Article: During the day, put toys in your baby's crib for them to reach for.  Do this during play time, not nap time. Place the toys in the crib and encourage your baby to reach for them through the bars. After some time passes, place your baby in the crib to grab the toys. By placing toys in the crib, you establish it as a safe, "fun" environment. Do not let your baby play for too long in the crib, though. Your child needs to see the crib as a pleasant place, but you should not establish it as a place for play and activity. Once your baby gets over their anxiety toward the crib, start holding nap time in the crib.  This can be done gradually. For instance, if your baby takes two naps, you can let your baby take one nap wherever they usually sleep. Place your baby in the crib for the other nap, though. Once your baby becomes comfortable sleeping in the crib for one nap, put them in the crib for both. Being left alone in the dark could be a major cause for your baby's fear. As such, letting your baby adjust to the crib during the day, when they can see more, can greatly reduce initial crib anxiety. After your baby feels comfortable sleeping in the crib for naps, you can start placing your child in the crib at night.  In some cases, you might be able to simply leave your baby alone in the crib as you would for a nap. They may fuss at first, but after several minutes, your baby might fall asleep without much difficulty. If your baby still exhibits signs of crib anxiety, you might need to take additional steps to introduce your baby to the idea of sleeping in the crib at night. Place the crib next to your bed so that your baby can still see you as they fall asleep.  If your baby is used to sleeping in your room, the scariest part about transitioning to the crib might be the change in surroundings. By moving the crib into your room for several weeks, you allow your baby time to adjust to the crib in an otherwise comfortable setting. Your baby may still have trouble adjusting to the crib if it is placed on the far side of your room. If this happens, you may need to compromise further by positioning the crib directly next to your bed. Once your baby becomes comfortable sleeping next to you in the crib, gradually move the crib further and further away within the room. When your baby is comfortable sleeping in the crib in your room, and has been so for roughly a week, it is time to move the crib back into baby's room. If your baby has trouble sleeping in their crib once you move it into their room, spend a few nights sleeping on a cot or sleeping bag in the same room.  Your presence can have a very soothing effect on your baby, which can turn an unfamiliar, uncomfortable set of surroundings into a safe place. By spending a few nights in your baby's room as they fall asleep, you can help to establish that room as a safe place. Once your baby has comfortably fallen asleep in your presence for three or four nights, you can ween yourself away. Instead of spending the night in baby's room, only stay put while your baby falls asleep.  If necessary, pat or massage your baby's back while cooing or humming softly to make your presence known. Begin by sitting nearby, making it easy for baby to see you. When your baby feels comfortable with the distance, move your chair back a little further. Each time your baby adjusts to the change in distance, move back a little more until, eventually, you are out of sight. When your baby is comfortable falling asleep without seeing you, you can start leaving the room and letting them fall asleep alone.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Make the crib a pleasant place. Establish that the crib is a place for sleep during the day. Ease your baby into sleeping in the crib at night. Move the crib into your room. Sleep in your baby's room. Coax your baby to sleep before leaving.
Article: Point-slope form allows you to write the equation of a line when you know its slope and have an (x, y) coordinate. You would use this formula when you want to define a second parallel line to an already given line with a defined slope. The formula is y – y1= m(x – x1) where m is the slope of the line, x1 is the x coordinate of a point given on the line and y1 is the y coordinate of that point. As in the slope-intercept equation, x and y are variables that represent coordinates on the line; generally, you will see them remain as x and y in the equation. The following steps will work through this example: Write the equation of a line parallel to the line y = -4x + 3 that goes through point (1, -2). When writing the equation of a new line, you must first identify the slope of the line you want to draw yours parallel to. Make sure the equation of the original line is in slope-intercept form and then you know the slope (m). The line we want to draw parallel to is y = -4x + 3. In this equation, -4 represents the variable m and therefore, is the slope of the line. This equation only works if you have a coordinate that passes through the new line. Make sure you don’t choose a coordinate that is on the original line. If your final equations have the same y-intercept, they are not parallel, but the same line. In our example, we will use the coordinate (1, -2). Remember the formula is y – y1= m(x – x1). Plug in the slope and coordinates of your point to write the equation of your new line that is parallel to the first. Using our example with slope (m) -4 and (x, y) coordinate (1, -2): y – (-2) = -4(x – 1) After you have plugged in the numbers, the equation can be simplified into the more common slope-intercept form. This equation's line, if graphed on a coordinate plane, would be parallel to the given equation.  For example: y – (-2) = -4(x – 1) Two negatives make a positive: y + 2 = -4(x -1)  Distribute the -4 to x and -1: y + 2 = -4x + 4. Subtract -2 from both side: y + 2 – 2 = -4x + 4 – 2 Simplified equation: y = -4x + 2
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Define the point-slope equation. Determine the slope of the first line. Identify a point on the new line. Write the equation of the new line with the point-slope form. Simplify the equation.
Article: You need to have a Twitter account to create this widget.   You will arrive to a page titled “Create a user widget.”. On the new tab, beneath the “Configuration” heading, in the search query, put your hashtag. (e.g. #wikiHow). Select whether or not you’d like to only display “Top Tweets,” if you want the widget to be in “Safe Search Mode,” and whether you want to “Auto-expand photos” by clicking the corresponding checkboxes. Select the height in pixels you’d like the widget to be. By default, it’s 600px. The next option down whether you want the contrast of the widget to be light (dark text on light background) or dark (light text on dark background). Pick what color you’d like links to be. You can either use an HTML color, or select from a color picker.  On the next page, beneath your preview, is the HTML code for your widget. Copy it to your clipboard and paste it to your website.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Log in to your Twitter account. Go to https://twitter.com/settings/widgets  Click the “Create New” button at the top right of the page. Click the “Search” tab. Input your hashtag. Configure the settings. Click “Create Widget” at the bottom. Copy and paste to website.