Gilbert road kindercare: Gilbert Road KinderCare – Closed
Complete Kids Care – Gilbert, AZ 85234
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(480) 306-8683Add WebsiteMap & Directions1546 N Parkway Dr Ste 101Gilbert, AZ 85234Write a Review
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Places Near Gilbert with Child Care
- El Mirage (4 miles)
- Higley (8 miles)
- Mesa (8 miles)
- Chandler (11 miles)
- Tempe (15 miles)
More Types of Child Care Services in Gilbert
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- La Jolla Village, Val Vista Lakes
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Phone: (480) 306-8683
Address: 1546 N Parkway Dr Ste 101, Gilbert, AZ 85234
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Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool
Reggio Emilia-Inspired Preschool & Child Care for Gilbert, AZ Families
Little Sunshine’s Playhouse & Preschool® of Gilbert at Higley opened in 2019 and is the third Little Sunshine’s Playhouse in Arizona. The school is located in the southeast part of Gilbert across the street from Walgreens on the opposite corner!
Our all-inclusive, private program provides educational care to children ages 6 weeks through Pre-Kindergarten. Communities around us are Stratland Estates, Whitewing Estates, San Tan Ranch, Caberra Estates, Windmill Ranch, Coronado Ranch, Weston Ranch, Seville, Shamrock Estates.
In order to cater to your family’s unique child care needs, we offer a variety of schedule options, which are M-F, MWF and Tues./Thurs. Our monthly tuition rates include; formula, wipes, baby food, breakfast, lunch and afternoon snacks, and extracurricular activities.
What Makes Little Sunshine’s Playhouse & Preschool
® so Special?
It’s all About our Gilbert Families.
At Little Sunshine’s Playhouse, we are committed to providing you the highest quality of communication, security and innovative conveniences through our Distinctive Services so you can take comfort in knowing your child is in the very best care.
LuvNotes®
Daily communication from your child’s teacher about their daily adventures
Red Carpet Service™
Convenient morning drop off service during your morning rush
Chef-Prepared Meals
Well-researched, nutritious menus for active, growing little ones
Double-Secured Entry
Strictly-enforced security putting parents minds at ease
Learn more today!
Our Reggio Emilia-inspired curriculum, Creatively Shine®, is based on the latest research and trends to prepare your children for their educational careers equipping them with cognitive, social, emotional, physical and language skills.
At Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool® we believe that a child’s work is play. We teach children age-appropriate lessons, manners and social skills all through creative and purposeful play. We believe that if children enjoy learning at a young age it will carry with them throughout their lives.
Each month we have original projects, provide each classroom with new materials that reflect the monthly theme and provide related activities to support the individual concepts of the “whole child.”
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Our Gilbert, AZ Leadership Team
Ms. Veronica
Program Director
Hello! My name is Veronica and I have been with Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool of Gilbert, AZ at Higley since we opened in 2019. I started as head teacher, and I am excited to be your Program Director. I absolutely love cultivating relationships with the children and their families as well as our staff.
I have an Associate in Business Management and obtained my Child Development Associate Certificate. I continue to educate myself on social and emotional learning as I believe there is a lasting impact these skills have that follows children into both their adolescent and adult lives.
On a personal note, after living in California for 25 years I moved to Arizona, with my daughter, to be closer to my parents. We’ve been living in Arizona for six years and the one thing I cannot get enough of are the sunsets. They are truly magnificent! When not working I enjoy movies, music, shopping, crafting, and hanging out with my teenage daughter and our little dog that we rescued. I drink iced coffee daily and still take naps when I can.
Ms. Mary
Assistant Director
Hello! My name is Mary, and I am so excited to be the Assistant Director at Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool of Gilbert at Higley. I have been with Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool since February 2022. I started as head teacher, and I have always enjoyed working with children and am excited to continue to do so.
I have experience with all ages in child care and continue to educate myself to have a lasting impact on the children and families in my care. I have worked in childcare for 10 years and three of those years were focused on teaching pre-k children.
I have lived in Arizona all my life. Although the heat can be tough, I love our winter seasons! Outside of work I enjoy reading, watching tv shows with my husband, shopping, and cuddling with our dog!
Inquire today!
Explore our Child Care Programs
Infant Program (6 weeks – 1 year)
Our highly trained infant teachers partner with you to ensure your baby’s developmental needs are met every step along the way. Our nursery staff create predictable routines and nurturing classroom environments that foster social and emotional development in your baby.
Toddler Program (1-2 years)
Our toddler classrooms are designed to encourage purposeful play where our teachers guide your child through age-appropriate learning experiences that prepare them with the knowledge they need to be confident as they grow.
Early Preschool Program (2-3 years)
Your child’s preschool teacher and our classroom create a nurturing, home-like classroom environment where your toddler is treated as a capable individual, whose opinions, actions and thoughts are respected and valued.
Preschool Program (3-4 years)
We design our preschool classrooms with developmental milestones in mind and equip each classroom with age-appropriate, educational toys to help continue inspiring your preschoolers curiosity and desire to learn and engage with their classmates and their environment.
Pre-K Program (4-5 years)
It is our mission to prepare your child for a successful year in the wonderful world of kindergarten. Our skilled pre-K teachers help build essential skills by carefully crafting engaging activities that balance instructed learning and purposeful play.
Our Gilbert, AZ Preschool
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What Our Higley Families Are Saying
Amanda
Our daughter has attended LSP Higley since they opened and she was 6 months old. A year later we are so amazed at her development. She is so well taken care of and learning so much every day. Her current teacher is wonderful and a great communicator which makes things so easy! The head teachers are outstanding as well! It truly feels like family is taking care of our little girl. I couldn’t recommend it any more highly.
Ashley
We have been taking our son to LSP Higley since it opened and I can’t say enough good things about it! The things he does each day are so awesome, he really enjoys his time there and I love the structure they give. Getting to see his day in the LuvNotes they send is refreshing and makes us feel like we know what happens at school. His current teacher is really helping him navigate his two-year-old life! They are nurturing and communicative with us. We couldn’t be happier!
Valerie
I tried a couple of different daycares and Montessori’s in the area but they were so bad I took my baby out and hired an educated child development nanny to care for my babies. Then LSP was opened in our area and I really wanted my girls to have more experience/social time with other children. So I took the leap by becoming one of the Founding Families. I’m very particular and they exceed my expectations daily!! I couldn’t be happier with the experience, teaching, development, and amazing teachers. My girl’s teachers are top-notch and go above and beyond!
Learn more today!
Gilbert Hill: a prehistoric monolith in the middle of Mumbai that remembers India as an island
In India’s most populous city, Mumbai, not only concrete skyscrapers rise up. In the suburbs to the north of it is a huge basalt column 60 meters high. Surrounded on three sides by residential buildings of about the same height, this monolith is called Gilbert Hill and is virtually invisible to anyone but its immediate neighbors.
A skyscraper millions of years old
Gilbert Hill is the oldest skyscraper in Mumbai. It formed about 66 million years ago, when India was still an island, drifting south of the equator and slowly approaching the Eurasian Plate. Just 15 million years later (and this is a short time in the time scale of geology), the Indian plate joined with the Eurasian plate in such a powerful collision that the highest mountain system in the world, the Himalayas, grew at the junction.
66 million years ago, this region of west-central India was volcanically active. A series of strong eruptions flooded the entire neighborhood with lava. Later, the lava solidified, forming a huge basalt plateau two kilometers thick.
Further geological transformations
This plateau, today known as the Deccan Traps, originally covered 1.5 million square kilometers, about half of modern India. Erosion and tectonic processes have reduced the size of the plateau to its current size of half a million square kilometers, which is still impressive.
The timing of these volcanic eruptions corresponds to the mass extinction of species during the Cretaceous period, including dinosaurs. This led scientists to speculate that the eruptions that formed the Deccan traps and released gas accumulations may have contributed to the extinction of these prehistoric creatures.
Although the scientific community favors the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs, some believe that both the meteorite and volcanic activity contributed to their extinction.
National Treasure of India
Gilbert Hill is a reminder of that old era. Geologists believe that the monolith was formed when lava was “squeezed out” between cracks in the plateau. As it cooled, it formed vertical columns instead of horizontal layers. These rectangular and hexagonal structures are known as basalt pillars or laccoliths. There are only a few places on the planet where these geological structures can be found. Devil’s Tower and Devil’s Pillars in the USA and the Giant’s Trail in Northern Ireland are some examples of basalt pillars.
Gilbert Hill was declared a national park in 1952. However, the current state of this miracle of nature shows that its legal status has not changed much. At the top of the pillar are two temples, to which stairs lead. The vegetation that used to surround this hill has now given way to buildings and a filthy slum.
little known attraction
People who live near this geological monument hardly remember it: they are too concerned about their own survival. The only people who visit this place are scientists, historians and temple ministers.
Few people in India know about this natural site. In geography lessons at school, students are not told about Gilbert Hill. Tourist trips also do not include visiting this attraction.
It is still unknown where Gilbert Hill got its name from. Some argue that it was named after the American geologist Grove Carl Gilbert, who coined the term “laccolith”. Others believe that the hill was named after a certain British officer who served in the region.
For years, local residents have been asking the Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation to build a protective wall around this monolith and make it a tourist attraction. But all requests were, unfortunately, ignored. Although the hilltop sanctuaries are in themselves an intrusion into his territory, they also become, as it were, his guardians.
A few years ago, a local developer proposed demolishing the hill to make more space for building houses. This proposal was categorically rejected by the temple trustees. These two sanctuaries today are the only thing that protects the geological wonder of Gilbert Hill from complete destruction.
Love and Death on Long Island by Gilbert Adair read online
12 3 4 5 6 7 03
It is hard to explain what made me stop dead in the middle of the wide pavement along which I so carelessly (at least when viewed from the side) paced a moment ago, but as soon as I stopped, my eyes immediately fell on the sign with the name of the street, affixed to the low brick wall of the garden—I don’t know if it was because that sign was the reason for my sudden stop, or because it just popped up in front of my eyes. It turned out that the street was called Fitzjones Avenue. For a moment I was at a loss, as if I could not decide whether or not to be amazed at the fact that I was still in Hampstead, although at a considerable distance from home, but still not on the other side of London or at all. god knows where. Evidently, having stepped outside the gate of my own garden, for some unknown reason, which cannot even be called a cause in the ordinary sense of the word, I did not direct my steps in the direction of Heath, as was always the custom, but instead turned off somewhere to the side, most likely to Frognal Rise, then some detour of which I have the most vague recollection – was it Church Road I was on? — nearly left Hampstead altogether. To tell the truth, I left the house without any particular purpose, driven by a simple nervous desire to “go out for a breath”, and without noticing it myself, I got to that part of Fitzjones Avenue, where she, as they say, “slows down” before how to merge into the ocean of the metropolis stretching in front of her.
It was then that I felt, albeit “subconsciously”, that my path was longer and straighter than the cozy and familiar confusion of Hampstead streets lit by lanterns with all their “passages”, “alleys” and “dead ends”, and then some, as yet unknown to science the internal organ responsible for orientation in space made me stop and look around.
There were no passers-by on the sidewalks on both sides of the street, and no traffic was noticed either. There is almost nothing on Fitzjones Avenue but residential buildings – large and elegant mansions, not always welcoming, separated from the street by unkempt (and sometimes downright neglected) gardens and surrounded by red brick fences, sometimes so high that it is hidden from the curious look of a passerby. everything but the ridge of the roof, or senselessly low, so that the whole house can be seen, from the porch to the chimney, and sometimes half collapsed and partially replaced by blackened plank fences. From time to time here you can stumble upon a church, an orphanage, or a boarding school. However, I did not notice any of this, for, moving with unusual haste, I was occupied exclusively with myself and did not pay attention to the landscape around me. And only now I felt an overbearing desire to find out where I was.
The house in front of which I happened to stop, with the infamous sign affixed to the garden fence, differed from neighboring houses in that it looked fairly new, or at least recently painted. The combination of its Dutch or, rather, pseudo-Dutch architecture and a well-groomed garden with an alpine slide left an amusing toy impression, which was further enhanced by the index of the house number on the gate. It was a simple lacquered tablet, which reminded me of the palette used by the old masters (although the shape was, of course, completely different), and the number was carved on it, not in numbers, but in the words: “Forty-Three A.” I could not help thinking that such sophistication was more befitting a rich country house than a modest Hampstead mansion.
However, the garden intrigued me even more. Naively symmetrical in layout, it was adorned with plants in tubs and flowers planted in flower beds, but I, a writer so often praised for the richness of the dictionary, did not know the name of any of the species represented. Except, of course, for the tree that the owner erected on the most honorable, in his opinion, place – do not believe it, but it was a palm tree.
Behind all this, undoubtedly, there was a desire to inject a bit of exotic into the dull leafless stone desert of northwest London, to turn the unfortunate lonely palm tree into a symbol and synecdoche of warmth and snow, which the everyday English landscape is completely devoid of. But this tree, for inexplicable reasons, made a completely opposite and extremely unpleasant impression on me. Carefully laid out around the base, a row of white pebbles and an ornament of turquoise and yellow flowers, reminiscent of a pattern on a woman’s jacket, only emphasized how alien this palm tree is to the surrounding landscape. It reminded me not so much of distant exotic lands as of Torquay, the dull pearl of what is called the “English Riviera” – the notorious Torquay with its palm-fringed boardwalks and mini-golf courses. The unfortunate plant aroused in me the same squeamish sympathy that a circus elephant, trained to stand on its hind legs, arouses.
Actually, there was nothing so unusual about the palm tree on the Hampstead lawn, and anyone in my place would have only given it a cursory glance, but it just so happened that it was she (and if not she, then something else ) allowed me at last to pour out my contempt for the world and its boundless vulgarity in a low but distinct curse that I had nurtured in my soul from the very moment I left home: “Damn all the journalists in the world!”
I was born on blessed 193 years old, but writing (much to the amazement of my fellow students and teachers at Cambridge, who expected me to make rapid progress) began rather late. In my senior year, I was orphaned; this tragedy left me with a considerable fortune, and I had no need to earn a living by literary expression of any kind, so that until the very end of the sixties I made the world happy with only one short and unremarkable study on sixteenth-century mannerist artists – it was not much more, but rather, much less than what one would expect from a deeply gifted person, which everyone considered me to be.