This design incorporates all aspects of everyday life. Agricultural, suburban, and city areas are represented as well as a busy airport and train station for commuters, and of course, roads and parking lots for travel around town.
This design incorporates all aspects of everyday life. Agricultural, suburban, and city areas are represented as well as a busy airport and train station for commuters, and of course, roads and parking lots for travel around town.
This design incorporates all aspects of everyday life. Agricultural, suburban, and city areas are represented as well as a busy airport and train station for commuters, and of course, roads and parking lots for travel around town.
This award-winning, interactive children’s rug is truly a multi-functional tool. Improve relationships by teaching communication skills as well as feelings, awareness, and self-expression. Also, enhance character building, vocabulary, and self-esteem.
Introduce children to the benefits of a healthy planet with this beautiful rug. Memorable icons of nature are displayed surrounding the planet Earth, while snowflakes, flowers, acorns, and the sun represent the four seasons.
Teach your children about healthy eating, community helpers, nature friends, weather, and transportation with the fun cartoon images on this captivating organizational carpet.
Introduce children to important early reading skills. A corresponding picture helps kids quickly and easily learn the phonetic sounds of the letters of the alphabet. Numbers and upper case letters border the rug.
Introduce children to a second language with this exciting bilingual teaching tool. Familiar pictures with both French and English words border the rug. Numbers and the French alphabet are featured in the center.
This simple design offers children the opportunity to be imaginative when constructing their own unique villages. Stop signs and directional arrows introduce children to the basic rules of the road.
Designed specifically for Head Start classrooms, this rug allows young children to choose a picture to identify their space and possessions before they can read and write their names.