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Опубликовано: July 16, 2023 в 5:33 pm

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Future Stars Preschool Academy – Daycare in Ocala, FL

About

Stars aren’t born, they’re grown.

Children are not a disruption from important work, they are the important work.

Future Stars Preschool Academy was founded five years ago, and is an exceptional childcare facility. We are family owned and operated and very much hands on. We take great pride in serving our community, children and parents in everything we do.

Future Stars Preschool combines preschool early learning and education with high quality child care for children 6 weeks through 12 years of age.

Each of our Academy is purpose built in every way to provide a bright and spacious setting with classrooms that are fully equipped for each age range. We also have outside play areas in all our Academy areas.

We believe that children should be encouraged to their maximum potential through a variety of early learning experiences and our qualified, caring and loving teachers are dedicated to the development of each child.
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Locations in South Orlando, Deland and Ocala, FL.
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Childcare, Daycare, After School Programs ages 5-12. Free VPK preschool, meals, snacks, transportation provided. We Accept 4C.

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Gallery

Location

2746 Ne 14th Street, Ocala, FL 34474

Center Highlights

Type

Child care center/day care center

Preschool (or nursery school or pre-k)

Philosophy

Academic

International

Services

Emergency backup care

Summer care / camp

Hours

Day
Time

Monday

6:00 AM – 6:30 PM

Tuesday

6:00 AM – 6:30 PM

Wednesday

6:00 AM – 6:30 PM

Thursday

6:00 AM – 6:30 PM

Friday

6:00 AM – 6:30 PM

Saturday

Closed

Sunday

Closed

Cost

Age Range
Monthly Rate

Contact this center for pricing

License

State license status:

Care. com verified on 04/29/2023

This business has satisfied FL’s requirements to be licensed. For the most up-to-date status and inspection reports, please view this provider’s profile on FL’s licensing website.

Licensing requirements typically include:
  • Complying with safety and health inspections
  • Achieving the required levels of educational training
  • Maintaining a minimum caregiver-to-child ratio
  • Other state-defined requirements

Reviews

Future Stars Academy of Ocala LLC

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About the Provider

Description: Future Stars Academy, Ocala’s premiere preschool, pre- kindergarten & Child Care for ages 1-5 has enjoyed an exemplary reputation for years. Licensed and Accredited by the State of Florida with approved Curriculum.

Future Stars Academy offers its leading child care services, preschool services and pre-kindergarten services to the City limits of Ocala, conveniently located by the Ocala Business District. Our main emphasis on Independent Child Development and our curricular activities are designed to encourage self- confidence and social skills. We provide year-round day care programs and Summer Camps. We understand the special needs of parents and offer varying schedules with hours available from 6:30 am to 6 pm weekdays 12 months a year.

Additional Information: Provider First Licensed on: 5/13/05;

Program and Licensing Details

  • License Number:
    C05MA0065
  • Capacity:
    160
  • Achievement and/or Accreditations
    Accredited Professional Preschool Learning Environment
  • Enrolled in Subsidized Child Care Program:
    Yes
  • Type of Care:
    VPK Provider; After School;Before School;Drop In;Food Served;Full Day;Half Day;Transportation
  • Initial License Issue Date:
    May 13, 2005
  • District Office:
    Judicial Circuit 5
    1601 W. Gulf Atlantic Hwy., Box #80 C
    Wildwood, Florida 34785
  • District Office Phone:
    (352) 330-5631 (Note: This is not the facility phone number. )
  • Licensor:
    Linda Mahone

Location Map

Inspection/Report History

Creative Garden LC Glen Burnie – Baltimore MD Licensed Child Care Center

Where possible, ChildcareCenter provides inspection reports as a service to families. This information is deemed reliable,
but is not guaranteed. We encourage families to contact the daycare provider directly with any questions or concerns,
as the provider may have already addressed some or all issues. Reports can also be verified with your local daycare licensing office.

Report Date
2022-04-06
2021-12-14
2021-03-30
2020-12-07
2020-08-03
2020-04-01
2020-01-06
2019-08-21
2019-08-07
2019-05-28
2019-04-03
2018-12-14
2018-12-05
2018-08-09
2018-04-24

If you are a provider and you believe any information is incorrect, please contact us. We will research your concern and make corrections accordingly.

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Left the army for tennis, raised Sharapova and lived to be 91. The story of the cult coach Nick Bollettieri

Thanks to Nick Bollettieri, tennis has received many champions, including Andre Agassi, Boris Becker, Martina Hingis and the Williams sisters / ZUMA / TASS

December 4 Nick Bollettieri, the founder and permanent head of the famous tennis academy, died at the age of 92. Bollettieri trained the top ten singles players in the world – Boris Becker, Jim Courier, Andre Agassi, Marcelo Rios, Monica Seles, Martina Hingis, Serena and Venus Williams, Maria Sharapova, and Jelena Jankovic. In addition, he worked with many other talented players, including Anna Kournikova, Tommy Haas, Mark Philippoussis and others. “Vedomosti. Sport” tells the story of the most famous tennis coach.

Military paratrooper and failed lawyer

Nick Bollettieri was born in 1931 in Pelham, New York, into a poor Italian family of a pharmacist and housewife. Bollettieri fell in love with sports since childhood, in high school he was the captain of the football team. While in college, Nick became interested in tennis and was selected for the institution’s national team. Bollettieri stood out for his powerful, aggressive game, but he still did not dare to start a professional career – his parents considered that for reliable earnings, his son needed to go to the military.

A young man set his sights on becoming a US Air Force pilot, but due to mild dyslexia (Bollettieri could hardly read printed text), he was not accepted into the elite troops. Nevertheless, the future mentor of Sharapova and Kournikova visited hot spots – as a military paratrooper, he flew to the Korean War (1950-1953). Interestingly, even in the army, Nick found time for a hobby – at every base where he was sent, he arranged tennis tournaments, where he was not only a player, but also a judge, as well as a coach.

Bollettieri retired from the army in 1957, but this experience predetermined his methods of working with athletes – the mentor always demanded the strictest order and maximum dedication from tennis players at every training session. “I really liked being in the paratrooper squad. They were so disciplined. We were all volunteers. There I realized: to become the best, you need to be among the best, and everyone must take some of the responsibility, ”said the mentor in his book“ My aces, my faults ”(“ My aces, my mistakes ”).

Anna Kournikova has been studying with Nick Bollettieri since the age of 10 (photo 1990) / Simon Bruty / Getty

After Bollettieri’s service, he entered the law school of the University of Miami, and earned private tennis lessons for $ 1.5 per hour on public courts in Miami -beach. At the same time, Bollettieri acted on a whim – he himself did not really know how to hold a racket with a forehand or backhand, so he spied on local instructors. Nick was a layman in technology, but he instilled in his students an equally important thing – character.

Soon it was time for Bollettieri himself to take a decisive step – without even finishing his first year, he dropped out and decided to devote his life entirely to tennis. “I don’t want to be Perry Mason (the famous lawyer from Earl Gardner’s detectives – Vedomosti. Sport”), he said then. – “I intend to become Fred Perry (one of the best tennis players of the 1930s – Vedomosti. Sport”).

Training with the Rockefellers and love for forehand

In the winter of 1959, Bollettieri got a job as a tennis coach at the elite resort of Dorado (Puerto Rico). While working there, he met several members of the Rockefeller family, after which he began to deal with representatives of an influential family on a regular basis. In one of the 18 winters that Bollettieri spent in Dorado, he met the legendary American football coach Vince Lombardi, who said the fateful phrase for Nick: “You need to work with children.”

Bollettieri heeded the advice and took on his first apprentice, eight-year-old Brian Gottfried. Bollettieri and Gottfried began touring junior tournaments all over America, and in 1964 Brian won the U.S. Under-14 Boys Championship. Subsequently, Gottfried had a great professional career, he won 79 titles under the auspices of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and climbed to third place in the rankings.

When the US tennis boom began in the 1970s, Bollettieri realized that there would be no better time to open his academy. Nick invested $100,000 accumulated over the years in the school project, but went bankrupt due to inaccurate accents. Bollettieri rented a lot of land in the hope of a large influx of children, but it did not happen, and for those who did come, Nick did not have enough basic equipment. Bollettieri again had to start from scratch: “I informed several families that I was opening a school and offering them tennis lessons. I managed to recruit 20 children, but the problem turned out to be housing – I had nowhere to place them. As a result, the children settled at his house, and trained at city sites.

Andre Agassi – one of the first big stars of the academy Nick Bollettieri /TASS

The wealthy father of one of the students believed in Bollettieri and allocated $ 1 million to build an academy in the town of Bradenton. The tennis center was placed on the site of a former vegetable plantation. The result came quickly – Bollettieri’s students began to win competitions in Florida and neighboring states, and the fame of the young mentor spread throughout the country. Bollettieri began to bring future top 20 players: Aaron Krikstein, Paul Annacone, Kathleen Horvath, Ann White and others.

15-year-old Jimmy Arias stood out in particular – at that time he was the youngest player to be ranked by the ATP. Arias was given a powerful forehand since childhood, which impressed Bollettieri and defeated all opponents. “Other juniors started to imitate him, the forehand became the main hit of the academy. And then all of tennis. I think we have revolutionized the game,” Bollettieri recalled. Thanks to Arias, a style of play began to take shape, which is inherent, if not to all, then to most of the Bollettieri academy – it is based on a stable serve and a powerful game on the back line.

Spartan graphics and a unique concept

Life at the Bollettieri Academy has often been compared to an army camp. Already at 7.00 the first training sessions on the court, aimed at physical readiness, begin. Then from 8.30 to 9.00 a break, and then classes again, but with an emphasis on the nuances – technique, working out the serve, doubles, etc. All courts (currently there are 55) are occupied until 12. 30, after which there is a break for lunch and rest until 15.00. In the afternoon, young tennis players go to classes in psychological preparation and general education subjects, and then return to the courts for the final training session. The lights out at the academy is announced at 22:00 – by this time the students should be in the rooms where they live together, three or four.

Young tennis players can stay in such a Spartan regimen for years, and all this, of course, is not free – a year of study at the academy costs from $15,500 to $75,000. “Becoming a tennis player is a conscious process,” Bollettieri wrote in 2001 in essay for The New York Times. “It’s hitting hundreds of tennis balls for four or five hours a day, school sessions between practices and a maximum of three or four days off a month, and those are at tournaments. Without this, there will be no result.

Bollettieri himself, right up to his ninth decade, adhered to no less severe regime. He got up at 4:00 in the morning, went out for personal training, and then went to the courts, where he spent 12 to 15 hours with the students. Once asked why he continued to work so hard in his 80s, Bollettieri, who married eight times and had eight children, answered as wittily as possible: “Alimony, baby.” As Andre Agassi noted, the coach was always interested in only three things: tennis, women and sports cars.

Nick Bollettieri Academy is located in Bradenton, Florida, its area is about 75 hectares /wikimedia.org

Efficiency is one of the two main features of Bollettieri. The second is communication. At major tournaments, where he often went with his students, Nick communicated with all the media, and at the academy he knew how to find a common language with any person. Many top tennis players who went through the Bollettieri school said: the score on the scoreboard was not important to the coach, the main thing that he demanded was dedication and patience.

Recently, the number of students who come to the school every year has exceeded 12,000. Of course, not only Bollettieri trained at the academy, although he himself gave lessons until the last years of his life (an hour of classes with Nick cost $ 1,000). In 1987, the mentor sold the academy to the founder of the IMG group, Mark McCormack, retaining management functions. Due to investments, by the end of the 20th century, the academy’s area was expanded to 75 hectares, and the best mentors from all over the world joined the coaching staff. For example, David Aime was Nick’s second hand for many years and helped raise Boris Becker, Marcelo Rios and Tommy Haas. And José Lambert worked with Andre Agassi, Jim Courier and Monica Seles.

Now the IMG Academy (that’s how it is officially called) is not only the most prestigious tennis school in the world, but also a real sports mini-city. David Ladbetter’s golf academy, football, baseball and basketball academies operate here. In addition, the complex has several swimming pools, a school of sports psychology, shops, a computer and language center, as well as three private secondary schools and a medical center.

Bollettieri’s contribution to tennis and sports in general cannot be overestimated – it is not for nothing that all his famous students honored the memory of the teacher in their social networks. It was Bollettieri who became the creator of the concept of the training process with simultaneous living and learning, which is now used in many sports around the world.

“I blazed my own path that others thought was unorthodox and completely insane,” Bollettieri said in his 2014 induction into the International Tennis Hall of Fame. “Yes, I’m crazy. But it takes crazy people to do what other people think is impossible.”

Mass media news2

Oskin: we solve state problems – prepare athletes for the 2018 Olympics

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MHL

Deputy General Director of “Admiral” Alexei Oskin spoke about the club’s task of preparing hockey players for the Russian national team.

“The MHL once raised interest in youth and junior hockey in Russia. It is the MHL that trains future stars and Olympic champions – this is the league of the future. And the Far East, I’m sure, is the land of the future. Behind the Admiral and the Sakhalin Sharks” future, especially in the light of the upcoming Olympics in South Korea in 2018. After all, it is Vladivostok and Sakhalin, having all the modern infrastructure, that become an excellent sports base and solve serious state problems – they prepare athletes for the 2018 Games, “Soviet sport in Petersburg”.

See photo of the day on AllHockey.Ru!

Source Soviet sport in St. Petersburg

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