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Rhyming text and illustrations of such sea animals as whale, gulls, clown fish, and seal provide opportunities to practice counting and squaring numbers from one to ten.
In this sequel to The Other Side of the Door, ten-year-old Dora makes a quilt to record her experiences as she finally starts school and her Mormon family's efforts to secure homestead rights for their farm in New Mexico.
Bubbles grow and flow, fly in the sky, and pop, but dipping the stick and blowing can make more.
Rookie Reader, Level B.
Rhyming text and illustrations of such sea animals as whale, gulls, clown fish, and seal provide opportunities to practice counting and squaring numbers from one to ten.
"In an underwater grotto, where the sea is warm and blue, there are creatures to be counted in every shape and hue. We'll have a great adventure, an encounter face-to-face, while we're adding and subtracting in the coral-reefy place."--Page 5. Includes information about the coral-reef animals.
Witches, owls, skeletons and other scary creatures dance and wail in this rhyming tale of Halloween night.
Provides an introduction to the Fibonacci sequence and its presence in the animal world, including the equiangular spiral of a sundial shell, a parrot's beak, a hawk's talon, and a ram's horn.
"A sea born creature, who never quite belongs, discovers who she really is"--Back cover.
My Own Way is a poem and a picture book that introduces very young children to the wonder of gender diversity. Why feel limited to his or hers, blue or pink, football or ballet?