preschool / adjective ˈpriˈskul; noun ˈpriˌskul /

💦中学词汇学前班学前教育学龄前儿童学龄前教育

preschool2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of, relating to, or intended for a child between infancy and school age: new methods of preschool education.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a school or nursery for preschool children.

preschool 近义词

n. 名词 noun

nursery school

preschool 的近义词 4

更多preschool例句

  1. The reopening plan calls for first bringing back students from preschool to Grade 2 and students who are vulnerable and have special needs, with other grade levels returning on a phased schedule starting in March.
  2. My younger daughter was supposed to go back to her toddler program at the preschool.
  3. Dixon, a teacher for more than two decades and the director of the preschool for two years, can relate to her students — and their parents.
  4. The district, formed in 1938 in one of the county’s oldest communities, is home to just 230 students from preschool to 12th grade.
  5. The preschool teachers are now being asked to take on responsibilities requiring medical expertise, such as evaluating runny nose secretions based on thickness and color.
  6. High quality, free preschool for three and four year-olds growing up in low or moderate income households.
  7. About half of these are preschool students with varying levels of special needs.
  8. These kinds of supports start as early as preschool, Osher said.
  9. Children typically begin to recall and describe their dreams around preschool age.
  10. Our schools are suspending or expelling a tremendous number of black students, and it begins as early as preschool.
  11. But though Jake needed a preschool child with intelligence, he did not realize the height of Jimmy Holden's.
  12. Approximately 50 percent of the children in elementary school have had their preschool education in the half day kindergartens.
  13. For the preschool years we will help needy children become aware of the excitement of learning.