavilions have been installed.
Fans of cycling actively use the bicycle infrastructure. They have 48 car parks and 27 two-wheeler rental stations.
* * * *
Landscaping
Tidying up existing parks and creating new outdoor recreation areas is the task of creating a quality public space. In the south, it is being successfully solved.
Landscaping of Orchard was completed, where there is more greenery, places for active and quiet recreation.
Skate park, pump track and other activities attract children and youth at park e Pines . There is something to admire, fans of topiary art.
Updated Fruit Park – bright and cozy.
Several recreation areas near the water have been landscaped.
Chertanovka river valley.
Square at Bulatnikovskaya street .
Landscaped area around Korneevsky ponds .
Upper and Lower Biryulevsky Ponds .
New pedestrian zones have been equipped – along Kashirskoye Highway from 51, building 5 to 59, building 2,
from st. Zagoryevskaya to the projected passage No. 6133 .
Among the well-maintained iconic objects is a recreation area at Borisov Ponds , landscaped areas along Kavkazsky boulevard from the street. Bekhterev to st. Kantemirovskaya, between Shipilov proezd and Kashirskoe highway .
We pay great attention to the development of Biryulevsky arboretum . A unique park-nursery was established in 1938 to select tree species most resistant to the Moscow climate. It was severely damaged by freezing rain in 2010. Over the past decade, much has been done to restore plantings and expand the collection.
In addition, the reconstruction of the ponds of the arboretum, the construction of the amphitheater and the embankments of the Biryulevsky Creek were completed.
This year we took on a few more iconic objects. Among them – square near DK “ Moskvorechye ” and park named after. Herzen .
* * * *
Social infrastructure
The educational system was replenished with several new buildings, which have all the conditions for study and education, communication and recreation, creative and sports activities.
Kindergartens – at st. Yagodnaya, 14, building 1 ,
Kashirskoye sh., 38, building 2.
School on the street. Mikhnevskaya , 8, building 2.
Annex to the school in Vostryakovsky pr.
In addition, in Moskvorechye-Saburovo, construction was completed two buildings 0162 objects under the program to stimulate the creation of places of employment. The investor built a school for 900 students and a kindergarten for 160 children.
School.
Kindergarten.
Construction is underway kindergarten on the street. 6th Radial, vl.7.
In the south of the capital there is a traditionally strong system of additional creative education for young Muscovites. And thanks to the project “Art for Children”, she received a new impetus for development.
Among the more than 150 buildings of art schools renovated in the city – Det Music School No. Elevatornaya, 6/4,
Children’s Music School No. 4 on the street. Bekhtereva, 27,
Children’s Art School Kantemirovskaya, 15/2,
Children’s Art School. S.T. Richter on Kashirskoe sh., 42, building 3
and st. Kantemirovskaya, 20, building 5.
Thanks to the modernization of the creative education system, the competition at Moscow art schools has doubled.
This year we are completing a large-scale program of comprehensive reconstruction of the outpatient department. Modernization covers 201 polyclinics – almost half of the outpatient fund of the capital.
Works completed in 92 buildings, which are reopened to receive patients.
Among them, two clinics in these areas – branch No. 1 of polyclinic No. 52 (Ryazhskaya St., 13 ) ,
branch No. 2 of the children’s polyclinic No. 23 (St. Timurovskaya, 3) .
Work continues in branch No. 2 ( Bulatnikovsky pr. 163 , branch No. 1 children’s clinic nicks No. 98 ( Bulatnikovsky pr -d, 16A) . As well as branch No. 3 of polyclinic No. 210 (Koshkina street, 21) and the head building of this clinic, which also houses children’s clinic No. 145 (Kashirskoye sh., 57, building 1) .
ambulance substation was built for 20 parking spaces on the street. Promyshlennaya, 12, building 1.
Construction of flagship center of the State Clinical Hospital im. V.M. Buyanova on Baku street. It is designed to provide patients with emergency medical care according to a new standard, which is based on unified medical algorithms, highly professional doctors, the most modern equipment, advanced technologies, and care for patients and their loved ones. The flagship center will use the Triage digital patient assessment system, introduce the doctor-to-patient principle, and equip high-tech operating rooms.
The construction of children’s polyclinic with a trauma center on the street is being completed. Lebedyanskaya, vl. 33 and of the children’s and adult polyclinic on 6th Radialnaya St., vl. 7, room 36.
Moscow Longevity Center on Medynskaya street, 11A is open for residents of the older generation. People come here to do interesting things, discover something new and, of course, communicate with like-minded people.
The same club space will be created on the street. Kantemirovskaya, 9.
Overhaul of the Territorial center of social services Tsaritsynsky .1) .
We are implementing many projects to improve the quality of social services for Muscovites who need special care from the city. One of them is “City boarding houses of a new type”.
In place of traditional closed neuropsychiatric boarding schools, we are creating open and friendly social homes, in which adults with mental disabilities get much more opportunities for an interesting and meaningful life, including communication with the outside world, creative activities and much more.
An example of such a transformation is two buildings in С social om house e « Moscow speech 90 163 » in the Moskvorechye-Saburovo area. Cozy living rooms, studios and workshops, medical units, accessible environment.
As part of the modernization of the sports infrastructure, the facade of the Moscow Complex Sports School of the Olympic Reserve was overhauled South
a sports complex with tennis courts on 6th Radialnaya Street was built from lightweight structures.
An artificial ice skating rink was opened at the address: Kashirskoye shosse, 76, building 4. Nearby there is a workout area with simulators for all muscle groups.
This year it is planned to complete the repair of sports facilities Mos Moscow State University of Sports and Tourism 162 Chertanovo
Construction in progress 4 FOKov on the street. Medynskaya, vl.6, building 1; st. Bulatnikovskaya, vl.2; st. Lipetsk, industrial zone “Lenino”; Kashirskoye highway, 51, building 1.
Multifunctional sports complex will be built on the street. Moskvorechye, 4, building 1 and reconstructed stadium “ Ogonyok ” on the street. Sportivnaya, d.2.
Public centers created during the reconstruction of former cinemas have become new points of attraction for residents. This is “ Elbrus ” on Kavkazsky Boulevard,
“ Biryusinka ” on Bulatnikovskaya street.
The former cinemas “ Kerch ” on Biryulevskaya street and “ Mechta ” on Kashirskoye highway.
Residents liked fairgrounds .
St. Moskvorechye, vl.14 .
Proletarsky Ave, vl.24.
St. Lipetskaya, 48.
Bulatnikovsky
* * * *
Renovation
The Renovation Program included 184 houses in which 42,000 Muscovites live.
In 2019, the first new settlers began to move to a beautiful and comfortable new building at st. Bori sovskie prudy, 7, building 2 .
Today 9 more new houses are being settled. Among the addresses –
st. Zagoryevskaya , 2, building 1 ,
Bulatnikovsky Ave., 16B ,
Kharkivsky pr. , 1/1, k . 1,2,3 ,
Kantemirovskaya st., 27A ,
Kaspiyskaya st., 28/4 ,
Kantemirovskaya st., 39A ,
Kavkazsky Boulevard, 40 ,
st. Bekhtereva, 3A ,
st. Yerevanskaya, 8 .
* * * *
LCD “Tsaritsyno”
This year, the construction of the Tsaritsyno residential complex, the largest problematic facility in Moscow, was completed: 14 buildings with a total area of about 650 thousand square meters. meters.
The rights of about 5 thousand defrauded equity holders have been restored. Now they are receiving the keys to the apartments in the completed buildings. At the same time, social infrastructure is being built here.
Housing 1.
Case 2.
Housing 5.2.
Housing 27 .
Housing 28/29 .
* * * *
Reorganization of former industrial zones
The area near the intersection of Moskvorechye Street and Proletarsky Prospekt is subject to comprehensive development.
Now there are warehouses, car services and parking. Instead, it is planned to build about 168 thousand square meters. m of modern residential development – the houses will be transferred for settlement under the Renovation Program. A new kindergarten, school, shops, cafes and other facilities needed in everyday life will also open on the site.
The implementation of the project will give the city almost 370 new jobs.
Another 430 jobs will appear in the shopping center, which is being built in Biryulyovo Vostochny on Elevatornaya Street under the program to stimulate the creation of work places.
Overview
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School Overview
Student Body
Tuition and Acceptance Rate
School Notes
At Christ Church Parish Day School each child actively and
creatively participates in their day, thus laying the foundation
for the creative and critical thinking process so essential in
today’s world. With acceptance for individuality and mutual trust,
our teachers help each child develop the necessary self confidence
so that he/she may explore and expand her world. Our carefully
planned program allows the children to choose from a wide variety
of activities and to progress at their own pace. As such, the Day
School promotes a harmonious and cooperative relationship between
the two institutions. The Day School embraces the value of
fostering Christian principles, and we attempt to model these
behaviors on a daily basis.
Source: National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)
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17 CROOKED LN MANCHESTER, MA
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The Daily Walk
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Best Sample Daycare Schedule for Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers
Creating a daily daycare schedule is no small feat. As a daycare owner or childcare director, your day-to-day can be hectic. Daily routines are the key to maintaining order. This goes for daycare staff, children, and even families.
In this guide, we’ll share the basics to help you create a daily schedule for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers that perfectly balances structure and flexibility.
The basics of a daily daycare schedule
Building a daycare schedule can be a challenge. You’ll need to factor in available resources, licensing requirements, developmental needs, and space constraints. While every childcare provider has different rules and program offerings, there are some general guidelines to follow when building a daycare schedule. Regardless of age group, your daily schedule must incorporate ways to meet all of your children’s developmental milestones while ensuring the safety and well-being of your children and your staff.
There are four key areas to consider as you craft a schedule that works for your center.
1. Licensing requirements
Adhere to your state’s daycare and childcare licensing regulations when creating a schedule for your center. These vary depending on your location and will provide you with a framework to start from. Are you required to provide 30 minutes of daily exercise for your three-year-olds? What are the rules regarding staff ratios for each age group at your daycare? Do you need to document health checks for your infants every morning? Are there regulations on cleaning tasks during the day? Do your due diligence to ensure that you build both the required and the recommended components into your daycare schedule template.
2. Developmental needs
Consider that 80% of brain development happens in the first three years of life. More than 1 million neural connections are formed every second during these years. Not to mention the rapid physical development that occurs during this stage of childhood. The good news is that there are easy-to-follow recommended guidelines for meeting the daily needs of each age group, whether it’s hours of exercise per day or types of play activities. As such, all daily daycare schedules should be built to support each age group’s developmental milestones and prepare each child for the next developmental stage and classroom. Your schedule will contain blocks of time dedicated to supporting physical, social, and cognitive growth through structured routines and activities. It will also consider the necessary physical needs of each age group, such as naps, feedings/meals, and diapering/potty training.
3. Facility logistics
Depending on your daycare facility and available resources, daily scheduling can become a puzzle to piece together. Different age groups may need to use your outdoor facilities at staggered times. If you have a multipurpose room for special events or guest activities, you’ll need to work this space’s availability into your daycare schedule template. If the toddlers and preschoolers share a wall between their rooms, you may want to schedule some quiet activities while the toddlers are having their nap. If you offer flexible options, such as part-time mornings or afternoon schedules, you may have programs that share a room, so you’ll need to build transition time into your daily schedule.
4. Staff logistics
Another building block of your daily daycare schedule will be staffing needs. Your childcare staff will need regular breaks throughout their day. Will you schedule a floating staff member to provide these breaks throughout the day? Or will these be built into each classroom’s daily schedule, depending on the activity block? Staff will also need time to perform all other duties that don’t involve direct supervision in their rooms, from prep time and cleaning to record-keeping and assessments. Another common practice is consolidating classrooms at the end of the day as children are picked up at different times. This helps to maintain ratios while keeping staffing costs down. Some daycare centers plan to pull a teacher in the afternoon as students leave to perform non-supervisory administrative or cleaning duties. For example, you may want to schedule outdoor time at the end of the day for toddlers and preschoolers so that the groups can be combined as needed depending on the ratios each day.
Source
Creating daily lesson plans will help you organize and stick to your daycare schedule. Download our free daily lesson plan template and customize to suit your teaching style and children’s needs.
Infant schedule
The infant daycare schedule is typically designed to meet the needs of children between the ages of six weeks to 18 months (or when they begin walking). Building opportunities to engage with infants one-on-one will help encourage their progress on all developmental milestones.
To inform your schedule, you’ll need an understanding of benchmark behaviors and abilities in this age group.
Developmental milestones for four-month-olds
Reaching for toys
Holding up their heads unsupported
Starting to roll over
Recognizing faces
Returning smiles
Imitating facial expressions
Babbling and imitating sounds
Developmental milestones for nine-month-olds
Sitting without support
Pulling themselves up to stand
Starting to crawl
Playing “peek-a-boo”
Showing preferences for favorite toys
Exhibiting the beginnings of separation anxiety
Understanding “no”
Copying sounds/gestures
Developmental milestones for infants one year to 18 months old
Speaking a few words
Repeating words/trying to say words
Waving goodbye
Working at standing/walking
Banging objects together
Drinking from a cup
Crying when a parent leaves
Responding to simple requests
Infant schedule guidelines
Infants need as much interaction as possible as they are learning about the world around them. They also need plenty of exercise—even newborns! The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends several minutes of tummy time a day from when they come home from the hospital.
Daily schedules for infants should contain a lot of flexibility and variation since you’ll likely deal with a range of needs throughout the day. Infant programs typically have a higher staff-to-child ratio to handle all of the physical tasks that accompany caring for a group of infants. You may also face some stringent licensing guidelines around documentation of naps, feedings, or diapering, so these activities may need more thorough planning than is provided in our sample below.
Many centers opt not to post daily schedules for infants, given how varied the needs are and how rapidly they are changing. However, it is still best practice to have a guideline to work from to ensure they are getting the support and interaction they need to grow and learn.
Sample infant daycare schedule
8:00am – 9:00am
Drop-off + bottles/breakfast
9:00am – 9:30am
Diapers
9:30am – 10:00am
Circle time (books + songs + puppets/finger plays)
10:00am – 10:15am
Bottles/morning snack
10:15am – 10:30am
Diapers/clean up
10:30am – 11:30am
Naptime
11:30am – 12:00pm
Bottles/lunch
12:00pm – 12:30pm
Story time (books + songs)
12:30pm – 1:30pm
Outside play/gross motor time
1:30pm – 2:30pm
Naptime
2:30pm – 3:00pm
Bottles/snack
3:00pm – 4:00pm
Sensory or art activity
4:00pm – 5:00pm
Individual play time
Source
Toddler schedule
The toddler daycare schedule is generally designed to meet the needs of children from 18 months to three years old. This group is newly mobile and working hard to communicate verbally. Plenty of time to work on language and gross motor skills will be the basis of the daily schedule for toddlers as you help them progress on all of their developmental milestones.
Developmental milestones for two-year-olds
Walking confidently
Throwing a ball
Holding a crayon
Experimenting with defiance and independence
Copying others
Engaging in simple cooperative play
Simple vocabulary of names, everyday objects, and body parts
Speaking in two to four-word sentences
Can follow simple instructions
Developmental milestones for three-year-olds
Showing affection and concern for friends
Taking turns in games
Engaging in joint activities with a common goal
Following multi-step instructions
Starting to carry on conversations
Can be understood by most adults
Running
Jumping
Pedaling a tricycle
Climbing stairs and playground structures
Toddler schedule guidelines
Once your children are mobile toddlers, their daily schedule will change some, with the biggest difference most likely being the absence of the morning nap. Daily schedules for toddlers will contain ample outdoor/gross motor time to foster the important physical development happening at this age. The AAP recommends 60 minutes of active play per day for toddlers, with at least half of that being led by adults.
Toddlers need plenty of group play time to explore the beginnings of cooperative play. Your schedule should encourage interactions during activities or at play centers in the classroom. The younger ones will benefit from observing the older toddlers as they begin to play and interact with each other. Imitation is key as they start to build a real understanding of how to work with others around them.
Sample toddler daily schedule
8:00am – 9:00am
Drop-off + breakfast
9:00am – 9:30am
Independent play/play centers
9:30am – 10:00am
Circle time (morning routine + songs)
10:00am – 10:15am
Morning snack
10:15am – 11:30am
Outside play + physical activity
11:30am – 12:00pm
Lunch
12:00pm – 1:00pm
Sensory or art activity
1:00pm – 1:30pm
Story time (books + songs)
1:30pm – 2:30pm
Naptime
2:30pm – 3:00pm
Afternoon snack
3:00pm – 4:00pm
Group play (puzzles + games + center activities)
4:00pm – 4:30pm
Closing circle
4:30pm – 5:00pm
Choice time/outside play
Source
Daily preschool schedule
The preschool daily schedule will meet the needs of the oldest children at your center, typically three to five-year-olds. The shift for this age group will focus more on fine motor and language/cognition abilities and other kindergarten readiness skills. Building more structured activities with an increasing academic focus will encourage progress on this group’s developmental milestones.
Developmental milestones for four-year-olds
Hopping
Catching and throwing a ball
Walking backward
Using scissors
Copying shapes
Dressing themselves
Engaging in imaginative play
Cooperating with others
Having interests/likes/opinions
Following some basic grammar rules (using he/she and over/under appropriately)
Telling simple stories
Singing songs such as Itsy Bitsy Spider and The Wheels on the Bus
Writing capital letters
Developmental milestones for five-year-olds
Skipping
Doing somersaults
Using the swings
Drawing shapes and people
Telling the difference between what’s real and make-believe
Exhibiting more independence
Wanting to please their friends and be like them
Speaking very clearly
Using future/past tense and more sophisticated grammar
Telling stories with full sentences
Writing letters and numbers
Preschooler schedule guidelines
This is the age that the afternoon nap is starting to drop off, so naptime can also turn into quiet reading time for those who aren’t able to fall asleep. The other big shift will be towards more cognitive and literacy skills in preparation for kindergarten. Your daily preschool schedule should include more table and task-centered activity blocks to ensure they leave your center fully equipped to handle the transition to school.
This age group still learns a lot through imaginative and fantasy play, as they build a stronger sense of self and cooperative relationships with each other. According to the AAP, they also need even more physical activity, up to two hours daily. This group will work on improving balance and coordination in both fine and gross motor activities.
Sample preschooler daily schedule
8:00am – 9:00am
Drop-off + breakfast
9:00am – 9:30am
Circle time (morning routine + songs)
9:30am – 10:15am
Activity center
10:15am – 10:30am
Morning snack
10:30am – 11:00am
Outside play + physical activity
11:00am – 11:30pm
Table work (literacy/math)
11:30am – 12:00pm
Lunch
12:00pm – 1:00pm
Art or sensory/fine motor activity
1:00pm – 1:30pm
Story time
1:30pm – 2:30pm
Naptime/quiet time
2:30pm – 3:00pm
Afternoon snack
3:00pm – 4:00pm
Group play (puzzles + games + center activities)
4:00pm – 4:30pm
Closing circle
4:30pm – 5:00pm
Choice time
Final reflection
Whatever your variation on these schedules is, it’s important to post your daily schedule in the classroom and share with your families to keep everyone informed. Following your daycare schedule framework will ensure that each age group’s developmental needs are met, which will help build trust with your families. Follow your daycare routine as much as possible and allow flexibility as special events or opportunities arise.
Preschool Schedule Ideas to Structure Your Day
It’s a fact that children who have supportive and rich early educational experiences enjoy lifelong benefits. This benefit of preschool is supported by a daily preschool schedule that considers children’s developmental needs, from proper nutrition to motor skills.
A day at preschool is all about balance: quiet time and play, flexibility and routine, and structured lessons and free choice. While finding the formula that works for you and your group may take a while, the basic elements of a daily preschool schedule will remain the same.
This article will cover the components of an effective preschool schedule and give ideas on managing day-to-day preschool activities. If you’re looking for preschool daily schedule templates, head to the bottom of the article, where you’ll find sample full-day and half-day schedules.
How to create a structured preschool schedule
A detailed, structured preschool schedule will help you, your staff, and the children in your program have productive, enriching days. Carefully plan your activities and breaks to help foster the children’s development and growth.
Establish preschool schedule basics
The main objective of a daily preschool schedule is to structure the best environment for early childhood development. Since preschoolers can’t self-regulate the same way older children can, your careful planning enables their growth. A positive preschool experience is essential to optimal early childhood development, and this growth plays out daily according to how well teachers plan and engage with children.
No matter how you choose to schedule your time, the activities you engage in each day, or what resources your center has, your daily schedule should include the following:
Routine: Children perform best when they have a regular schedule and know what to expect.
Play: Children grow and explore through play, and every preschool should build playtime into the schedule.
Regular meals and snacks: Preschool days require lots of energy, and children need to fuel their bodies appropriately.
Downtime: Adults often wish nap time was still a part of their daily schedule, and for good reason: nap time (or downtime) helps children recharge so their brains can absorb what they’ve learned.
Physical activity: Regular time and space to move around outside is widely regarded as a staple for any preschool schedule and is essential for developing motor skills.
Source
Incorporating all these elements into your daily schedule is necessary for promoting early childhood development and is often regulated by law. Check your state’s regulations to see their requirements and ensure that your plans align with standards.
For example, South Carolina requires outdoor activity for children daily as weather permits, and Florida requires that snacks and meals meet USDA MyPlate guidelines. There may also be different required staff ratios for active time and down time, which should factor into your preschool’s daily schedule and how you handle staff breaks.
Use flexibility to your advantage
Flexibility is an important part of your daily schedule. Early on, let your timetable be flexible as all of your children settle into a new schedule. Preschool is a time for growth and exploration that will manifest differently for each child, so you may face different challenges from one class to the next.
For example, one group of children might experience a relatively smooth drop-off, while another may need more time to prepare for the day. Maybe your last group was hungry long before snack time, and your next group isn’t hungry during snack time at all. There’s no way to know this ahead of time, but flexibility during the first weeks of school can curb staff frustrations about moving through planned daily activities.
The secret to a flexible preschool schedule is patience—and not just being calm if you run behind or have to adjust your day’s flow. It’s also about being patient with the children in your care. Starting preschool is a big adjustment; it takes time for children to trust their teachers and feel comfortable sleeping at nap time, eating new foods, listening to instructions, or socializing. Your patience and willingness to spend a few extra minutes to smooth things over is a major signal to children that you are trustworthy and on their side.
Another way to build malleability into your daily routine is to implement guided choice time, especially if you have a group of mixed ages and abilities. This will ensure that children are exploring and have “independent” time to socialize, take a break, or try something new at their own pace.
Manage transitions
Moving from one task to another as a group can be challenging for preschoolers. Managing your schedule’s flow keeps your day and the children in your care on track. Approaching transitions with a firm, gentle hand will help you usher your class along more easily.
One key element of managing transitions comes before you even start your day. Post a visual schedule where everyone can see it. It’s easy to make a child-friendly daily schedule using laminated paper or a whiteboard—no need to get fancy. As long as children know where to see the order of activities, the posted schedule is doing its job.
When it comes to transition times, use an audio or visual cue to signal the start of wrapping up. This could be a bell, a rhyme, a song, or anything else that works for your group. You can include children by making this a rotating classroom helper role, which will also instill a sense of the daily rhythm as each child assumes the role of “transition conductor.”
Source
Use positive reinforcement and clear expectations to help your group transition smoothly. Set up rules around transition times, such as “Everyone does their share to clean up,” and praise children following your classroom code each day.
Another good way to smooth transitions is to provide quiet options for those who finish their tasks early (e. g., finish lunch early, wake up from a nap early). Picture books, puzzles, pencil drawings, or making pipe cleaner shapes are quiet, solo activities that are easily set up. These help children occupy themselves, so you don’t have to rush anyone and ensure that the whole group moves on from one thing to another together.
Preschool daily schedule example
7:00 to 8:30 a.m. — Welcome / Free play
8:30 to 9:00 a.m. — Breakfast
9:00 to 9:30 a.m. — Clean up
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. — Circle time
10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. — Learning centers
12:00 to 1:00 p.m. — Lunch
1:00 to 1:30 p.m. — Clean up
1:30 to 2:30 p.m. — Nap time
2:30 to 3:00 p.m. — Storytime
3:00 to 4:00 p.m. — Outdoor play
4:00 to 4:30 p.m. — Snack time
4:30 to 5:00 p. m. — Clean up / Free play
5:00 p.m. — Close
Preschool half-day schedule example
7:00 to 7:30 a.m. — Welcome / Free play
7:30 to 8:30 a.m. — Breakfast
8:30 to 9:00 a.m. — Clean up
9:00 to 9:30 a.m. — Circle time
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. — Centers
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Nap time
11:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. — Lunch
12:00 p.m. — Close
Preschool visual schedule
Source
According to the National Center for Pyramid Model Innovations at the University of South Florida, visual schedules can prevent challenging behavior and help children learn to follow routines. Visual schedules associate pictures with each activity, so children can easily associate scheduled events with familiar objects. For example, children can associate an image of a bowl of cereal with breakfast time.
Visual schedules can also help young children understand the order of scheduled events. If an image of a swing follows the picture of a bowl of cereal, children can make the connection that time on the playground comes after breakfast. When children understand the order of activities, it can be easier for teachers to transition them from one activity to the next.
How to create a visual schedule
Take pictures of items in your childcare center that correspond with your scheduled activities
Print the photos
Arrange the photos to fit the order of your scheduled events
Write the name of each event on an index card and attach it to the photo of the event
Display the schedule in your classroom
Plan the best you can
The “perfect” preschool daily schedule doesn’t exist. It depends on what works for you, your preschool set-up, and your classes. However, the framework of a good preschool schedule is made with building blocks that are tried and true, and classroom management can be all the difference in making a schedule work.
The routine you build with your preschoolers isn’t just what order you do activities in; it is also about behavioral expectations and how you can set up your day to support each child. Your daily preschool schedule lays the groundwork for all the learning and development that occurs each day, so getting it right is essential for a functioning classroom.
Daily routine in kindergarten
Home – For parents
EXAMPLE DAILY SCHEDULE FOR ALL AGE GROUPS
Kindergarten opens at 7.00.
Our day begins with free time spent by the child of his own choice, playing and socializing with children and adults, working in various centers.
Morning exercise allows you to organize children, cheer up and prepare for the upcoming day.
Breakfast.
At 9.00 in all age groups, organized educational activities with children begin, as well as individual sessions with a speech therapist, psychologist.
Walk in the fresh air.
Lunch.
Daytime sleep. Children can sleep, relax, listening to music or a fairy tale.
Wake up exercises. Hardening procedures, prevention of flat feet.
Afternoon snack.
Games, joint activities of children and caregivers, individual and group sessions with a psychologist, a walk.
Dinner.
Kindergarten closes at 19.00, at which time the paid working day of educators ends. You can find out more detailed information about the organization of your baby’s life in this age group by studying the daily routine.
DAY REGULATION
Early age group
Cold season
Reception, examination, games
7.00-8.00
Morning exercises
8.00-8.10
Preparation for breakfast, breakfast
8.10-8.40
Games, preparation for classes
8. 40-9.00
Organized educational activities
9.00-9.30
Preparation for a walk, walk (games, observations)
9.30-11.00
Return from a walk
11.00-11.15
Preparation for dinner, lunch
11.15-12.00
Preparation for bed, daytime sleep
12.00-15.00
9005 3 Rise
15.00-15.10
Preparation for afternoon tea, afternoon tea
15.10- 15.20
Activities, games, independent activities
15.20-15.45
Preparation for a walk, walk
15.45-16.55
Return from a walk
16.55-17.10
Preparing for dinner, dinner
17.10-17.35
Games, leaving children home
Cold period of the year
Reception, inspection, games
7.00-8. 00
Morning exercises
8.00-8.10
90 057
Breakfast preparation, breakfast
8.10-8.35
Independent games
8.35-9.00
Organized educational activities
9.00-9. 40
Preparation for a walk, walk (games, observations)
9.40-11.25
Return from a walk
11.25-11.45
Preparation for dinner, lunch
11.45-12.30
Preparation for sleep, daytime
12.00-15.00
Rise
15.00-15.10
Preparation for afternoon tea, afternoon tea
15 .10-15.20
Activities, games
15.20-15.45
Preparation for a walk, walk Return from a walk 10-17.45
Games, children leaving home
17.45-19.00
Middle group
Cold season
900 53 Reception, inspection, games, duty
7. 00-7.50
Morning exercises
7.50-8.00
Breakfast preparation, breakfast
8.00-8.35
Independent games
8.35-9.00
900 57
Organized educational activities
9.00-9.50
Preparation for a walk, walk (games, observations)
9.40-11.45
Return from a walk
11.45-12.00
Preparation for dinner, lunch
12.00-12.35
Getting ready for bed, daytime sleep
12.35-15.00
Getting up
15.00-15.10
Preparation for afternoon tea, afternoon tea
15.10-15.20
Activities, games, independent activities
15.20-16.05
Preparation for a walk, walk
16.05-17.05
9 0057
Return from a walk
17.05-17.20
Dinner preparation, dinner
17. 20-17.50
Games, taking children home
Cold season
Reception, inspection, games, duty
7.00-8.10
Morning exercises
8.10-8.20
9 0057
Breakfast preparation, breakfast
8.20-9.00
Organized educational activities
9.00-10.15
Preparation for a walk, walk (games, observations, work)
10.15-12.00
Return from a walk
12.00-12.10
Preparation for dinner, lunch
12.10-12.40
Preparation for sleep, afternoon nap
9005 3 12.40-15.00
Rise
15.00-15.10
Preparation for afternoon snack, afternoon snack
15.10-15.20
Activities, games, independent activities
15.20-15.45
Preparation for a walk, walk
15. 45-17.15
Return from a walk
17.15-17.25
Preparing for dinner, dinner
17.25-17.5 0
Games, taking children home
17.50-19.00
to school group
Cold season
Reception, inspection, games, duty
7.00-8.30
Morning hymn stick
8.30-8.40
Breakfast preparation, breakfast
8.40-9.00
Organized educational activities
9.00- 10.30
Preparation for a walk, walk (games, observations, work)
10.30 -12.15
Return from a walk
12.15-12.30
Preparation for dinner, lunch
12.30-13.00
900 57
Sleep preparation, daytime nap
13.00-15.00
Rise
15.00-15.10
Preparation for afternoon tea, afternoon tea
15 . 10-15.20
Activities, games, work, independent activities
15.20-15.50
Preparation for a walk, walk
15.50-17.20
Return from a walk
17.20-17.30
Preparation for dinner, dinner
17.30-17.55
Games, children going home
17.55-19.00
Recommendations of teachers on the daily routine for preschoolers – here.
Little Country Khimki: private kindergarten (kindergarten) in the gangway, Zelenograd,
+7 (495) 500-00-26
LICENSED ENGLISH KINDERGARTEN WITH A POOL
Information about the NGO
KOLPAKOV PLATO’S PARENTS
We have been going to the “Little Country” for 1 month. We are very happy that we chose your kindergarten. The child goes to kindergarten with joy, in the evening he cannot tear himself away from games and go home. We are also pleased that there are additional classes and a pool. We are waiting for 3 years to start going to you for football! Thank you very much!
PEACOCK VICTORIA’S PARENTS
We are very pleased with Little Country Kindergarten. Adaptation was easy and imperceptible. The most important thing is that my daughter goes to the group with a smile, and after kindergarten she tells new rhymes and nursery rhymes. Many thanks to the teacher of the group “Zvezdochki” for her hard work and love for our kids.
ANECHKA’S MOTHER KOLESOVA
I like everything very much. The quality of services corresponds to the prices. Wonderful educators. the child enjoys going to kindergarten.
VLADA GORBUNOVA’S MOTHER
My child has been attending kindergarten since September. During this time, I was 100% convinced of the correctness of my choice: in this kindergarten they not only care about the health, safety, education and development of the child, but also do everything for the peace and confidence of parents. You can always get information from caregivers about how the baby behaved during the day and how he felt. Mom can ask any question or express a wish. The head of the kindergarten constantly communicates with parents. It seems to me that children feel this spirit of cooperation in adults, it makes them calm, they are friendly, confident, they are comfortable.
MOTHER ELISEEVA VLADISLAV
My husband and I decided to send our baby to kindergarten when we realized that it was difficult for him to find a common language with children – he was afraid of them and shunned them. In the hope of instilling communication skills and the ability to communicate in a team, we brought him to the “Little Country” and were amazed to find that after a couple of days our child became liberated, began to play and communicate with children. We see in this the great merit of our teacher Natalia, she knows how to win over the kids, give them sincere warmth and surround them with care. Giving your baby to such a caregiver is a pleasure because trust plays a major role in this matter. Separate words of gratitude deserve the director of the kindergarten, the nurse and the wonderful receptionists. The entire staff of the kindergarten is ready to help in any matter, they are always friendly and sympathetic to every visitor. Separately, I would like to say about developing programs in the kindergarten, educational activities and, not least, the presence of a swimming pool with an experienced trainer. We are very satisfied with the nursery, we recommend it to all our friends.
DARIA KARASEVA’S MOTHER
In this “Little Country” our child’s great life begins. We really like the garden, cozy, warm, homely atmosphere. All kindergarten workers are very nice. The child goes to the kindergarten with great pleasure, we love our teacher Larisa Ilyinichna very much. She is just a great fellow, both children and parents love her. Special thanks to the head of the kindergarten for organizing the life of the “Little Country”!!!
SEREGINA ARINA’S MOTHER
Our daughter Arina goes to the Kapelki group. The first time we came when she was 1.5 years old. Thanks to our wonderful teacher Zoya Mikhailovna, our daughter learned a lot in a short period of time: she learned to eat, learned to use the potty, got used to the bottle, learned to pronounce animal sounds and recognize them, and much more. Good food, the child is always happy and goes to the garden in a good mood. All staff members are attentive and friendly. There is an approach to every child. As well as many additional developmental activities. We all like it! Thank you very much! Good luck to you!!!
MAMA RIBALKINA MARK
I am very pleased that the baby goes to this kindergarten with such a sensitive, attentive attitude towards children. I really like our teacher – Zoya Mikhailovna, her approach to children and attitude. The son became very independent, learned to go to the potty, new words appeared. Thank you so much for what you are doing!
BURKINA GERMAN’S MOTHER
I like it very much! The child began to do a lot. Good development program. Beautiful groups, interesting design of the garden and, of course, wonderful teachers and nannies!
PARENTS OF VIKTOR SOBOLEV
We thank Larisa Ilyinichna (Zhemchuzhina group) for her contribution to educational work! Victor matured, began to speak well, became more disciplined, learned to play football. We also thank the director and the entire team of the “Little Country” for their love for children, love for people. The kindergarten is very warm, beautiful, like in Paradise! Thank you very much for your contribution to the development of our children, for your positive, creative, attitude and care! We wish you prosperity, so that our children come out diligent, smart and beautiful, an example for all children! Good luck in your upbringing!!! Thank you for your work!
YANA’S MOTHER
Yana goes to kindergarten with pleasure, we all like it, especially she loves physical education classes and in the pool, music. Many thanks to Larisa Ilyinichna for her care, love, patience, how everything is organized with her: classes, discipline – this is very important in raising children. And of course, thanks to Oksana Alekseevna for helping the teacher organize the day and for the cleanliness and order in the group!
KARIN’S MOTHER CIRCULAR
They started going to the “Little Country” kindergarten when the child was 1.5 years old. My daughter goes and she loves it. I would like to express special gratitude to the teacher of our group “Droplets” Zoya Mikhailovna. She takes care of them and takes great care of them. When a child goes to the garden with a smile, it says a lot, or rather about everything. If possible, we want to stay in this kindergarten until the end.
MOTHER SERIAKOVA ALEXANDRA
We have been going to the kindergarten “Little Country” for about 3 months. Both me and the child like it. A very good and caring teacher – Zoya Mikhailovna. Thank you very much for your truly responsible attitude to the upbringing of our children. Children are always clean, well-groomed, dry, cheerful. I can only say good things about the kindergarten itself. The groups are always clean, the food is excellent, everything that the children need is available. Every day the children are examined by a nurse, so we rarely get sick. There is also a swimming pool, a gym, that is, children develop physically too. Lots of activities, games and entertainment. The child comes home full, happy and sleeps well. I also want to note the respectful and benevolent attitude of the employees of the “Little Country” garden. For this, I think, I must say a big thank you to the Head Aisyl Koznova. I wish our kindergarten further development in the New Year!
MAMA LIMASOVA SASHENKI
We really like the Little Country Kindergarten. The wonderful director Aisylu Marsovna Koznova has selected an excellent team – professional, sympathetic, kind! In the “Little Country” every child is treated as if they were their own – with love, tenderness and affection.