It's time for a trip to the grocery store, and there's lots to put in the shopping cart! Using the themed pop-out play pieces, perfect for little hands to hold, children can buy the items on the shopping list and then put them back in the right places. With easily recognizable grocery items from the different food groups such as fruit, vegetables, dairy, and meat, children will love getting into character and acting out real life roles. Once play is over, the pieces double up as a jigsaw puzzle, as children call upon skills of problem solving and logic to decide where the play pieces belong.
This reference book, arranged alphabetically by country, describes how to found jurisdiction in over 20 jurisdictions. A questionnaire-based analysis ensures consistent headings are used throughout to
Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.From a young age, Matthew Newton understood that the shopping mall offered visitors far more t
Do you know how to prioritize your purchases? This book introduces readers to effective shopping skills. Real world examples help readers learn the importance of math skills for money management. Call
Join Kara, Lauren and Cassie on their shopping trip, and help them choose what to wear and buy.Have fun completing the scenes as the girls go to a shopping mall, take a break in a cafe, browse for boo
Sharing a delicious meal helps a family connect in this loving tribute to Chinatown grocery stores and spending days-off together. On a rainy Saturday, a young girl feels as gray as a pigeon. Since moving from China to Brooklyn, Mom, Dad, and Grandma have been too busy working. But a trip to Mom's favorite Chinatown market, where there are "vegetables in a hundred greens" and "silver fish on crunchy white ice," might just be what the girl needs to feel connected again. After a long day of shopping, they cook up a savory meal of mushroom and bok choy, thin slices of bitter melon, fragrant ponds of broth, and seafood--almost like being back in China. A final dream spread shows the family walking hand-in-hand in rainbow colors, an affirmation of love and support even on rainy, gray days. Inspired by Qing Zhuang's experience as a first generation Chinese American, Rainbow Shopping explores how sharing a meal together can be a source of comfort and connection to loved ones, near and far. Qi
Retailers are in difficult times. The recession, global competition, government regulation and the growth of the Internet mean that costs are rising but margins are increasingly squeezed. Cor Molenaar
This case study of English shopping centers validates what is self-evident to adolescents: the relationship between consumer behavior and identity. Combining shopper surveys and focus groups with an e