Category: Book Review (Page 52 of 63)

Cybils: Best STEM Children’s Books of 2013

Amidst the hubbub for Valentine’s Day comes the announcements of the winners of the Cybils awards. Since we are also hosting STEM Friday today, let’s look at the STEM titles that were nominated in the Elementary/Middle-Grade Nonfiction category, as well as reveal the winner.

cybils-2013-logo

Quite a few strong STEM books were nominated for Cybils awards last year and four made it to the finalist round. The three runner-ups were:

boy-who-loved-math

The Boy Who Loved Math: The Improbable Life of Paul Erdös by Deborah Heiligman and illustrated by LeUyen Pham is a rare treat.

This picture book biography explores the life of Paul Erdös, who thought about math all day, even when he was a young boy. In fact, he was so busy thinking about numbers that he never really learned to tie his shoes or other basic life skills (his mother and nanny did all those things for him). It isn’t until he was 21 and attended a meeting of mathematicians for the first time that he buttered his own bread!

The illustrations in this book are ingenious. LeUyen Pham includes three pages of illustrator notes in the back to explain all the math she has incorporated into them. I’m sure we will be hearing more about her work in the future.

Important messages the book contains:

  • Math can be exciting and interesting
  • It is okay to be different from everyone else

Paul Erdös is an amazing, unique human being and Heiligman’s passion for her topic is palpable, yielding a biography as special, lovable and one-of-a-kind as its subject. Share it today!

Age Range: 3 – 8 years
Hardcover: 44 pages
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press (June 25, 2013)
ISBN-10: 1596433078
ISBN-13: 978-1596433076

volcano-rising-bigger

Volcano Rising by Elizabeth Rusch and illustrated by Susan Swan

Children are definitely interested volcanoes, but too often children’s books focus on the sensational, explosive aspects. Volcano Rising is different, because it explains not only what volcanoes are, but also how they can be a positive force by creating new land and adding nutrients to the soil. The text has two layers, with one layer of simple text meant to be read aloud and the other for those who want to delve more deeply into what volcanoes are all about.

See related post about volcanoes with activities (includes a previous review of this book)

Age Range: 6 – 9 years
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Charlesbridge (August 1, 2013)
ISBN-10: 1580894089
ISBN-13: 978-1580894081

how-big-were-dinosaurs

How Big Were Dinosaurs? by Lita Judge

Judge compares dinosaurs to common objects in a fun romp. Children will probably be surprised how small and how big some of the dinosaurs were. In the back is a fold out section that explains more about each dinosaur. If you are going to read this book aloud, you might want to take a gander at that section first, because it contains pronunciation guides to some of the tongue-twister names.

Age Range: 6 – 9 years
Hardcover: 40 pages
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press (August 27, 2013)
ISBN-10: 1596437197
ISBN-13: 978-1596437197

And, now, drumroll please…

This year’s winner is a STEM book!

 

look-up

Look Up!: Bird-Watching in Your Own Backyard by Annette LeBlanc Cate

Cate utilizes a conversational style and humorous cartoon illustrations that are sure to attract children to give birdwatching a try. Although targeting middle grade, it will appeal to a broad range of ages.

Look Up! was also chosen as a 2014 Robert F. Sibert Honor Book.

Activity suggestion:  It would be a perfect book to accompany the Great Backyard Bird Count, which is being held this weekend.

great-backyard bird count 2014

Age Range: 8 – 12 years
Hardcover: 64 pages
Publisher: Candlewick; First Edition edition (March 12, 2013)
ISBN-10: 0763645613
ISBN-13: 978-0763645618

 

Disclosures:  I am an affiliate for Amazon, and if you click through the linked titles or ads and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission at no extra charge to you. Proceeds will be used to maintain this self-hosted blog.

 

Come visit the STEM Friday blog each week to find more great Science, Technology, Engineering and Math books.

Handle with Care: Story of a Butterfly Farm

Several exciting new science and nature-related picture books are coming out this spring. Frankly it was hard to decide which to share first, but today let’s start with Handle With Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey (Junior Library Guild Selection) by Loree Griffin Burns and with photographs by Ellen Harasimowicz.

handle-with-care

Have you ever visited one of the many butterfly exhibits that seem to be popping up all over? The ones that allow you to enter a greenhouse or pavilion full of live butterflies?

Heliconius-sara- sara-longwing

Sara longwing

Isn’t it a magical experience?

Have you ever wondered where all those colorful butterflies come from? Handle with Care answers that question.

It turns out it is an amazing journey. The book starts with a mysterious foil-covered package that arrives at the Butterfly Garden at the Museum of Science in Boston. Inside the box are nestled brightly colored pupae that will soon turn into butterflies for the exhibit. The package came from a butterfly farm far away in Costa Rica.

Author Loree Griffin Burns and photographer Ellen Harasimowicz traveled to the farm to research the story of how butterflies are raised. They found out that captive butterflies are mass raised like any other livestock, except they live in large greenhouses instead of in a pasture. Readers will likely enjoy the amazing photographs of the process and the people who make it happen.

Related activities:

1. Take a trip to a butterfly exhibit

Handle with Care is very likely to inspire a trip to a butterfly exhibit. Here in Arizona we have seasonal butterfly exhibitions at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix and at the Tucson Botanical Garden, as well as Butterfly Wonderland year round in Scottsdale.

I hadn’t been to the newly-opened Butterfly Wonderland, so I went this weekend.

Heliconius-hecale-tiger-longwing-111Tiger longwing

It was a photographer’s dream.

paper-kite-Idea-leuconoe-111Paper kite

If you go, encourage your children to bring a camera, if allowed. Photographs are great ways to record the different kinds of butterflies and learn their names. Keep a digital or physical scrapbook to record your trip.

I found out that Butterfly Wonderland gets their butterflies from South America, Africa and all the way from Asia!

If you can’t get to a butterfly exhibit in person, the Florida Museum’s Butterfly Rainforest has a live feeding station webcam, rainforest canopy cam, and a chrysalis cam so you can watch the butterflies feed, fly and emerge in real time.

Before you go on a field trip note:  Even though butterflies are for the most part innocuous, be aware that some children (and adults) may fear or have a phobia about insects, including butterflies.

2. Learn about butterfly life cycles/metamorphosis

Children can explore the butterfly life cycle through the book, with photographs of all the stages and a complete description in the back, plus comparisons to the life cycles of some other insects.

hornworm-egg-up-good

Butterflies lay their eggs on the leaves of the plants the caterpillars feed on.

monarch-caterpillar

The larval stage of butterflies, or caterpillars,  feed on plants, often only one or a few kinds.

aaa-chrysalids-104

The pupal stage for butterflies are often called chrysalids. The butterfly exhibits receive pupae for butterfly farms.

aaa-Hh-chrysalids-103

Some of the pupae are incredibly beautiful.

paper-kite-Idea-leuconoe-201

Many butterfly exhibits have an area where you can observe the adult butterflies emerge from the pupae.

See a related post about butterfly science

3. Butterfly behaviors

Butterfly exhibits and gardens are wonderful places to observe butterfly behaviors, such as basking, feeding, perching, puddling, and patrolling.

Heliconius-melpomene-postman

This postman butterfly is basking on a part of a sidewalk warmed by the sun. If it is cool out, it is not uncommon to see butterflies basking, particularly first thing in the morning.

at-top Cethosia biblis perakana (male)Butterfly exhibits offer many opportunities to watch butterflies feeding on various sweet solutions. This is a colorful butterfly feeder.

feeding

If you look closely, you may be able to see a butterfly using its proboscis to drink nectar from a flower.

paper-kite-perching

Sometimes the butterflies appear to rest on plants, but often it is their way to “see and be seen,” especially by rivals and potential mates. This behavior is called perching.

clearwing-Greta-oto-111

It would be easy to miss this tiny clearwing butterfly. It is puddling on a leaf by inserting its proboscis into a wet clump of dirt. Butterflies, particularly males, are thought to take up important minerals and nutrients this way. The behavior is called puddling because it is often observed around damp patches or puddles on the ground.

Male butterflies may actively fly around looking for mates or even guard territories against rival males. Patrolling isn’t as easy to document via photographs, so here is an enchanting video showing an admiral butterfly patrolling. (Note: there is a pop-up ad.)

 

Handle With Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey (Junior Library Guild Selection) is a lovely book for youngsters that will surely inspire a trip to a butterfly exhibit. You will want to use it to accompany units on life cycles, farming, and insects, as well. Read it and watch children’s imaginations take flight!

Age Range: 6 – 10
Series: Junior Library Guild Selection (Millbrook Press)
Library Binding: 32 pages
Publisher: Millbrook Pr Trade (January 1, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0761393420
ISBN-13: 978-0761393429

Disclosures: The book was provided electronically for review via NetGalley. I am an affiliate with Amazon so I can provide you with cover images and links to more information about books and products. As you probably are aware, if you click through the highlighted title link and purchase a product, I will receive a very small commission, at not extra cost to you. Any proceeds help defray the costs of hosting and maintaining this website.

If you are interested in children’s nonfiction, you might want to visit the Nonfiction Monday blog and see what other new books bloggers have found.

nonfictionmonday

Plastic, Ahoy: Investigating the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Want a first hand look at young scientists exploring a recently discovered phenomenon? Plastic, Ahoy!: Investigating the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by Patricia Newman, with photographs by Annie Crawley introduces the middle grade level reader to three graduate students who spend nearly three weeks aboard a research vessel in the Pacific Ocean taking samples from what is called the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch.”

Plastic, Ahoy!- Investigating the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

In August of 2009, Miriam Goldstein, Chelsea Rochman, and Darcy Taniguchi departed on a ship as part of the Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition or SEAPLEX (see the blog). The book chronicles their observations and experiences.

You can get a feel for the book in this trailer:

 

 

Surprisingly, the students found that much of the plastic in the Garbage Patch is small broken pieces, basically “the size of confetti.” The small size is going to make removing the plastic from the water very difficult because any net that is the right size to capture the bits of plastic will also capture all sorts of marine life. The bottom line is that these are not all full-sized water bottles floating around.

The team members also discovered that 9% of 147 the fish they sampled during the trip had plastic bits in their stomachs. Given that there is some evidence plastic bits tend to accumulate toxins from the water, this could have long term negative consequences to food chains. Obviously more studies need to be done.

Not all the news was necessarily negative, however. One study found that sea-going relatives of water striders called “sea striders” are actually doing better in the Garbage Patch because more debris means more places they can lay their eggs (Plastic Trash Altering Ocean Habitats, Scripps Study Shows).

Plastic, Ahoy! can be a jumping off point for many potential science experiments and explorations of your own. Here are just a few ideas:

1. The lifespans of plastic objects

How long will your trash bag live? is an idea for a science fair project that compares the longevity of plastic, paper, and biodegradable plastic bags buried in the ground. This is a long duration experiment (months).

In this article, a Teen Decomposes Plastic Bag in Three Months

2. Preventing plastic from reaching the ocean

Science Buddies has a science fair project idea for looking at the design of storm drains with the idea of keeping trash from getting into the water

3. Floating ocean trash experiments from previous post at Growing with Science

4. The National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration’s Marine Debris Program has educational materials such as:

Plastic, Ahoy!: Investigating the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by Patricia Newman, with photographs by Annie Crawley is an exciting introduction to science, told through the stories of actual young scientists. You will want to share it with children interested in marine biology, chemistry and conservation. It would make perfect reading for Earth Day (April 22, 2014) or World Ocean Day (June 8, 2014) or a unit on the environment, particularly the marine environment.

Recommended Ages:  8-12
Publisher: Millbrook Pr Trade (January 1, 2014)
ISBN-10: 1467712833
ISBN-13: 978-1467712835

Disclosures: This book was provided for review via Blue Slip Media. Also, I am an affiliate for Amazon, and if you click through the linked titles or ads and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission at no extra charge to you. Proceeds will be used to maintain this self-hosted blog.

 

Come visit the STEM Friday blog each week to find more great Science, Technology, Engineering and Math books.

« Older posts Newer posts »