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Autumn has arrived, and at Granite City Elementary School everyone
is gearing up for the biggest and best event of the year, the
Harvest Festival. The whole school is excited about the games, the
contests, the food, and most of all the costumes! Everyone except
Lucy. She doesn't like dressing up, and has no desire to be a fairy
princess or rock star, even for one day. But Lucy is excited about
the new science unit Miss Flippo has started: the states of matter.
Lucy and her friends understand solids and liquids. They're easy.
But gasses are more difficult to grasp. When the class goes on a
field trip to an orchard and Stewart Swinefest eats too many
apples, and gets a serious stomachache, Lucy suddenly understands
that even if you can't see gasses they can fill space and expand,
and even make you move. And with Stewart feeling better, she has a
really great idea for her Harvest Festival costume, too. The second
book in a new chapter book series from IRA Children's Book
Award-winner, Michelle Houts, Solids, Liquids, Guess Who's Got Gas
draws on STEM themes and is aligned with curriculum guidelines to
bring a love of science to young readers, inspiring them to start
their own labs and explore their world.
From IRA Children's Book Award-winner, Michelle Houts, Lucy Saves
Some Squirrels draws on STEM themes and is aligned with curriculum
guidelines to bring a love of science to young readers, inspiring
them to start their own labs and explore their world. On Lucy's
first day of second grade, she's excited to meet her new teacher,
Miss Flippo, and find out everything's she's going to learn about
this year in school. And when Miss Flippo tells the class that
they're going to have their very own science lab, complete with lab
coats and goggles, Lucy can't wait to start exploring. But one
thing is troubling her. The tree that sat outside her first-grade
classroom all year is gone. Where are the squirrels going to live?
Inspired by her classroom lab, Lucy starts her own research mission
to find out what happened to the tree, and then to lobby for the
school to plant a new one. With the help of her cousin, Cora, and
their new classmates, Lucy discovers that science is everywhere you
look, and a lab can be anywhere you look.
"A beautifully crafted friendship tale that’s just right for
storytime." --Kirkus A tender and emotive picture book about a
scarecrow who befriends the young girl who reads to him day after
day until one day he's left wondering where she is. The perfect
Fall book for kids! A scarecrow stood in the garden. Tall, proud,
and smiling. Every day a girl brought her favorite books to the
garden and she read to him. He heard tales of courage and of hope.
And when she said, "The End," the scarecrow always felt a little
bit taller and braver. Year after year, she came and she read to
him. Until one spring, two different hands picked him up from the
garden shed and placed him in the garden. He waited, but she didn't
come to read to him. With poignant words from award-winning author
Michelle Houts and lush illustrations by Pura Belpré Honor winner
Sara Palacios, Hopefully the Scarecrow is a tender distillation of
the enduring power of friendship and a heartwarming look at the
ways stories connect us. Perfect for fans of The Scarecrow by Beth
Ferry and The Fan Bros. Praise for Hopefully the Scarecrow: "A
simply told, emotionally satisfying picture book." --Booklist
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Sea Glass Summer (Hardcover)
Michelle Houts; Illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline
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R508
R437
Discovery Miles 4 370
Save R71 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Introduce kids to the great horned owl with this beautifully
illustrated and accessible picture book. Perfect for preschool and
kindergarten science curriculums. An owl swoops down to lay her egg
in a coal yard-a dangerous spot for a fragile egg! Rescued by
Walter, a bird expert with a big heart and a warm shirt pocket, the
egg miraculously hatches and is aptly named Coal. Thus begins a
tender story of rescue, rehabilitation, and most of all,
friendship. After meticulously researching the facts, Michelle
Houts tells Coal's story with warmth and humor. The connections
between Coal and the people whose lives he touches are captured by
Deb Hoeffner's illustrations, done in her unique style of soft
realism. Backmatter answers children's questions with facts and
photos of Great Horned Owls and Walter Crawford "The Man Who Saved
Coal." Parents and teachers will appreciate literacy connections
and STEM activities that extend the learning of the story. A
perfect book for:parents and teachers needing homeschool supplies
for kindergarten (or any grade!)anyone looking for owl books for
kidsanyone looking for children's books to help instill an
appreciation of our planet!
As debate rages over the widening and destructive gap between
the rich and the rest of Americans, Claude Fischer and his
colleagues present a comprehensive new treatment of inequality in
America. They challenge arguments that expanding inequality is the
natural, perhaps necessary, accompaniment of economic growth. They
refute the claims of the incendiary bestseller "The Bell Curve"
(1994) through a clear, rigorous re-analysis of the very data its
authors, Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray, used to contend
that inherited differences in intelligence explain inequality.
"Inequality by Design" offers a powerful alternative explanation,
stressing that economic fortune depends more on social
circumstances than on IQ, which is itself a product of society.
More critical yet, patterns of inequality must be explained by
looking beyond the attributes of individuals to the structure of
society. Social policies set the "rules of the game" within which
individual abilities and efforts matter. And recent policies have,
on the whole, widened the gap between the rich and the rest of
Americans since the 1970s.
Not only does the wealth of individuals' parents shape their
chances for a good life, so do national policies ranging from labor
laws to investments in education to tax deductions. The authors
explore the ways that America--the most economically unequal
society in the industrialized world--unevenly distributes rewards
through regulation of the market, taxes, and government spending.
It attacks the myth that inequality fosters economic growth, that
reducing economic inequality requires enormous welfare
expenditures, and that there is little we can do to alter the
extent of inequality. It also attacks the injurious myth of innate
racial inequality, presenting powerful evidence that racial
differences in achievement are the consequences, not the causes, of
social inequality. By refusing to blame inequality on an
unchangeable human nature and an inexorable market--an excuse that
leads to resignation and passivity--"Inequality by Design" shows
how we can advance policies that widen opportunity for all.
When you look at a bird, do you see feathers and a beak? Or do you
see circles and triangles? Artist Charley Harper spent his life
reducing subjects to their simplest forms, their basic lines and
shapes. This resulted in what he called minimal realism and the
style that would become easily recognized as Charley Harper’s.
Art fans and nature lovers around the world fell in love with
Harper’s paintings, which often featured bright colors and
intriguing nature subjects. Harper’s love of painting and drawing
led him from the hills of West Virginia to the bombed-out villages
of Europe, to the streets of New York City, and to the halls of the
Art Academy of Cincinnati. How did the farm boy who didn’t know a
single artist become one of America’s most recognized midcentury
modern painters? The answer is simple. He did it by counting the
wings. Count the Wings is the first book for middle-grade readers
about Harper’s life and work. Author Michelle Houts worked
closely with the Harper estate to include full-color illustrations,
plentiful supplemental materials, and discussion questions that
will intrigue and engage young readers. Count the Wings is part of
our acclaimed Biographies for Young Readers series, which brings
smart, expertly researched books about often overlooked but
exceptional individuals to school-age readers.
It took her two tries, but in 1955, sixty-seven-year-old Emma
"Grandma" Gatewood became the first woman to solo hike the entire
length of the Appalachian Trail in one thru-hike. Gatewood has
become a legend for those who hike the trail, and in her home state
of Ohio, where she helped found the Buckeye Trail. In recent years,
she has been the subject of a bestselling biography and a
documentary film. In When Grandma Gatewood Took a Hike, Michelle
Houts brings us the first children's book about her feat, which she
accomplished without professional gear or even a tent. Houts
chronicles the spirit of a seasoned outdoorswoman and mother of
eleven whose grit and determination helped her to hike over two
thousand miles. Erica Magnus's vibrant illustrations capture the
wild animals, people from all walks of life, and unexpected
challenges that this strong-willed woman encountered on the journey
she initially called a "lark." Children ages 4-10 will delight in
this narrative nonfiction work as they accompany Emma Gatewood on
the adventure of a lifetime and witness her transformation from
grandmother to hiking legend, becoming "Grandma" to all.
This is the first systematic study of patterns of social mobility
in Ireland. It covers a recent period-the 1960s-when Ireland was
undergoing rapid economic growth and modernization. The author thus
was able to test the widely accepted hypothesis that growth weakens
class barriers. To his surprise he found that it did not. Social
mobility increased somewhat, but among mobile men the better jobs
still went to those from advantaged social class origins. Despite
economic development and demographic change, the underlying link
between social origins and career destinations remained unchanged.
In chapters on education, life cycle, religion, and farming,
Michael Hout shows how inequality persists in contemporary Ireland.
In the last chapter he reviews evidence from other countries and
concludes that governments must take action against class barriers
in education and employment practices if inequality is to be
reduced. Economic growth creates jobs, he argues, but economic
growth alone cannot allocate those jobs fairly.
When you look at a bird, do you see feathers and a beak? Or do you
see circles and triangles? Artist Charley Harper spent his life
reducing subjects to their simplest forms, their basic lines and
shapes. This resulted in what he called minimal realism and the
style that would become easily recognized as Charley Harper's. Art
fans and nature lovers around the world fell in love with Harper's
paintings, which often featured bright colors and intriguing nature
subjects. Harper's love of painting and drawing led him from the
hills of West Virginia to the bombed-out villages of Europe, to the
streets of New York City, and to the halls of the Art Academy of
Cincinnati. How did the farm boy who didn't know a single artist
become one of America's most recognized midcentury modern painters?
The answer is simple. He did it by counting the wings. Count the
Wings is the first book for middle-grade readers about Harper's
life and work. Author Michelle Houts worked closely with the Harper
estate to include full-color illustrations, plentiful supplemental
materials, and discussion questions that will intrigue and engage
young readers. Count the Wings is part of our acclaimed Biographies
for Young Readers series, which brings smart, expertly researched
books about often overlooked but exceptional individuals to
school-age readers.
Explains the most widely used methods for analyzing
cross-classified data on occupational origins and destinations.
Hout reviews classic definitions, models, and sources of mobility
data, as well as elementary operations for analyzing mobility
tables. Tabular and graphic displays illustrate the discussion
throughout.
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