What ingredients are needed to make a nourishing bean soup? Appealing text and illustrations will draw emergent readers into the story. Pairs with the nonfiction title Let's Look at Beans.
Introduce emergent readers to the life cycle of the tiny-but-mighty bean. Carefully leveled text and bright photos show bean plants in all their stages: seed, sprout, flower, and pod. Pairs with the fiction title Bean Soup.
Strawberries start as tiny seeds and grow into sweet, bright red fruit. Eye-catching photos and carefully leveled text show readers the strawberry life cycle. Pairs with the fiction title Sharing Berries.
Follow a bee, a butterfly, and a bunny as they find dandelions to eat together in this adorably illustrated tale. Pairs with the nonfiction title Let's Look at Dandelions.
Adorable illustrations introduce body part vocabulary on a woolly friend.
Jake and his friends use what they know about toads to make the perfect toad house.
Jake and his friends make bird feeders at school, but their creations turn out to be more popular than they expected!
What happens when the wind blows? Children discover the wind can cause problems, but it can also be fun!
Raise children's awareness of the importance of trees to nature and our lives. This book points out the food we receive from trees and opens the door to learnin
Will Snake find something tasty to sate his hunger? Simple text introduces readers to dialogue.
What happens when the wind blows? Children discover the wind can cause problems, but it can also be fun!
Will Snake find something tasty to sate his hunger? Simple text introduces readers to dialogue.
While the seagull looks for a meal, the fish looks to avoid being a meal. Readers will enjoy watching the story unfold from two different perspectives.
Explore sea life through vivid photos of a school field trip.
There's much to be discovered on a walk through the woods at night.
Catching lightning bugs is so much fun! Will Mom be as excited to see what's in the jar?
What surprise does the little girl find hiding in her garden? This patterned text is great to use for teaching color words.
Silly illustrations and rhyming phrases depict the various ways animals can move.
Caterpillar is plain, and the other bugs know it. But everyone is impressed when a big change takes place!
A young boy notices the life in the forest as he waits for one special creature. Readers will enjoy predicting the final animal to make an appearance.
Horses come in many different colors. Dynamic illustrations will help readers explore them all.
How many birds can you find? Practice counting and colors with rich photos of birds.
Jake and his friends use what they know about toads to make the perfect toad house.
In Exercise, young readers will learn about the role of exercise in a healthy lifestyle while exploring different ways to have fun while moving. Vibrant, full-color photos and carefully leveled text will engage emergent readers as they explore the world of hiking and biking. A labeled diagram helps introduce readers to a variety of healthy fitness practices, while a picture glossary reinforces new vocabulary. Children can learn more about exercise online using our safe search engine that provides relevant, age-appropriate websites. Exercise also features reading tips for teachers and parents, a table of contents, and an index.
From the shore, the ocean looks like clear, sparkling blue but look closely at a small scoop and you'll find the ocean looks more like soup! Our oceans are filled with plastics, from water bottles and take-out containers to the teeny tiny plastic particles you need a microscope to see. But who exactly cooked up this stinky soup? And, more importantly, what is the recipe for getting (and keeping) our oceans clean? This bouncing, rhyming story pulls no punches about how we ended up in this sticky mess but also offers hope and help for cleaning up this ocean soup.