Night becomes day : changes in nature
(2022)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Lerner Publishing Group, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781728447612 (electronic bk.) MWT14717849, 1728447615 (electronic bk.) 14717849
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Audisee® eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and sentence highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience! Night becomes day / Flower becomes fruit. Nature is always at work, transforming. Whether sudden or gradual, change is a constant in our world. Author Cynthia Argentine describes transitions including acorns sprouting, deserts blooming, canyons forming, and volcanoes erupting. Explore the transformative power of nature all around us. "Changes occur every day all around us. This text leads readers to notice and seek out the many changes that are taking place in their world: An acorn sprouts and grows, clouds form, a volcano erupts. Argentine simultaneously folds in a lesson in opposites. 'Change can BRIGHTEN' shows a desert with mountains in the background before and after a rain, the left one barren, the right one covered in blooming pink flowers. 'Change can DULL' pictures fallen leaves and the beginning of soil formation. Changes can be small/big, quick/slow, hot/cold, or ancient/new, and they may take place above/below. An author's note encourages readers to think about how all things, living and nonliving, are connected, defining this branch of science as ecology. Further backmatter provides more information about the various examples in the text and the branches of science they fall under (geology, botany, biology, chemistry, and physics). This is written at a higher reading level and largely uses undefined vocabulary (microbes, humus, molecules, minerals), possibly creating a mismatch between the audience for the main text and children who will understand the backmatter, though it could be a solid springboard in older elementary and middle-grade science classes. In addition, some of the facts presented are incomplete or incorrect. For instance, subduction is not the only means of volcano formation. The stock photos are well chosen to highlight the changes and will hold readers' interest. A catalyst for conversations about change."-Kirkus Reviews

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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