Four Seasons in Mexico sets up exam cabins and hires a screening doctor by the pool to attract families during the school year

A leading company focused on virtual transformation.

The task is rarely very fun, however, a luxury hotel in Mexico needs to help students make the most of it by preparing them to be informed overlooking the pool and the beach.

The Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita, just north of Puerto Vallarta, on Mexico’s west coast, needs families to take a vacation while young people participate in distance learning with its “Knowledge for All Seasons” program, the hotel shared with Travel and Leisure.

As a component of the program, the hotel offers everything from loose categories of Spanish to “studio cabins” for rent, with Wi-Fi, a tv screen, headphones, a charger, snacks like ice pops and, of course, sea views.

“Learning can take place anywhere. At The Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita, we are here for young people and parents in this new learning paradigm with encouraged educational courses through our destination and being team members concerned to help young people in their schoolwork,” general hotel said Director John O’Sullivan in a statement. “We have generation gadgets and artistic workspaces to make learning a lot of fun.”

In addition to teaching, the hotel has a “Screen Doctor” by the pool that will leave blank the laptops and iPads of customers, as well as fellow academics, and young people with schoolwork. What about those who have forgotten the team? The hotel is available for students with printers, larger monitors, portable chargers, headphones and more upon request.

But learning isn’t just about school work: young people can enjoy the diversity of after-school sports, tennis classes, golf clinics or yoga.

And as the kids learn, their parents can sit back and relax on a sun lounger under a budding umbrella watching the turquoise waves land on the sand smeared with butter.

While Mexico has recorded more than four62,000 cases of COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University, it is one of the countries that allows Americans this summer. The land border between the U.S. And Mexico will remain closed until at least August 21, but the U.S. State Department thursday raised its level four global fitness warning that opposes foreign travel.

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