Children's Books for Big Learning

Thursday, November 18, 2004

Way to learn history!

What more delicious way to learn about history than a good piece of historical fiction? The vivid descriptions of context, the personal views of the characters, and the compelling scenarios - it all adds up to history that means something. Kids learn that the events of history had immediate and important effects on people's - and kids' - everyday lives.

Once you make history come alive, kids are a lot more ready for a non-fiction analysis of broad social movements and world events.

An great example for kids ages 7-12 is Wingwalker by Rosemary Wells, which brings the dustbowl drought of the 1930s to life.

Read a review of Wingwalker on BigLearning.com.

Monday, November 15, 2004

Good Science Books

What makes a good children's science book?

Part One: Concept Development

Many science books aim too low, going only for the Gee Wiz. They underestimate both children's ability to understand science and a book's ability to help them.

Good science activity books have activities that connect with one another to help kids build robust understanding of real science concepts.

So skip the books with one-shot activities on a million different topics, even if each activity has a wimpy one or two sentence explanation of the science behind the activity. Instead, go for the ones that thoughtfully and completely develop important concepts.

Click here for a list of great science activity books with reviews and buying informaiton.


Thursday, November 11, 2004

One Smart Cookbook

Why is it so rare for children's book authors to treat their young readers as if they had brains? I looked high and low for a children's cookbook in which the approach went beyond, well, cookbook. Since this is rare even in adult cookbooks, I was thrilled to find Cooking Wizardry, which explains the "why" behind the recipes, includes science when helpful, and encourages kids to embellish recipes and create their own.

Check out the full review on Big Learning at www.biglearning.com/book-review-cooking-wizardry.htm.

More cookbooks at
www.biglearning.com/books-cooking-for-kids.htm

-KC

Saturday, November 06, 2004

Children's Educational Books

You call them educational, but your kids will call them "interesting."
Or "great."
Or "one of my favorite books."

Maybe even, "the book that changed my life."

I'm here to help you find books that will excite your child's intellect and open new worlds. To get started, check out the reviews on Big Learning:

Big Learning Children's Book Reviews