
Articles
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Mar 3, 2024 |
muscatinejournal.com | Max Wainewright |Neha Saini |Josh Funk |Sara Palacios
BOOKS | REVIEWSChildren are growing up in a world filled with technology that changes every day. The technology we have today may look entirely different in 20 years — even in five. Young people are going to be instrumental in some of the biggest advancements in the future of technology. So, learning some basic skills and essential information about how things work is a great place to start.
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Mar 3, 2024 |
journaltimes.com | Max Wainewright |Neha Saini |Josh Funk |Sara Palacios
BOOKS | REVIEWSChildren are growing up in a world filled with technology that changes every day. The technology we have today may look entirely different in 20 years — even in five. Young people are going to be instrumental in some of the biggest advancements in the future of technology. So, learning some basic skills and essential information about how things work is a great place to start.
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Feb 14, 2024 |
news.lee.net | William Anthony |Neha Saini |Josh Funk |Sara Palacios
Children are growing up in a world filled with technology that changes every day. The technology we have today may look entirely different in 20 years — even in five. Young people are going to be instrumental in some of the biggest advancements in the future of technology. So, learning some basic skills and essential information about how things work is a great place to start.
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Feb 13, 2024 |
auburnpub.com | William Anthony |Neha Saini |Josh Funk |Sara Palacios
Children are growing up in a world filled with technology that changes every day. The technology we have today may look entirely different in 20 years — even in five. Young people are going to be instrumental in some of the biggest advancements in the future of technology. So, learning some basic skills and essential information about how things work is a great place to start.
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Jan 5, 2024 |
kirkusreviews.com | Sara Palacios |Kevin Jonas |Danielle Jonas |Jamie Ofelia
A maravilloso reminder of being true to oneself. A young aspiring artist must save his community from the fearsome El Dragón. Miguel’s familia is dedicated to “the deadly art of sword fighting.” His abuelitos, his mami and papi, and even his hermanita, Zulema, devote their time to swashbuckling. Miguel, however, prefers “a gentler kind of art”—one that moves him to sketch and observe the world around him, despite his familia’s strong objections.
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