InLittle Stars for Little Wars 2.0 each "world" has 54 Crosses, 54 Void Crosses and 3 Dark Stars. However I can't find any information on even how to start attempting the 3 Dark Stars aside from the fact that they are "hidden" ... Is a way to tell at least what levels they are on?
In recent update 2.1.3 the way black stars are obtained is changed. You can now see an empty yellow star above level - this indicates that in this level you can discover a black star. When obtained, icon above the level changes to full yellow star.
The way you can achieve a black star is different now. You can see a rotating star icon with a line to a single unconquered star. The star is following the path very slowly and after it reaches the unconquered star, the black star is created. Make sure you or your enemy doesn't conquere the star - otherwise the "anomally" is lost and you have to play again
I'm assuming you found the voided crosses, if you didn't you need to complete each mission with 3 crosses. Then start a mission, in the upper menu, find the menu the menu that enables "Difficult Mode". The game color will change to purple and then winning levels will complete the void crosses.
As for the dark stars, I haven't found them yet. I messaged Maxim (the game creator) but he hasn't given any hints. I remember awhile ago, one of the game updates "fixed" hidden paths to stars that were not shown. I am assuming it's something like this but to starts not shown on the map.
I've found two of the nine Dark Stars so far. I'm not sure exactly how or why. I wonder if it's related to completing missions in order or some other criteria, but the two stars I located were in sectors 2-11 and 2-13. However the stars don't reliably reappear when I redo those sectors. It's also worth noting I only managed 2 crosses on 2-13 but I did manage 3 on 2-11. I haven't tried either on Hard mode yet.
What do you think? Easy right? Well, before little loaf of bread I had a lot of time on my hands and made almost 50 favors in a week or so. Now, I am making her baptism favors and it's taken me about two months, lol!!! I've also been thinking of making some custom patches to combine a business promotion idea with a small gift for my customers.
I have had my kids in Little Stars for over two years (since before they turned two), and have had a good experience. I have recommended it to others and one of my co-workers has his daughter there now, too. It is a great school for diverse, working families.
There are many things I like about the school, and my kids have grown a lot by being there. They were potty-trained there. They learned the alphabet and how to spell their names there. They have learned good social skills there. They have learned how to sing and speak in Spanish and Cantonese. What I like most is my relationship with the teachers, especially the director, Young Lee. She takes the time to talk with me whenever it is necessary, and really listens to what I do with my children as a parent so that she can be on the same page with what direction they are given at school. My boys have a lot of energy, but there are a lot of kids like that at the school; my kids are mixed-race (black/white), but there are a lot of kids like that at the school; my kids have their own styles of learning and interacting, and their styles are known by the teachers and respected.
We just enrolled our 21/2 year old daughter at Little Stars and are very happy with it. I have a certificate in ECE and when she and I went for a visit before enrolling it was like the teachers had seen my list of questions before I even asked! It's play based, which fits my understanding of child development. They have such a great mix of kids from different ethnic backgrounds and they do separate the babies from the older kids, but there is an opportunity for the pre-schoolers to mix with the pre-k. They have a bi-lingual Spanish teacher who speaks to her in Spanish all day so that she doesn't lose the language (her previous care giver spoke only Spanish to her), and she's learning words and songs in Cantonese and Mandarin. The most compelling reason we love it is that when we come to pick her up, she doesn't want to go home. Email if you want more info. Melissa
I have looked through the BPN reviews and am wondering if anyone has any reviews (perferably current) of Starlite Preschool and/or Little Stars Preschool, both located in downtown Oakland, near the main library. Thanks.
Our child went to Little Stars Preschool between the ages of about two and a half and three and a half. We were not happy with this school. It's very strong on academics... in a way which often seemed inappropriate for children of this age. For example, the head teacher (eventually) told us that ''we really PUSH the children to read.'' There was a strong emphasis on performance whether the children were drawing, coloring, or copying letters.
Some teachers were very firm, even strict. Other teachers and staff were total pushovers. The net effect of this was that in the morning, the children were given almost no real boundaries, and in the afternoon everything suddenly changed and they were expected to behave, to go to the bathroom when they were told, et cetera. This was very confusing for our child, and led to a lot of acting-out.
The bathroom issue was especially problematic. For example, we would send him to school in underwear and he would return in pull-ups. When I asked why this was happening, the head teacher said that he wasn't ready for potty-training - even though he had been potty-trained at home for some time - because he refused to go to the bathroom when they told him to. Adding to the problem was that he became afraid to ask the teachers for permission to go. And the toilets were in one long row in one room, right there with the teacher changing the babies.
The more we talked to our child about school, the worse the discipline problem turned out to be. At first, he talked about his teachers yelling at him and slapping his arm and the arms of other children. When I asked the head teacher about this, she didn't say that it wasn't true, but she said that it was against their rules and illegal to hit the kids. When I kept pursuing it, she finally said that the only time they would stage a physical intervention would be if that was the only thing that kid would listen to. The scenarios she gave were situations like our kid taking another kid's toy. When he began going to Little Stars, he used to get into fights and roughhouse with several of the other children, and he was labeled a troublemaker by the teachers. When he told me about these fights, I taught him that it wasn't okay to hit other kids, even to hit back, and we worked on other solutions he could come up with. He stopped hitting kids at school, but they kept on hitting him - and now he had no defense - and he was being blamed for being hit, because ''they must have had some reason to hit him.'' When pressed, the teachers couldn't come up with any reason that the other students might have wanted to hit him, because there was very little supervision on the playground, and an illegal teacher-student ratio in the classroom. (The ratio on paper was fine, but in practice the students were often left with staff members instead of teachers, or were sent into ''time out'' in a separate room with no adults or other children anywhere nearby.) Both of these things were big contributors to the amount of violence among the children. And if children came to them for help in solving a conflict or to say that someone had hit them, the standard teacher response that I witnessed was ''Well, I didn't see it, so I don't know which of you is telling the truth.''
We also observed our son - who loved the PowerPuff Girls and had a PPG backpack - getting verbally harassed by groups of other children for ''liking girl things.'' It turned out that this was a regular occurence, which the teachers had known about for a long time. To their credit, when we brought it up with them, the head teacher waited until a day when the whole school was present and then had a talk with them about it; however, it made no difference and was absolutely too little too late. And to this day he is terrified of being seen to wear glitter or anything else that someone might think is ''girly.''
The supervision was another thing that turned out to be a bigger problem the more we learned. It turned out that for a while, when we signed our child in, brought him to the classroom, said goodbye and left, he had been walking back out to the unsupervised lobby/front playroom, trying to get out, then hiding and crying. The teachers initially did not even tell us about this, then toldus as an example of a horrible thing our child was doing. It turned out that the teacher-student ratio was so far off that they weren't even noticing when we brought Connor into the classroom, and even when we made sure to flag a teacher down, they didn't notice afterwards when he snuck out. At no point did they question why he was crying: to them he was simply misbehaving by leaving without permission. As time wore on, I started noticing other children sitting alone in the front room on days when he came to school late or left early. They always told me that they were in time out; apparently the school was sending them to sit alone in a separate room, without an adult, where they could have run out the front door if someone had come in, or if they had known how to operate the buzzer system.
But the crowning glory came when he was home sick one day and we were talking about how we did time outs. I asked him if he remembered how I did them, and he said that we sit down and talk about it. Then asked how his mom did them, and he said that she sends him to sit in a corner. Then I asked how his teacher did them, and he said, ''She grabs my ear.'' It turned out that he had tried to escape from time out and one of the teachers had grabbed him by the ear and pulled him back to the time out area. We asked him to demonstrate on us, and even though he had tiny little fingers and we have big grownup ears, it still hurt. We pulled him out of the school immediately. I would never recommend this preschool to anyone, ever. Aidan
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