주메뉴 바로가기 본문으로 바로가기
Napping Child Section Slide with Style

Napping Child Section Slide with Style

RJ0500032_3

  • Last Update 06/16/2025
  • File Size 3.8MB
  • # of Slides 2
  • File Format PPTX
  • Slide Ratio 16:9
  • Color
View the Full Template

About the Product

A section divider slide set designed for educational and child-focused presentations. This 2-slide PowerPoint template features a sleeping child image paired with bright yellow and calm blue backgrounds, creating visual contrast and engagement. Each slide includes a title area and descriptive text field on the right, with the child image anchored on the left in an asymmetrical layout that maintains visual balance while supporting information hierarchy. Ideal for early childhood education, childcare seminars, child psychology presentations, educational program introductions, and parenting workshops. Ready to download and customize immediately.

Usage Points

  • Main Usage

    Marks section transitions in educational and child-related presentations, creating visual breaks between topics. The warm color palette and child imagery refocus audience attention and smoothly guide viewers into the next presentation section.

  • How to Use

    Insert this slide before each major section of your presentation. Keep the child image on the left unchanged and edit only the right text area to add your section title and description. Alternate between yellow and blue slides for visual variety across sections.

  • Recommended For

    Early childhood educators, childcare center directors, child psychologists, education consultants, child development researchers, school administrators, and parenting coaches presenting educational programs, childcare policies, child psychology seminars, and developmental workshops.

  • Slide Structure

    Two-slide set with consistent layout: fixed child image on the left side and editable text area on the right (title field + description field). One yellow-background slide and one blue-background slide provide color variation for section differentiation.

Add to Collection

  • No collections created.

TOP