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Top 10 Sci-Tech Books for Youth: 2021, by By Sarah Hunter

Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga Hoole | Corona Coming Attractions

Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga Hoole | Corona Coming Attractions
coronacomingattractions.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from coronacomingattractions.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

2020–2022 STEM/STEAM Biographies for Young Readers: A Booklist

2020–2022 STEM/STEAM Biographies for Young Readers: A Booklist
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Fall 2021 Children s Announcements: Publishers F-L

And gains Greystone Kids Inside in: X-Rays of Nature’s Hidden World by Jan Paul Schutten, illus. by Arie Van ‘t Riet, trans. by Laura Watkinson (Oct. 12, $19.95, ISBN 978-1-77164-679-6), provides a look at creatures and their natural habitats using x-ray techniques and photographs. Ages 2–7. How Beautiful by Antonella Capetti, illus. by Melissa Castrillon (Nov. 2, $17.95, ISBN 978-1-77164-853-0). A curious caterpillar searches for the true meaning of the word beautiful. Ages 4–8. Little Narwhal, Not Alone by Tiffany Stone, illus. by Ashlyn Anstee (Oct. 12, $17.95, ISBN 978-1-77164-620-8). In a tale inspired by real events, a lost narwhal in search of other narwhals finds a pod of beluga whales instead. Ages 4–8.

Wild About Utah: Going In With a Child s Naturalist Eye

Credit Shannon Rhodes In Kathryn Lasky’s picture book “One Beetle Too Many,” we read, “Charles [Darwin] learned the names of everything he collected, for to know the names of these things was important, and it might be the one time when adults would actually listen to a child speak.” As an elementary school teacher, I ponder its message, reflecting on my wilderness experiences enriched by children. In fact, some of my best discovery days have been when I was led by a curious child.  As a Stokes Nature Center camp leader one summer, my focus for the day was on alpine forest plants as we set out on a northern Utah trail. I carried plant presses and field guides, ready to teach how to identify a Douglas fir from a Lodgepole pine and to have them hug quaking aspens blindfolded to discover distinguishing characteristics of each trunk. These youngsters were going to learn every forest fact I could share, I thought, but they quickly taught me the meaning of naturalist John Muir

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