Product Description
Spiral bound book with over 300 easy-to-read, age-appropriate activities. Includes planning guides, activities for listening and talking, activities for social growth, and suggestions for physical development and creative learning. 193 pages.
Customer Reviews:
Nice resource to have.......2007-09-27
I am on a one year leave from teaching second grade to stay home with my 5 month old. The teacher in me purchased this product because I wanted to make sure my baby was not missing out on any learning. I wish I would have discovered it sooner as the guide is set up for babies not able to sit up, babies able to sit up, and babies able to crawl. It gives activities to do at each of these stages. It is easy to use and activities are divided into categories: listening and talking, physical development, creative and learning from the work around them. We were already doing some of the activities included, but the book offers many ideas I would not have thought of. Overall, I feel it is a great resource to have.
Lots of great information.......2002-11-20
It's almost overwhelming. There is no way you can spend this much time teaching everything, but it's nice to be able to pick and choose fun things to do with your baby. It's easy to use in a well thought out layout from birth on, divided by sensory perception.
What do you do with a baby?.......2001-03-29
As a first time mom,of a child with special needs to boot, I had no idea. This book and the others in the series are great resources for finding things to do with your child other than watching Teletubbies for the thousandth time. If your child needs extra help in a certain area, like fine motor or listening skills, you can easily find a variety of exercises to help here. The later books in the series (Threes, Fours, and Fives) would also be a great resource for a homeschooling parent.
Active Learning for Infants.......2000-08-28
Not just for daycare! I am a first-time, stay-at-home mom and needed a way to tell if I was "doing all the right stuff" in regards to play, development, speech, music, etc. This book gives you exercises that are so easy for each stage of the first year of life. There is not a lot to read like a typical baby care book, but each section outlines what the child should be accomplishing and gives you exercises to ensure that your child reaches those development milestones. If you can look past the idea that it is written for daycare providers, you will find this book extremely helpful. I knew I was giving my child all he needed because I had these exercises to use as a handy guide. Good luck to you!
wonderful ideas.......1999-12-22
I absolutly recommend this book for all providers working with infants. It is loaded with ideas and learning expeirences for babies. A must for providers and mothers who want to expand their child's learning!
Product Description
125 Brain Games for Babies is filled with enjoyable ways to lay the groundwork for your baby's future. It is packed with everyday opportunities to contribute to the brain development of children from birth through twelve months. The games all use simple things found around the home or classroom. Each game has an annotation on the latest brain research, and a discussion of the ways the activity will promote brain power in your baby. These simple games create the brain connection needed for future learning while you are having fun!
Customer Reviews:
Don't buy 120 things you do naturally & 5 minor things you don't.......2006-08-12
What a waste of trees to make this book. 120 things you do naturally & 5 minor, unimportant things you don't. DON'T BELIEVE THE REVIEWS WITH MORE THAN ONE STAR. ALL THE POSITIVE REVIEWS WRITTEN BEFORE MINE except one have only reviewed books by this author, all that they give high grades for, most likely FRIENDS OF THE AUTHOR. If there are other reviews by them check the date, it will be after my posting. I checked their reviews because I couldn't believe anyone would give this book 5 stars. Some "games" listed are and I am quoting "Let's Watch" this is where the baby just watches whatever is happening around her. "Diaper Song" sing to your baby as you change its diaper, the pages brain research section states "singing to babies facilitates genuine bonding between adult and child". There are about a dozen different games of peek-a-boo offered. You can play it with a loud voice or try singing peek-a-boo. For a real change of pace you can put a puppet on your hand to hide for peek-a-boo or any number of ways you already play peek-a-boo. Only buy this book if you're looking for clutter for your bookcase.
Useful book of neat baby games.......2003-08-01
I have 125 Brain Games for Babies and love it. It has many little games that I knew but had forgotten about; but it has many more that I never would have come up with. It does a good job of simply explaining the specifics of brain development and itýs importance in the first months of a childýs life. This is a good, handy basic book for a new parent.
Easy, structured play with your baby.......2003-02-03
I thought this book was a nice way to do simple activities that stimulated various senses with my baby. I also worked part-time and I gave it to my nanny when I was away to give her ideas of things to do, which she really enjoyed. I liked the specific reasearch linked with each activity to help me understand why a particular activity was helpful. While some of the activities were things I was doing, many were new and I just liked having an easy reference to grab when I wanted to do something I might not have thought about. I also think it's a nice gift for a new Mom.
Great for first time parents.......2001-05-23
This is a nice little book for first time parents who aren't always so sure how to 'intelligently' entertain the new little person in their lives. Everybody wants their child to become the smartest and best they can be but find it sometimes difficult to figure out how exactly to promote that in the first few months. This book gives some nice and simple ideas that anyone can follow to hopefully get a few extra smiles out of their babies.
Overpriced, but pretty good.......2001-04-17
Considering the content of this book, it is really not worth the fifteen dollars listed on the cover. It consists of games and activities that are basically traditional; the sorts of things that most mothers do with their babies. Five to ten dollars at most would have been a much more reasonable price.
However, it is not a bad book at all. Contrary to what the previous reviewers said, parents will not automatically know all of these games. Granted, I would definitely have done some of the things mentioned in the book with my child anyway (for example, holding the baby and making faces), but many of the other games may expand the parent's "bag of tricks" or inspire new ideas in them, and there's nothing wrong with that!
The best thing about the book is that it emphasizes the importance of human affection and interaction in promoting brain development, rather than expensive toys or gadgets. So go ahead and purchase it if you find it on sale, or take it out of the library. Just getting a few good games or tips will make it worth your time.
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Baby Fun: Games and Activities to Promote Your Baby's Mental, Physical and Social Development (Play Laugh & Learn)
Anne Knecht-Boyer
Manufacturer: Carroll & Brown Publishers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Health o Meter HDC100-01 "Grow with Me" Teddy Bear Scale for Babies and Toddlers
ASIN: 1903258863 |
Book Description
A step-by-step, stand-up guide to games and activities that will enhance your baby's mental, physical, and social development, with 200 color photos.
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Age-Right Play: Playful Learning for Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers
Susan L. Lingo
Manufacturer: Group Publishing
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ASIN: 0764420143 |
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Peek-a-Boo!: A Very First Picture Book (Board Books)
Nicola Tuxworth
Manufacturer: Lorenz Books Childrens
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ASIN: 0754800644 |
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Babies and toddlers love the surprises in a game of peek-a-boo, and will delight in looking at this lively first picture book.
Book Description
In 1973, Henry Kissinger shared the Nobel Peace Prize for the secret negotiations that led to the Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam. Nixon famously declared the 1973 agreement to be "peace with honor"; America was disengaging, yet South Vietnam still stood to fight its own war. Kissinger promptly moved to seal up his personal records of the negotiations, arguing that they are private, not government, records, and that he will only allow them to be unsealed after his death.
No Peace, No Honor deploys extraordinary documentary bombshells, including a complete North Vietnamese account of the secret talks, to blow the lid off the true story of the peace process. Neither Nixon and Kissinger's critics, nor their defenders, have guessed at the full truth: the entire peace negotiation was a sham. Nixon did not plan to exit Vietnam, but he knew that in order to continue bombing without a congressional cutoff, he would need a fig leaf. Kissinger negotiated a deal that he and Nixon expected the North to violate. Ironically, their long-maintained spin on what happened next is partially true: only Watergate stopped America from sending the bombers back in.
This revelatory book has many other surprises. Berman produces new evidence that finally proves a long-suspected connection between candidate Nixon in 1968 and the South Vietnamese government. He tells the full story of Operation Duck Hook, a large-scale offensive planned by Nixon as early as 1969 that would have widened the war even to the point of bombing civilian food supplies. He reveals transcripts of candidate George McGovern's attempts to negotiate his own October surprise for 1972, and a seriocomic plan by the CIA to overthrow South Vietnam's President Thieu even as late as 1975. Throughout, with page-turning dialogue provided by official transcriptions and notes, Berman reveals the step-by-step betrayal of South Vietnam that started with a short-circuited negotiations loop, and ended with double-talk, false promises, and outright abandonment.
Berman draws on hundreds of declassified documents, including the notes of Kissinger's aides, phone taps of the Nixon campaign in 1968, and McGovern's own transcripts of his negotiations with North Vietnam. He has been able to double- and triple-check North Vietnamese accounts against American notes of meetings, as well as previously released bits of the record. He has interviewed many key players, including high-level South Vietnamese officials. This definitive account forever and completely rewrites the final chapter of the Vietnam war. Henry Kissinger's Nobel Prize was won at the cost of America's honor.
Download Description
On April 30, 1975, when military helicopters pulled the last U.S. soldiers off the roof of Saigon's American embassy, the question lingered: had American and Vietnamese lives been lost in vain during the prolonged conflict? When the city fell shortly thereafter, the answer was clearly yes. The Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam, signed in 1973 and hailed as "peace with honor" by President Nixon, had not brought peace. Now, in a shocking expose of Henry Kissinger's back-channel negotiations, Larry Berman reveals that it also did not bring honor. Kissinger has sealed many of the crucial documents concerning U.S. negotiations in the final years of the war, negotiations that led to his sharing the Nobel Peace Prize. Now, based on newly declassified American documents and a complete North Vietnamese transcription of Kissinger's talks, Larry Berman offers the real story of the peace negotiation for the first time. While Nixon said one thing in public and something very different in the private talks, Kissinger kept his own beliefs almost -- but not quite -- secret. There is only one word for America's actions toward its former ally, and toward its tens of thousands of soldiers who died in the final years of the war: betrayal.
Customer Reviews:
Harsh (Negative) Review in direct E-Mail exchange with the author.......2006-10-07
Attached is an extract of my letter to Larry Berman dated April 01, 2002.
Subject: "No Peace, No Honor"
Dr. Berman: I am reading (with great skepticism & disagreement) your above book. I have a keen interest in Vietnam War history (and pseudo history) and have recently received from my daughter (college librarian)the Choice heads up about your book....(I was a 1956 Political Science graduate of The University of the South and was a co-pilot in SAC until 1959. We, of course, Studied Dien Bien Phu, the Geneva Accords, SEATO and the then already identified Communist insurgencies in South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Indonesia and other areas of South East Asia and were well aware of Communist Ho Chi Minh's plans to take over South Vietnam by covert and/or overt invasion, rigged elections, infiltrated agents, democratic [Communist] fronts, etc.). You surely knew all of this at one time (because I note that you too have read Nixon's "No More Vietnams" and his & Kissinger's memoirs...) Apparently you agree with hardly any of Nixon's assessments, or if you do, you have deliberately chosen to adopt the simplistic [straight leftist] history of gentle 'George Washington' Ho Chi Minh and his noble efforts to unify Vietnam [under ruthless totalitarian Communism] and his betrayals after the Geneva Accords..(p18 et seq). (I really think that you are too smart for this and what follows and that you have adopted the "Russian style of history writing" that you [and Zumwalt, Jr] attribute to Nixon & Kissinger at p9). In particular, although you do refer, without elaboration, to the Jan 2 & Jan 4 1973, Democratic caucus votes to cut off all funds to Indochina - with legislation to terminate the war speeding its way to the floor..., you do not make the obvious points that the antiwar movement and the determination of the Doves [predominately Democrats] to force an end to the war - with or without a negotiated agreement & whether or not 150,000 NVA troops remained in South Vienam, or Laos or Cambodia, or whether or not all of SE Asia would surely fall into Communist hands - totally under cut Kissinger's negotiation options and forced him to take the only Agreement available. Everyone knew that leaving 150,000 NVA troops in place was a terrible option and that continued US military support of South Vietnam would be essential, and that strict US enforcement of the Paris Agreement - by resumed bombing of strategic military targets might well be necessary. (As you well know, the North concluded in 1968, or earlier, that the growing antiwar movement and the outspoken Democrats would force an end to the war within a few years, or less, and that victory could be obtained - if only the North could hang on until Congress defunded the war. Gen Giap has confirmed this and has stated that he designed a strategy to avoid large & costly full scale engagements, but to hide in the jungles & Cambodian sanctuaries and initiate enough ambushes to keep the US body count high, and to stall the peace negotiations indefinitely...) You, of course, conclude [very much disingenuously, in my opinion] that Kissinger was out-negotiated, that the Paris Agreement & Nixon brought no peace, and no honor, and that he and Kissinger deceived the American people into thinking that the terms of the cease-fire would be the end of the American involvement [I don't know of anyone who thought that...] and that this was a dishonorable two-faced deception, and that Nixon [& not the US Congress] betrayed our South Vietnam allies by forcing them to accept an Agreement that could only be enforced by continued US monetary & air power support - which Nixon fully intended to provide (as well as secretly promised reconstruction aid to the North - as an economic incentive to abide by the Agreement...). Watergate, of course, prevented Nixon from re-introducing air power to enforce the Agreement, and light weight Ford had neither the leadership ability nor inclination to advocate for strict enforcement - absent Congressional willingness to do so. The betrayal of South Vietnam and the dishonoring of the American people was Congress' doing - at the urging of the Doves and antiwar protestors like John Kerry, et al. As you know - and conveniently failed to even discuss in your book that purports to assess blame for the betrayal - [Russian history style..] - Nixon very clearly & cogently [and convincingly, in my opinion] laid out the facts upon which he concluded that the US Congress "Lost the Peace". ("No More Vietnams", Chapter5) You also assert that Nixon & Kissinger deceived and misled the American people [and the Congress] and did everything they could to deny any independent access to the historical record and that only [now?] "This story of diplomatic deception and public betrayal has come to light only because of the release of documents and tapes that Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger sought to bury for as long as possible." This too is disingenuous, in my opinion. I find very little in your book that was not more comprehensively presented in Kissinger's 1979 book "White House Years". (He had at leased ten times [this is an exaggeration] more facts about the Paris negotiations than you did, and I do not find any place in your book where you demonstrate that any statement by Kissinger was false - or even misleading or deceptive. In other words, I find very little in your book that is new - other than your gratuitous assertions that you have uncovered new data that shows that Nixon & Kissinger were dishonorable and deceived and betrayed the American people....In my opinion, your slanderous assertions are not supported by the facts contained in - or conveniently omitted from - your sensational and poorly reasoned book. But this is just my opinion, and who cares?? John Ellis
Drivel.......2003-10-16
The Paris Agreement was doomed because no agreement of this kind can survive without enforcement. Congress wanted Vietnam to go away, and when they cut off all aid, South Vietnam did go away, as well as Cambodia as we knew it.
The DRVN had no reason to honor the agreement once we legislated that we would do nothing about violations.
The Hellish Truth Of What Nixon & Kissinger Did In Vietnam!.......2003-03-20
This stunning, smart, scholarly and incisive book neatly unravels the clever pseudointellectual reconstruction that many neo-conservative authors have bought into regarding the conduct of the Vietnam War by the Nixon administration. While few of us would quarrel with the idea that Nixon accomplished much on the world scene, we still must protest the idea held by many that he was so severely hampered in his prosecution of the war by a combination of internal and external constraints that he was unable to execute the compassionate, intelligent, and objective policies toward southeast Asia that he and Henry Kissinger had so painstakingly devised. Rather, we learn here that his Vietnam policies were as full of the 'sturm und drang' contradictions seen elsewhere in his administration. For Nixon, prosecution of the Vietnam War was just another case of "politics as usual", another opportunity to pit conservative against liberal, hawk against dove, for personal aggrandizement and short-term political gain.
Much of what he did and planned were based on domestic political considerations and the fear of being seen as weak on communism. he looked Le Duc Tho eye to eye, and Nixon blinked. For this he never forgave himself, and he was willing to do anything, lie to anyone, dissemble, connive, and betray the American people just to win in Vietnam. Far from flying with the angels, both Nixon and Kissinger bloodied their hands by instituting policies that resulted a dramatic increase in both American and Vietnamese casualties, instituting policies that continued the escalation of the war and its extension to new areas such as Laos and Cambodia. Using the conflict in Vietnam as a key element to engage both the Soviet Union and Communist China, Nixon seemed to lose sight of the need to deal with the specific factors propelling the war even as he became increasingly engaged with it, thinking he could simply "bomb" the North Vietnamese into capitulating regardless of the mounting evidence to the contrary.
At times his conduct of the war was not only irrational and extremely counter-productive, but also criminal and unnecessary, as with the incursions into Cambodia in 1970, which spurred an avalanche of student protest and increasing political resistance at home. indeed, much of the documentary evidence related here shows his entire strategy of seeming withdrawal while simultaneously secretly escalating the air war tells volumes about the levels of deceit and cupidity the Nixon administration had toward the war in Vietnam.
Nixon's presidency is a study in contrasts, a reflection of the internal contradictions propelling the President himself. Nixon is truly one of the most fascinating of our modern presidents, a remarkable amalgam of his genius, daring, and all-too human flaws, a man so haunted and tortured by his interior demons that he spent the balance of his post=presidency years attempting to reconstruct the truth about his conduct of the presidency and the war in Vietnam. Here is revealed a man so anxious to gain the presidency that he outrageously influenced the President of South Vietnam during the 1968 presidential campaign to disengage from an effort by sitting President Lyndon Johnson to end the war. How can we expect a man capable of such perverted motives to do "the right thing" to save life and treasure by bringing the war to an "honorable" conclusion?
Instead, we find the same irrational, pseduo-macho tendencies as led to the debacle of Watergate perpetrated onto the war in Vietnam, resulting in thousands of additional deaths and casualties. This is a wonderful book, one that lays bare the truth about the self-serving efforts by Nixon, Kissinger, and a number of over-eager neo-conservatives to reconstruct the truth about the conduct of the war in Vietnam in order to salve their structure of beliefs and also lay blame for the war at the doorsteps of sixties liberals. I found myself engaged and excited by the author's interesting approach, and was quite impressed by the interviews, documents, and research used to present the evidence included in the book. This is one I can heartily recommend, and enthusiastically give a full five star rating to. Enjoy!
Abandonment, Betrayal and Lies = Nobel Peace Prize?.......2002-03-11
How can "A Peace With Honor" claimed by Henry Kissinger result from a divided nation with 58,000 casualties and an ally with over 2 million dead? The only honor is bestowed upon the men and women who fought for an honorable cause, one that aimed for a free and peaceful South Vietnam. Presidents Nixon and Thieu are dead and Le Duc Tho never accepted his Nobel Peace Prize. The only remaining key player from the 1973 Paris sell-out of South Vietnam is Henry Kissinger. But his true legacy will be locked up for many years in vaults. Thanks to Dr. Larry Berman for this insightful revelation into one of the darkest times in our political history. "Return the Nobel Without Honor" should have been the title for this book...a must read for all Americans.
Nixon's Vietnam Duplicity.......2001-12-25
Larry Berman is the perfect person to expose President Richard Nixon's duplicity regarding his Vietnam War policy, wherein Nixon sought to promote a peace agreement he and Henry Kissinger both knew would accomplish nothing in thwarting North Vietnam's design to achieve a unified Vietnamese Communist nation. In the typical Nixon fashion, design was preeminent over ultimate reality as he heralded the agreement ending U.S. participation in the nation's most controversial war with the glorious phrase, "Peace With Honor."
"No Peace, No Honor" is the logical sequel to Larry Berman's earlier penetrating work, "Planning a Tragedy," which was a fascinating look inside the Johnson Administration and the mindset which brought about America's entry into the Vietnam conflict. Robert McNamara, despite his earlier assurances, proved to be a naive administrator, making mistake upon mistake in forcing America into an ever deepening hawkish posture. The wise counsel of State Department operative George Ball, who provided the beneficial hindsight input of French president Charles DeGaulle, whose country fought a war in Indo China between 1946 and 1954, was unfortunately spurned.
With Johnson gone and the Nixon Administration taking over in January of 1969, the scene is set for Berman's latest work. Taking advantage of recently declassified government documents, Berman presents a chaotic scene in which Nixon and Kissinger seek to find a way out of the Vietnam morass without conveying the impression that the U.S. was running out on an ally and leaving it vulnerably exposed to a successful Communist insurgency. Despite ferocious bombing, Nixon was ultimately confronted with a situation wherein public support for the war in America had reached its lowest level while his anticipated strategy of helping build Vietnam's fighting forces into a team formidable enough to hold off the insurgency from the North had notably failed. As a result, Nixon sought to convince Americans that the agreement he was able to achieve embodied "Peace With Honor" when Communist troops remained in place in the South, prepared to finish the job and achieve a unified Vietnam. Debate had persisted over the years over whether Nixon and Kissinger were aware of what ultimately would transpire, and that the agreement signed and put into place was nothing other than a facade meant to disguise an ultimate result of which they were well aware. The documents unearthed by Berman demonstrate an awareness of Nixon and Kissinger of the tragic nature of circumstances and the inevitability of a Communist triumph.
William Hare
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No Peace, No Honor: Nixon, Kissinger, and Betrayal in Vietnam. (book review): An article from: Presidential Studies Quarterly
Melvin Small
Manufacturer: Center for the Study of the Presidency
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Digital
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ASIN: B0008ETHRA
Release Date: 2005-07-30 |
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This digital document is an article from Presidential Studies Quarterly, published by Center for the Study of the Presidency on June 1, 2002. The length of the article is 830 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: No Peace, No Honor: Nixon, Kissinger, and Betrayal in Vietnam. (book review)
Author: Melvin Small
Publication:
Presidential Studies Quarterly (Refereed)
Date: June 1, 2002
Publisher: Center for the Study of the Presidency
Volume: 32
Issue: 2
Page: 434(2)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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