Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On PinterestVisit Us On InstagramVisit Us On Linkedin
  • Homeschool
    • Book Lists
    • How Do We Do That?
    • Notebooking
    • Subjects and Styles
    • Unit Studies
  • Travel
    • Europe
      • Benelux
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • London
      • Porto
      • Prague
    • USA
      • Chicago
      • Georgia
      • Hawaii
      • Ohio
      • Utah
      • Yellowstone and Teton
  • Family
    • Celebrations
    • Frugal
  • Military Life
    • Deployment
    • PCS
  • Health
    • Recipes
    • Essential Oils
    • Fitness
    • Mental Health
    • Natural Living
    • Natural Beauty
  • Faith
  • About Me
    • Favorite Resources
    • Advertising and Sponsorship
    • Policies
  • Reviews

© 2025Jennifer Lambert · Copyright · Disclosure · Privacy · Ad

Preschool Letter A

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

April 23, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Letter A Work 

Letter A Work

Alex already knows all his letters, upper and lowercase, their sounds, his numbers 1-13, all colors (even the weird ones)…so we’re beginning preschool a bit early. He turns 3 on April 1. He’s just started showing an interest in tracing, writing, and making words!

We started calendar time back up again. The girls have a cursive notebook and Alex has his tot time notebook: letters, numbers, and shapes to trace. He LOVES it!

tracing letter A

Alex loves to play Starfall with big sister. By the time I got the picture, he was already through letter F, oh well.

Starfall

Wikki Stix alphabet cards are super fun!

wikki stix letter A card

Here’s one of our favorite alphabet resources. It’s fun and comes with foam pieces to make letters.

How to Build an A book

We working through Raising Rock Stars Preschool, but also still loving the Animal ABCs. And of course, I didn’t get any pictures of Alex completing his A work for those! ugh

We ate lots of apples. The kids prefer Honey Crisp, which, of course, are the most expensive! We did an amazing apple unit back in September.

eating apples

Tori helps Alex with the Letter A Find It bin. He found the pictures and she found the words.

Letter A scavenger hunt

Alex loves puzzles and he often takes a break from all our school time to sit quietly and do a puzzle alone.

letter puzzle

And why reinvent the wheel when Carisa does such amazing work? Here are her letter A ideas…and a Letter A Pinterest Board

cutting alligators
alligator letter A craft

He loves All About Reading prelevel 1. Liz usually plays with Ziggy.

A is for alligator. Alex really liked all our alligator works.

A is For Alligator

5 lil monkeys swinging from the tree, teasing Mr. Alligator: “You can’t catch me!”

Along came Mr. Alligator, quiet as can be, and snapped that monkey right out of that tree!

Alligator and Monkeys song

The big alligator is searching for monkeys to eat in our science bin from last week.

Alligator Play

still obsessed with cutting paper…yes, that’s a pink desk. Hand-me-down from sisters. It’s ok because he’s Superman.

Alligator Work

Apples! baby apple, daddy apple…and all those other ones. Eventually, Alex named them all after our family.

Apple sizing

cutting food is still a favorite

Cutting Food

apples again! Alex really liked matching the A apples to the tree

Matching A on the Apple Tree

They’re not really cherries…they’re apples, duh

Apple Game

This is how Alex ate his couscous. With a little cymbal clapping cow toy. sigh

Eating Cous Cous

Look! coloring and writing! for about 5 whole seconds.

Coloring and Writing

We’re using Animal ABC’s printables with other cards I already have.

How do you study the Letter A?

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: apples, LOTW, preschool

Spring Homeschool

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

April 20, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Our Spring Homeschool Work

Read alouds:

We’re finishing Beatrix Potter in another couple days!
 
Christian Liberty Nature Reader 1 about bees
 
Lesson 2 in Apologia Zoology 3. They LOVE their junior notebooks!
 
First Language Lessons (they’re almost bored with this!) We do a couple lessons every day.
 
The girls continue to love the word family work I print from here. They are so tickled by the pictures that go with the words.
 

I began writing a word in 3 languages on our new calendar each week.

Our foreign language word: “spring”…in German – die Fruhling, in French – la printemps, in Spanish – la primavera. They love this part of the calendar time every day. Now, they ask me what other words are, at random. It makes me wrack my brain!
 
Clapping the syllables with spring words Spring Literacy Pack.
Clapping Syllables
She was so excited that she got the right answer during our math lesson. I love it. I’m so glad I had the camera right beside me.
Math Workbooks
Still life art with fruit and flowers
Still Life with Fruit and Flowers
Alphabetizing spring words
ABC Order Spring Words
Bubba wanted the spring words cards.
 
Of course, toddler rules: everything is MINE.
 
I love how sweet and patient he was being.
Waiting

I also introduced the girls to the card game Uno. We all played it and loved it.

Sister 2 helped Dad plant my eggplant seeds while I took her sisters to track practice. She’s really excited about the garden and ready to get started. We still have to till and can probably begin planting in May. We’ve been collecting milk and juice jugs for garden use. We have crafts like watering cans and will place some around the tomatoes.

Sister 1 is a fast runner and beats all the other girls and most of the boys at track practice. I can’t wait to see her at her first meet. She wants to run with me after practice too! I love it. Grandpa is so proud.

 
Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: elementary, homeschool, spring

Word Families

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

April 15, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Finishing up word family work

Word Family
Word Family Cutting

Word family sorting center with moving trucks and boxes

Word Family Trucks
Here’s the word family word wall this week.
 
The girls were really tickled by the base word “crab.”
 
They said he was an evil crab and he did look rather vicious.
Word Family Chart
Katie working on her Proverb copywork.
 
That child will take forever to do something she doesn’t want to do.
 
And it was done poorly and out of order when all was finished.
 
How do you copy the words all haphazardly? sigh
Proverbs Copywork

Artistic Pursuits: landscape drawing

Landscape Drawing

Morning work math page with fractions and even/odd introduction

Morning Work with Fractions
Both girls enjoyed the jellybean math.
 
I gave them each a cup of Starburst jellybeans (cuz they’re the best!)
 
They sorted them by color and tallied them up and made patterns with them.
 
Then we ate ‘em.
Jellybean Math
I’ve never seen anyone so excited as when their Apologia Zoology 3 Junior Notebooks arrived in the mail Monday afternoon!
 
They’ve almost completed lesson 1. I think they will get to be more fluent readers and writers from this activity alone since they love it so much!
Junior Science Notebooks

Last week, Tori started her first season of track and field now that she’s 6.

Honestly, she could have begun at age 4 if they’d have let her. She loves it.

Here are her awesome track shoes, cuz when we do something, we need new shoes, do I hear an “amen”?

New Track Shoes
I’m sure they make her run faster and better.
 
She had her first practice last Thursday and she’s actually disappointed that they only practice twice a week.
 
They stretched and ran relays and played duck duck goose. I think I will supplement the practices with some runs at the park on the other days because I know she can run a mile without any effort. That’s my girl!
 
We have a 2.5k in May at Ogden Nature Center.
 
ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling
Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: elementary, notebooking, reading

Buds in Our Yard

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

April 11, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Our yard is bursting with springtime!
 
maple tree in backyard
Maple Tree Buds
tree at fence…so pretty…not sure what it is.
Pretty Tree
birch trees in side yard with catkins
catkins
red bud tree in front yard
redbud tree
grape hyacinths
grape hyacinths
tulips are blooming
magenta tulip
I love thrift in the rocks!
thrift
snow drops
snowdrop
 
mint returning…someone planted this by our A/C units and it’s such a nice surprise!
mint
fun lil critter
critter
lilac
lilac buds
Lenten rose
Lenten Rose
our decorative grape arbor
grape leaves
The girls are busy coloring pages from Notebooking Pages on tulips, daffodils, and crocuses. They love all the green and colorful things popping up!
ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling
Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: backyard, flowers, nature study, spring

Land Animals Science

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

April 8, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Fun with science this week

We’ve begun reading Apologia ECW Zoology 3: Land Animals.

1st experiment: predators and prey

What more fun than to prey on M&M’s?!

We used construction paper in three colors (green, orange, and brown) to represent a habitat.

Predator Prey Science Experiment

We hypothesized which color M&M’s would be camouflaged the best. We proposed that yellow and blue would be easiest to find.

We sorted and counted and stalked our prey. I set a timer for 2 minutes and each “tiger” took a turn seeking her M&M’s or “deer.”

Sorting Candy
Seeking Tigers and Deer

One of our read-alouds this month is Green Thumbs. It’s chock-full of fun gardening projects that are cheap and easy! We’re saving milk jugs for more fun projects next week!

We learned how plants drink water. These carnations were obviously on their last legs when we bought them since they didn’t suck up much. We did get to see a little green and blue come into a couple of them, but the red didn’t work. The celery did a better job in all colors.

How Plants Drink

Activity with baby animals and their sounds matching

Animal Sound Sorting

More posts coming on gardening real soon! So excited to see springtime!

Literature Study (or Book Report) Notebooking Pages
Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Apologia, elementary, Science

1st Grade Curriculum

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

March 31, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I’m revisiting what worked for Big Sister our first year and changing up some things I’ve found since for 1st grade with the girls.

I follow their lead, what they’re interested in, and allow for lots of breaks, outside time, play time, exploring, field trips.

My youngest child went along with his sisters from birth, so he did things whenever he felt ready.

Tot school, preschool, and Kindergarten were just natural progressions as they wanted to know more, learn more, do more.

I don’t want to rush academics. I don’t want everything to be so educational.

I feel almost sad this last time I am teaching 1st grade.

I highly recommend the books by Louise Bates Ames. A good guide to follow is What Your First Grader Needs to Know: Fundamentals of a Good First-Grade Education by E.D. Hirsch, Jr.

We focus on reading and writing.

We ease into science and math and all the humanities with Tapestry of Grace.

We make sure there is plenty of free time for play and helping with daily chores.

First Grade Curriculum

  • Journey Through the Bible and/or Studying God’s Word books A/B
  • All About Reading
  • Literature read alouds
  • Year One in our history cycle – Ancient Times.
  • Singapore Math 1 and Life of Fred
  • Christian Liberty Nature Readers
  • Apologia Science – Astronomy and/or Human Anatomy and/or Land Animals

Math

Starting to do some more formal math with the girls…Today, we started the textbook Singapore Math 1B (This is leftover from Big Sister and I haven’t gotten around to even buying workbooks yet.)…

We worked through almost half the book and got into place value. I brought out the cute little pipe cleaner bead strands I made a while back (they were totally unimpressed then!). I used shiny silver pipe cleaners and 10 blue plastic beads for each strand. I scrunched the ends of the pipe cleaners to hold the strands together.

I stopped at page 33. I got tired. My throat was sore!

Place Value Math with Beads
Montessori Math Beads

So, here’s the funny story. The equation was 15-3=? and I laid out 1 tens bead strand and 5 ones beads. I grabbed three beads and asked them what was left. Katie hollered out, “12!” I thought that was pretty amazing that they really were getting this. I asked her how she knew that, expecting her to explain how she got the answer using the beads or something…

With her head cocked to the side, she replied, condescendingly, “Mom, I just thinked it.”

Of course you did, Honey. How silly of Mama to underestimate you. Obviously, we need to move on to grammar and subject-verb agreement now.

Science

We’re beginning Apologia Zoology 3: Land Animals of the Sixth Day. We also are reading Christian Liberty Nature Reader 1. We read Green Thumbs and we’re ready to start a garden!

We studied the phases of the moon this week for astronomy. They had charts and matching pages.

Check out my astronomy Pinterest board for fun learning ideas.

Labeling Moon Phases
Moon Phases Montessori

Tori working on her space workbook.

Space Workbook

Fun

Eating purple grits! that Big Sister made one morning.

She’s been playing with food coloring lately. We have a different color of lemonade every day too.

Purple Grits

Writing

Penmanship, calendars, word families…

I found some fun free pages and I plan to incorporate that idea into our morning work now since the girls loved it so much. The calendar notebooks weren’t working out so well. I’ve since updated our calendar yet again and done away with the notebooks altogether.

Morning Message Work

We’re now working through our word families. We’ve done –an, –and, and –ad so far. 

Word Families and Copywork

Our calendar board is two sided. I use the Calendar Connections for our monthly themes.

On the other side, I just re-created all the focus points. I have our quarterly poet, composer, and artist at the top. I have our Bible verse and character trait and pledges and the Lord’s Prayer.

I have a poem, song, and hymn on the bottom. The blue background has our word family, a French word, and a German word.

I haven’t quite worked out what to put in that fourth quadrant yet. The blank space on the bottom will probably have our animal of the week to go with science. Always a work in progress!

Calendar Connections Astronomy
Circle Time Board

We do Bible and calendar time during or right after breakfast in the little living room right by the kitchen and dining area. Then, the girls and I do other school activities in the basement.

Here are the girls’ shelves with Montessori works and the word wall above. In the shelves, I have a moveable alphabet with Lauri letters and silent E worksheets, a red basket full of Unifix cubes that they love to do patterns, some paper weaving seahorses, flower arranging, hot dots short and long vowels, some file folder games, a sentence dice activity, and an animal book with an animal fact learning wheel.

Word families are in the blue pocket chart. The red chart holds Easter words and will have a theme each week or month or whenever we change.

Pocket Charts and Workboxes

Katie’s green box holds her notebooks and personal school items. Tori has a blue box in the picture above, under the easel and beside her table. This has worked well for us the past few weeks. We used to use workboxes, but now we have evolved into work folders, kept in the colored boxes.

Our read alouds:

We’re finishing Tapestry of Grace Year 1 Unit 4.  

We’re reading through Beatrix Potter and loving it. Dad even hopes he’s around for those readings – he’s a Peter Rabbit fan!

We focus on classics and fairy tales.

History is fun and simple and they love a coloring book with it!

We worked through First Language Lessons 1 for grammar and writing with the girls. 

We’ll take off a couple weeks in July when we have friends and family visit.

Do you school year round or take a big summer break?

Share
Pin35
Share
35 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: 1st grade, back to school, curriculum, elementary

Turning 2 Years Old

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

March 28, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

So, Alex turns 2 Sunday. He’s a big boy now!

All of a sudden, he’s not a baby anymore. He’s a little boy. He’s so big and talking and so independent!

After three little girls, this guy sure is a needed change! I’m learning so much from him. He is so different from his sisters. He has no interest in doing the Tot School activities I did with the girls. He likes some of the Montessori works that I have on his shelves. And of course, I never get any pics of him doing those because I’m right there with him. He loves being outdoors. Just when I thought I had homeschooling figured out, he throws me a curve!

Here’s a little bit about our blonde, blue-eyed Bubba.

Alex likes cheese. I mean, really likes cheese.

Big Boy

He was so excited for his Cars birthday celebration.

Cars Birthday

He blew out two swirly candles on his cupcake.

Blowing Out the Candles

Then we put lots of frosting on it and he licked it all off. He left the cake.

Colorful Cupcake

Alex likes orange, so I made him orange buttercream frosting. (The pink and blue and green frosting were more for his sisters to decorate their cupcakes.)

Frosting Finger

Alex loves his iPad. He loves his cat, Rubeus. They’re buddies.

iPad Kitty

Alex loves the kitchen and begs to cook! He knows where everything goes and what everything is used for and we have rather more than enough when it comes to tools and appliances…

Helping in the Kitchen

He’s my handsome little man who looks just like Daddy, all the way down to that smirk.

Growing Up

He’s my big boy!

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: birthday, tot school

Creating Books and Math Journals

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

March 25, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

These girls are growing by leaps and bounds!

Weekly Homeschool Update

The girls got a wild hair and starting creating these little books from my leftover paper stash.

They wrote fun facts and illustrated them in the cutest little them books!

They got their Draw Write Now, Book 1: On the Farm-Kids and Critters-Storybook Characters and copied the facts and drawings on cows and turkeys.

They made little St. Patrick’s Day books all on their own with info about leprechauns and rainbows.

Creating Books
Making Books
I just love how they planned this project all on their own. It wasn’t an assignment. They really applied their learning! I love times like these!
We have lots of paper and craft scraps lying around for the girls to use in free play. They got so creative making them into these little books about what they learned.
Creating Books About What We Learned
Food fun! The girls graphed marshmallows from Lucky Charms cereal.
Graphing Lucky Charms cereal

I finally printed math journals.

Katie wasn’t interested this week and I won’t push it. yet. I had these all ready and just set them aside and forgot about them! Tori just loved it. I will do one page each month with a theme.
Here are January’s shapes snowflake and February’s Valentine cookies. We also did gold coins for March’s leprechaun. The ideas are from Jazzy Journals.
January Jazzy Journal

 

The girls are slowly working through Artistic Pursuits Grades K-3 Book 1 An Introduction to Visual Arts.

This week, we drew a picture from a photograph.

I pulled out some old photos and we looked at them and Tori chose one of me at age 4.

Katie chose an adorable pic of her sister, Elizabeth, as a baby in an Easter bonnet. My main focus for Tori is confidence in her drawing. She is such a perfectionist that she gets paralyzed.

I have really enjoyed seeing the girls learn this month.

They have grown leaps and bounds and can read and write so well – all of a sudden!

We read about Alexander the Great and the beginnings of Rome in history.
We’re almost finished with our astronomy study in science. We read about the outer planets. We’ll do the Earth and Moon this week.

Follow Jennifer’s board Math on Pinterest.

ProSchool Membership - Productive Homeschooling
Share
Pin1
Share
1 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: art, elementary, homeschool, math, notebooking

St. Patrick’s Day Preschool Works

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

March 17, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

 
We read lots of books and watched some fun DVDs from the library this week about planets and our solar system.
 
Space matching game
Astronomy Matching Game
-an word family work and FLL proper nouns (aunts and uncles)
Letter Writing
-an word family word wall
Word Family Wall
How can you write the number 10?
Ways to Write the Number 10

Then we searched for shamrocks around the room and wrote the number 4 different ways on our papers! This was great fun!

Patterns with shamrocks

I love how creative the girls were! I gave them freedom to make up patterns. They turned the shamrocks backwards, sideways, and upside down to make different patterns! Then they told me the patterns: AB, ABC, ABBA, ABCD, AAB, etc.
Shamrock Patterns
We have a fun Irish dinner at church tonight. We’re making Irish lamb stew and corned beef and cabbage and soda bread!
We graphed with Lucky Charms cereal!

We read some amazing books and poetry about St. Patrick’s Day. Oh, how we love poetry!

Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: preschool, stpatrick

Astronomy Unit Study

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

March 12, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We added some Montessori materials for our science studies

Morning message pages introducing our astronomy unit:

Morning Message

The UMOCA had a FREE kids’ craft making astronomy mobiles.

Well, don’t ya know we hightailed it over there! Fun, fun fun! Free, free, FREE!

UMOCA Field Trip

5 Little Astronauts. He named each little astronaut after our family members. So sweet!

5 Little Astronauts

The girls enjoyed learning about and labeling the moon phases.

Labeling Moon Phases

Kate loved our Montessori moon cards:

Moon Phases Montessori

Fun astronomy matching game

Astonomy Matching Game

Comet kabobs snack

Comet Snacks

There are stars in my apples!

Apple Stars

Mnemonic the girls wrote to remember the names of the planets. Yes, I know Pluto is not a planet anymore, but it was fun and we needed to include the word “pigs” somewhere!

Astronomy Mnemonic

So cute how they laid all out on the foyer floor to do their word searches!

Astronomy Word Search

Working on alphabetizing the planets in these adorable workbooks from Target’s dollar spot (a long time ago)

Astronomy Workbooks
Astronomy Workbook

Found a fun popup book at a discount bin.

Astronomy popup

Elizabeth did astronomy in 1st-2nd grade with Apologia Exploring Creation With Astronomy, so this will be review for her. Tori and Katie are so excited! I even have some fun little things to include Alex.

Astronomy Unit Study

Poetry

Here are some poems that we plan to work on this month. We love poetry! I will have the moon poem on our calendar board and the gravity poem in a Montessori poetry basket. I also have some other poems in the works.

Calendar

Week 1: Intro, Sun and stars
Week 2-3: planets
Week 4: comets, asteroids, and other heavenly bodies
Week 5-6: Earth and moon

We start off our morning each day with these: Calendar Connections.

Texts

Stargazer’s Guide to the Night Sky and Apologia Astronomy

Arts and Crafts

  • make a solar system mobile
  • moon sand sensory bin
  • moon painting
  • stencils and stamps
  • watercolor planets
View this post on Instagram

Time lapse phases of the #moon with @Oreo! #homeschool #science @apologiaworld #oreo

A post shared by Jennifer Lambert (@jenalambert) on Sep 29, 2015 at 9:58am PDT

Games

  • Astronauts to Earth
  • Space Dominoes
  • Space Memory
  • Pretend play with Space Module Astronaut Dome Tent

Notebooking

  • copywork
  • word searches
  • mazes
  • fun space printables

I have some biography studies, mostly for Elizabeth. She also wants to do some mythology comparisons with constellations.

Montessori

  • 3 part cards
  • Nomenclature cards
  • poetry

Books

  • The Magic School Bus Rides Again
  • The Magic School Bus Lost in the Solar System
  • The Amazing Pop-Up Pull-Out Space Shuttle
  • First Big Book of Space
  • Answers Book for Kids Volume 5
  • Glow-in-the-Dark Constellations
  • Space: A Visual Encyclopedia

Field Trips

We went to UMOCA (fun crafts!) and the Planetarium. We went star-gazing while camping on Antelope Island.

Watching a lot of Doctor Who counts too, right?

Check out my astronomy board:
Follow Jennifer’s board Astronomy on Pinterest.

Astronomy Notebooking Pages
Share
Pin3
Share
3 Shares
You might also like:

Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: astronomy, homeschool, Science, unit study

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • …
  • 43
  • Next Page »
Suggested ResourcesReceipt Hog

Archives

Popular Posts

10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils10 DIY Gifts with Essential Oils
Natural Remedies for HeadacheNatural Remedies for Headache
10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand10 Natural Remedies to Keep on Hand
Henna Hands CraftHenna Hands Craft
Homemade Turkey Divan CasseroleHomemade Turkey Divan Casserole
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Reject Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT