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(Moved conversation from User talk:Grand'mere Eugene):
Hi Grandmere. It is nice to meet you. I see that you are an active Wikipedian and a member of WP:COMPANIES with a stated interest in family-owned businesses. Could you please take a look at my draft for Lovevery, an American educational toy company. I can't publish, because of my conflict of interest, but hope you might agree that it is ready for publication. I welcome your input. Thank you! Freddie at Lovevery ( talk) 19:30, 3 January 2022 (UTC)
Freddie at Lovevery, I added a COI tag aboe, and moved the conversation here from my talk page to keep the conversation transparent to other editors. If you have objections or other requests, please leave them here, as I will monitor it through my watchlist. Let me know her if you think my edits to your original text have errors or misrepresent any facts. Cheers! Grand'mere Eugene ( talk) 22:04, 4 January 2022 (UTC)
Reviews of the company products, including one in The Wall Street Journal, express the opinions of users, consumer experts, and psychologists. One mom said “kids don’t need fancy to have fun” and a child development expert said the toys “help generate interaction between parent and child, that’s an amazing thing.” Dr. Harvey Karp said that Lovevery’s products alleviate parental stress of finding the right toys for kids’ ages, “They’re thoughtful. They’re really trying to be supportive and to be educational as well as being helpful for the child.” [1] Products are also available at Target and other retailers. [2]
References
My big motto [is] 'kids don't need fancy to have fun,' said Susie Allison, a Seattle mother of three... "This is a group of people entertained by a cardboard box. We don't necessarily need to be reaching for the moon in order to reach them educationally." Because subscription boxes are tailored to a set age rather than your actual kid, the selections inside may be met with a "meh" response. "The toy or the book or whatever it is that comes is not ever going to reach every single child...I think it's more important to curate something specific to your child," Ms. Allison said. And anyway, some of the biggest brainiacs in history managed to gather their wits without mass-made toys, much less baubles by mail. Dr. Dana Suskind, co-director of the TMW Center for Early Learning and Public Health at the University of Chicago... takes a different tack. "Anything to make it easier on parents, I'm all about," she said. "My feeling is if they...help generate interaction between parent and child, that's an amazing thing." Playing and talking together—even if your kid is not yet verbal—has a transformative effect, she explained, helping catalyze approximately one million new neural connections every second. "Other than the expense, I don't really see a downside, said Dr. Harvey Karp.
:2
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).This is the
talk page for discussing improvements to the
Lovevery article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
Article policies
|
Find sources: Google ( books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The
Wikimedia Foundation's
Terms of Use require that editors disclose their "employer, client, and affiliation" with respect to any paid contribution; see
WP:PAID. For advice about reviewing paid contributions, see
WP:COIRESPONSE.
|
(Moved conversation from User talk:Grand'mere Eugene):
Hi Grandmere. It is nice to meet you. I see that you are an active Wikipedian and a member of WP:COMPANIES with a stated interest in family-owned businesses. Could you please take a look at my draft for Lovevery, an American educational toy company. I can't publish, because of my conflict of interest, but hope you might agree that it is ready for publication. I welcome your input. Thank you! Freddie at Lovevery ( talk) 19:30, 3 January 2022 (UTC)
Freddie at Lovevery, I added a COI tag aboe, and moved the conversation here from my talk page to keep the conversation transparent to other editors. If you have objections or other requests, please leave them here, as I will monitor it through my watchlist. Let me know her if you think my edits to your original text have errors or misrepresent any facts. Cheers! Grand'mere Eugene ( talk) 22:04, 4 January 2022 (UTC)
Reviews of the company products, including one in The Wall Street Journal, express the opinions of users, consumer experts, and psychologists. One mom said “kids don’t need fancy to have fun” and a child development expert said the toys “help generate interaction between parent and child, that’s an amazing thing.” Dr. Harvey Karp said that Lovevery’s products alleviate parental stress of finding the right toys for kids’ ages, “They’re thoughtful. They’re really trying to be supportive and to be educational as well as being helpful for the child.” [1] Products are also available at Target and other retailers. [2]
References
My big motto [is] 'kids don't need fancy to have fun,' said Susie Allison, a Seattle mother of three... "This is a group of people entertained by a cardboard box. We don't necessarily need to be reaching for the moon in order to reach them educationally." Because subscription boxes are tailored to a set age rather than your actual kid, the selections inside may be met with a "meh" response. "The toy or the book or whatever it is that comes is not ever going to reach every single child...I think it's more important to curate something specific to your child," Ms. Allison said. And anyway, some of the biggest brainiacs in history managed to gather their wits without mass-made toys, much less baubles by mail. Dr. Dana Suskind, co-director of the TMW Center for Early Learning and Public Health at the University of Chicago... takes a different tack. "Anything to make it easier on parents, I'm all about," she said. "My feeling is if they...help generate interaction between parent and child, that's an amazing thing." Playing and talking together—even if your kid is not yet verbal—has a transformative effect, she explained, helping catalyze approximately one million new neural connections every second. "Other than the expense, I don't really see a downside, said Dr. Harvey Karp.
:2
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).