Se busca mujer o chica que maneje correctamente el idioma español y si tuviera algunas nociones de francés sería un plus, aunque no es excluyente .
El puesto a cubrir está en Barcelona , concretamente en el barrio de Sarria -Bonanova. Es necesario que resida en las cercanías del barrio, alrededores o mínimamante en Barcelona Ciudad .
Deberá tener disponibilidad horaria de 9:00 a 20:30 (a parte del horario establecido, disponibilidad para urgencias o alguna noche esporádicamente)
El puesto es fijo y sería para empezar a partir de septiembre
Sus Funciones:
- Atender y cuidar a un niño de 3 años, a quién deberá alimentar, cuidar e ir a recogerlo a la salida de la escuela a las 16.30 h y cuidarlo hasta las 20.30 ( deseando que la atencion por el niño sea completa, juegos, parque, baño...)
- Debe ser cariñosa con el niño, responsable y sobre todo honesta!!!!!
- El resto de la jornada matinal deberá dedicarla a llevar la casa y lo que esto implica: limpieza, pequeños recados, plancha, mantenimiento de la casa y preparación de comidas y cenas etc.
Se ofrece:
- Buenas condiciones de contratación - Remuneración acorde a la experiencia - Descanso al mediodía para almorzar de una hora
-Fiestas, fines de semana (es decir sábados y domingos) y periodos vacacionales.
Interesadas dirigir un mail a: nathalietruel@hotmail.com
Books and Babies
Sáb, 04/02/2012 - 04:16 - linxiao929 (linxiao929)
“Anatomy of the Human Gravid Uterus,” by William Hunter (1774). In Cambridge www.uggnetistakenka.com, England, the cavernous University Library has recently launched a quirky exhibit entitled “Books and Babies,” which explores “two senses of reproduction”—human and textual—and their interaction over time:Before reproduction there was generation, a broader view of how all things come into being than passing on the blueprint of a particular form of life. Before electronic media there were clay figurines, papyrus, parchment, printed books and journals. The interactions between communication media and ideas about reproduction have transformed the most intimate aspects of our lives.You can tour much of the exhibit online. It begins with the gynaecological musings of later medieval writers (all male, often monastic) and moves on to early modern images of generation. There are sixteenth-century Italian childbirth trays depicting the holy family, and “The Byrth of Mankind,” one of the first copperplate engravings of the matrix (womb), which is, as the caption proclaims, “remarkably phallic”: There are images of the human egg (not discovered until the early nineteenth century), magical and monstrous births, and spooky evolutionary trees produced by Darwin’s followers. The advertising age ushers in colorful prophylactic wrappings www.saappaatnettikauppa.com, grim eugenicist warnings, and bubbly Chinese P.S.A.s encouraging women to use birth control. Our own era arrives in the form of dystopian films about population growth and a Daily Mail article about Nadya Suleman, a.k.a. Octomom. In the opinion of Dr. Francis Neary, one of the curators of the exhibit, the obsession with Suleman shows how little our thinking about reproduction has changed, however much our knowledge of it has changed. “Despite the neatness of modern biomedical science … reproductive issues retain their wider cultural connotations,” is how a piece on Neary and the exhibit in the Guardian put it. And it is indeed possible, reading through the exhibit in chronological order, to become rather depressed by the evidence: one travels from ignorance to an abundance (perhaps an overabundance) of knowledge. Is this healthy curiosity or morbid fascination? Evident throughout is the desire for control over the reproductive apparatus, which seems, all too often, to stand for the female in her entirety. There’s a genius to this exhibit. It allows you flip, so to speak, through the pages of our sexual past and to see each entry for what it is: an idea, powerful yet paper-thin Ugg boots, overlaying the impenetrable mystery of our existence. Books and babies is showing through the end of the year; admission is free. Visit the U.L. Web site for more information.(Images: University Library, Cambridge.)