Night Stalkers is an interesting and informative book about a special group of army soldiers. The pictures are simple for young readers to understand. This book is full of exciting and informative facts. This is a book that boys or children with family in the military would especially enjoy.
Monthly Archives: May 2013
Sophie’s Fish
This is a fun story with interesting pictures. I like how it expresses many of the anxieties children and adults often feel when confronted with something new. It is fun to see the creative solutions illustrated in the pictures. This would be a fun book to share with children, or for them to read on their own. The vocabulary is simple for early readers. The surprise at the end leaves you wondering.
Space Vehicles
This book has nice big pictures and print. It is a simple explanation of space crafts, their functions, and destinations. I liked the glossary at the end of the book. It defined many of the words younger children may be unfamiliar with.
It would be a nice read for a science class, or for a personal read for younger scientists. It is a nicely done book.
B-2 Stealth Bombers
This is a simple clear book about an amazing plane. Great for young readers. The pictures are interesting and clear. The facts are easy to understand and supported with a glossary at the back. It also has a table on contents and index, with a page of “To Learn More.”
Great read for young boys.
Just Grace and the Flower Girl Power
In this 8th book of the Just Grace adventures, Grace’s favorite neighbor is getting married and Grace is not chosen to be flower girl! At first, Grace is crushed. Then her indomitable personality takes over. She gathers her friends and plans an unusual surprise for the wedding day. Many large headings and fun cartoons are sprinkled on every page. These “Just Grace” books are terrific for readers moving from picture books to chapter books.
Just Grace and the Double Surprise
Energetic 8 year old Grace has humorous and insightful observations about life at home, in the neighborhood, and at school. Next door, best friend Mimi’s family is in the process of adopting a younger sibling. At the same time, Grace’s parents have finally agreed to get a dog for a pet. For readers venturing into chapter books, Just Grace books are divided into many sections with titles, cartoon drawings, conversation bubbles, and lists. The text is lively as Grace shares her quirky, yet spot-on, views of friendship and the events in her life. This is book 7 of the 11 Just Grace books to date. They can be read in any order as each book has it’s own theme.
Find the Perfect College for You
Blend a detailed lesson on discovering your personality/learning type with Marie and Law’s first hand knowledge of 82 possible colleges/universities majors and enviroments from across the spectrum and you see the potential their text Find the Perfect College for You has for students who just don’t know where to start their college search.
Every high school student does some sort of learning styles inventory during their school career. Marie and Law’s inventory asks readers to evaluate themselves in being either:Introverted or Extroverted, Sensitive or Intuitive, Thinking or Feeling, and Judging or Perceiving. Once a student identifies their learning style, the 82 colleges are listed with a description of how that college meets different combinations of the learning styles. For example, this reviewer scored a E, S, T, J combination. Using the index, I can find colleges that match my learning styles based on their values, structure, and the majors and minors offered. With clear, realistic examples of each throughout the text of the learning styles for each college listed, a student can walk away with a pretty hardy list of colleges that might best fit their learning style. I think this text would be especially helpful for those students who don’t “fit the mold” or don’t “like the structure of organized mass education”. They will be exposed to some smaller, unique schools. It’s a great idea to connect learning styles to the style of the college and every career/college center should have this available for students to check out.
Walter Dean Myers
This biography of this well-known writer is excellent in that it is direct and factual. Inspiration for so many of Myers’ books is from his life. The subtitle of this book, Urban Fiction Author, emphasizes the main focus of Walter Dean Myers’ writing. He writes to speak to the unrepresented, disillusioned, struggling teenager that has no voice or sense of direction. Myers never forgets the challenges he faced as a young, under-educated black man growing up in Harlem in the 50s. Trying to overcome his own speech impediment, he began writing and reading poetry, winning his first writing prize at age 13. He has written over 20 books, many of which have been recognized for his ability to speak to young adults in an authentic voice. His work targets the disconnected, shy, lonely, frustrated young person that is trying to understand his world and hoping to figure out his role in that confusing, ever-changing scene. Myers does not shy away from the tough topics, addressing them with humor, understanding and persistence. The only drawback is that it is every page is text. Not a single picture to give interest. Still, this biography is a useful addition to a middle or high school library as an example of a successful adult who does achieve his life-long dream, through guidance, inspiration, and most of all persistence. It is fascinating to read the life story of such a prolific writer.
National Intelliegence
“Freedom from fear is a basic human right… Intelligence agents play a key role in securing this freedom for all Americans.” (p.7) Before reading this five chapter book with a skeletal* amount of information I didn’t know much , if anything, about the United States national intelligence system. It is so full of secrets, the general public only knows of its failures.
There are 16 separate agencies, with 200,000 employees spending $75 million / yr. on intelligence each year. Few of these employees are spies.
There are 5 steps in the Intelligence Cycle: 1) planning, 2) collecting information, 3 & 4) processing and analyzing , 5) delivery of intelligence to President. “The IC [Intelligence Cycle] relies on analysts to make sense of the information it gathers.” ( p. 36) Not all the information gathered makes it past the processing and analyzing due to its inaccuracy, being incomplete, or being outdated.
Chapter 5 discusses the controversies associated with some of the methods used in collecting intelligence, such as – waterboarding.
Includes: Map of Events – What Happened Where?, The Story Continues – New Threats, Influential Individuals, Timeline, Living History*, Glossary, and Index.
* more information at www.factsfornow.scholastic.com keywords National Intelligence
You Wouldn’t Want to Work on the Hoover Dam! An Explosive Job You’d Rather Not Do
The Great Depression of the 1930s is underway when Herbert Hoover’s dream to build a hydroelectric dam on the Colorado River is finally realized. Out of work men from California, Nevada, and Texas are a major part of the 21,000 workers employed for the dam’s construction. They arrive to find NO town, desert heat, and NO water supply.
The unnamed main character is one of the many employed unskilled workers. His facial expressions amplify and personalize the hardships of: dysentery, muddy drinking water, ditch latrines, living in a tent city in desert heat and freezing cold, and the dangers from blasting rock.
Amidst the graphics of the construction work there is an easily understandable diagram of how the water gets to the turbines to generate the power.