Personaliza las plantillas de diplomas infantiles de preescolar, primaria y secundaria de Edit.org y sorprende a tus alumnos de manera fácil y rápida.
Crea un diploma para niños personalizado con las plantillas del editor Edit.org
Los reconocimientos son una muy buena forma de incentivar a seguir aprendiendo, sobretodo en los cursos primaria, secundaria o incluso preescolar, en donde la labor de los maestros y maestras en la educación es en gran parte pedagógica, formando los valores y enseñando a aprender y disfrutar de ello.
El diseño de diplomas es todo un arte. Nuestro equipo de diseñadores gráficos profesionales ha creado muchas plantillas de diplomas para niños para editar e imprimir. Obtendrás un resultado gráfico espectacular, mucho mejor que los que puedas encontrar editables en Word. Todos están listos para rellenar, enviar a imprimir. Podrás encontrar mucha variedad:
- Reconocimientos para niños
- Diplomas de graduación preescolar
- Deportes
Te invitamos a usar nuestra herramienta de edición en lote para editar varios diplomas a la vez. Empieza seleccionando un diploma de base y haciendo clic en la caja de texto con el nombre del niño. A continuación, haz clic en el botón de Crear en Lote y copia-pega la lista de nombres de tus alumnos. Al descargar los diseños, se bajarán todos los diplomas personalizados de golpe. ¡Olvídate de editarlos uno por uno!
Descubre plantillas con un aspecto más infantil (kinder) y otras con un look más enfocado para colegios. Podrás guardar online todas las versiones que quieras, subir el logo del colegio, la firma del director, etc. Si te interesa ver diplomas o certificados de clases o cursos con un diseño más formal también puedes encontrarlos en nuestro editor.
Entra ahora en el editor online, selecciona y edita una de las plantillas de diplomas infantiles. Elige el diseño que más te guste y rellénalo con los datos del alumno. ¡Sorprende a los estudiantes y familias con estos diseños tan bonitos!
-oyasumi- Nhk Ni Youkoso - Welcome To The Nhk - [TESTED]
The relationship between Satō and Misaki Nakahara is not romantic in a healthy sense. Misaki is equally broken:
“If you die, I die.” — This is not love; it’s shared despair.
If you are currently in a dark place, this anime is a mirror. It will hurt. You will see your worst habits reflected in Satou’s garbage-filled apartment. But there is a strange comfort in that. You realize you aren't the only one who hears the conspiracy. -Oyasumi- NHK ni Youkoso - Welcome to the NHK -
So, turn off the lights. Put on the OST. And whisper it to the void:
Oyasumi.
Are you a fan of Welcome to the NHK? Did the ending give you hope or break your heart? Let me know in the comments below.
Enter Misaki Nakahara. In any other anime, Misaki would be the "Manic Pixie Dream Girl"—the quirky, mysterious girl who pulls the sad boy out of his shell. Welcome to the N.H.K. deconstructs this trope violently. The relationship between Satō and Misaki Nakahara is
Misaki appears on a rainy evening, knocking on Satō’s door and shoving a contract into his face. The contract is a "therapy project." She will "cure" him of his hikikomori ways, provided he follows her instructions. She is unnerving. She smiles too perfectly, too vacuously. Her eyes, often drawn devoid of highlights, stare into the void.
We eventually learn that Misaki is not a savior; she is drowning just as badly as Satō. A high school dropout who self-harms and has been abandoned by her family, Misaki needs Satō to be sick so that she can feel useful. The therapy project is a co-dependent symbiosis. She doesn't want to fix him; she wants to be needed. Their relationship is toxic, transactional, and achingly real. It asks the audience a difficult question: Can two broken people fix each other, or do they just make each other shatter slower? “If you die, I die
The story follows Satoru Chiba, a 22-year-old man who finds himself increasingly detached from society. He lives in a small Tokyo apartment, dedicating his life to playing video games and barely interacting with the outside world. His mundane and isolating lifestyle takes a radical turn with the sudden appearance of Yamazaki, an eccentric girl who claims to be from the NHK (Nippon Hōsō Kyōkai or Japan Broadcasting Corporation). She visits Satoru with a seemingly absurd mission: to recruit him for an NHK project aimed at spreading cultural awareness worldwide.
However, as Satoru becomes more involved with Yamazaki and another character, Shinsuke, the narrative unfolds into a complex exploration of their lives, struggles, and how they cope with societal expectations and personal demons. The series cleverly navigates through their experiences, questioning the norms of Japanese society and the reasons behind Satoru's reluctance to engage with the world around him.