profile -- rosy_sri_dewi
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rosy_sri_dewi
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rosy
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1) Nama Anak : NCIHO
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Perempuan
Tanggal Lahir : 04 Jan 2006
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Selasa 26 Mei 6:07:07 2009
hOW TO MAKE READING FUN
Reading can be a blast — a wild, laugh-a-minute, occasionally rambunctious party between two covers. Here's how you can encourage your child to have some fun with books:
Dramatize. Settle into a daily ritual of reading aloud, and when you do, use voices for each character or to stress ideas. Make faces — a happy face for a silly part, a pouty face for a grumpy part. Act out the story with your hands. Children in this age group love funny voices, faces, and hand motions. The more you can do to help the story come alive, the better — a love of reading can start now and last a lifetime.
Throw a book exchange party. Invite your child's friends over, and ask them (or their parents) to bring five books they want to trade. Then let the bargaining begin! It's the best way to refresh your collection without spending cash. Tip: Offer gift bags for toting home "new" books.
Have some bath-time fun with books. Get your child a few bathtub books (made of vinyl and labeled "bath-safe") and some bathtub paint. Let your child "read" a book in the tub and draw pictures from the book on the bathroom wall with the paint.
Heard of audio books? Make your own! Read a book with your child into an audio recorder. Let your child add sound effects (using pots and pans, any musical instrument, utensils, anything that makes noise) or read a couple of lines of the book. If it's a favorite your child has memorized, let him read part or all of the book into the recorder. Let your child play the recording back and read along.
Let your child "buy" her own books. Make your own "book dollars" out of construction paper, and give them to your child for chores or good deeds at home. When your child earns ten or 15, go to the bookstore and let her spend the equivalent money on books.
Arrange a holiday book grab-bag. Try a preschool holiday gift exchange with books only. Each child brings a new book to wrap and contribute to the gift pile. Number all the gifts and then ask children to pick numbers out of a hat for their gift. You can add to the fun by asking all the other parents to give the teacher a children's book as a holiday gift rather than a ceramic apple for her desk. With a new book from every child, she'll be well stocked for the rest of the year.
Make an alphabet book. Draw each letter on a different piece of white paper. Then go through magazines and catalogs, and cut out pictures of things that begin with each letter; glue them to the page. Next put the book together. Let your child put the letters in order. What you'll need: a stack of white paper (more than 26 sheets to account for mess-ups), markers or crayons to draw each letter, old magazines and catalogs, a glue stick for gluing pictures, and a stapler to assemble pages or a hole punch and string to tie the pages together.
Frame a book. Make a color copy of your child's favorite picture in a book — or favorite book cover — and frame it for the bedroom. Let your child pick the frame, or pick a plain white one and let your child decorate it. What you'll need: access to a color copier — try a local office supply store or chain such as Kinko's, an 8.5 x 11" plain frame with wide rim for decorating (if the book is smaller than a standard sheet of paper, cut down the color copy and put it in a smaller frame), and materials to decorate the frame, such as permanent markers, glue, ribbon, feathers, stickers — anything goes!
Have a reading picnic. Take your favorite eats and your favorite books to the park.
Serve a meal from a book. Use food coloring to make green eggs and ham, make your own oatmeal porridge for the Three Little Bears, or try to re-create parts of the Grinch's Christmas feast..
Play dress-up and act out a book. Invite your child's friends over to play the other characters.
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Selasa 26 Mei 6:06:02 2009
How to beat the morning rush (ages 2 to 4)
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If getting everyone going in the morning is driving you bonkers, here's help:
• Whip up a healthy breakfast in seconds.
• Learn what to do when your toddler refuses to put his clothes on.
• Discover simple tricks for getting your toddler or preschooler to get a move on.
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