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1. The Baby-Sitter’s Club. Rating: TV-G Where to Stream: Netflix Content Descriptors: coming of age, family drama, friendship This TV show from 2020 is a shoo-in for tween girls that’s based ...
The YouTube Kids app features parental control settings that allow parents to limit screen time, and restrict users from accessing the search tool. Parents can use a passcode or their Google account to protect these settings, and configure profiles for multiple users to tailor their experiences.
Olena and Volodymyr Kydysiuk started making YouTube videos as a hobby when Diana's brother, Roma, was born. [4] Born in Kyiv, Ukraine, [7] Diana 1st appeared in a video in 2015 when Olena launched a YouTube channel to share videos of Diana with friends and family. [8] In 2017, both parents left their jobs to focus full-time on their YouTube ...
Readers will also enjoy the recurring visual pun as they spy the very same book they're reading in the hand of the girl, and the same page they're looking at almost every time she manages to sneak a peek at it". [2] Booklist said the book is "utterly charming (and more than a little surreal) [and] winsome in text and art". [3]
In addition, new segments “ABC Time,” “Counting Time,” “Game Time,” “Story Time,” and “Hopping/Moving Time” explore the episode theme or other skills in a playful way. Signing Time! Sentences is a three episode mini-series released in 2015 and 2016 geared toward older children and teens. In it Alex and Liam, both now in ...
The Care and Keeping of You: The Body Book for Girls by Valorie Lee Schaefer is an educational children's book about puberty, female health and hygiene. It was written for readers aged eight years and older, and does not mention sex or sexuality.
Learn To Read was later syndicated to PBS state network Kentucky Educational Television. KET marketed it throughout the United States. In the first broadcast, Findlater scheduled the program at 5:30 am, and at 10:00 am. The idea for the early morning time slot was conceived by Doug Frazier years before.
[1] [2] [3] The events, usually geared for children aged 3–11, are hosted by drag queens who read children’s books, and engage in other learning activities in public libraries. [4] [5] [6] Jonathan Hamilt, who co-founded the New York chapter as a nonprofit, said that as of June 2019, DSH has 35 U.S. and five international chapters. [7]