Science

Home in the Cave

Book Cover
Author(s): 
Janet Halfmann
Illustrator(s): 
Shennen Bersani
Grade / Age level: 
ISBN: 
2 147 483 647
Copyright: 
2012
Review: 

Baby Bat learns about the importance of guano to a cave's ecosystem in Janet Halfmann's new book "Home in the Cave." Children learn about bats and other creatures that live in caves through the exploration of Baby Bat and his pack rat friend. As with all Sylvan Dell books, the last pages contain more information and activities related to the story. Don't let the insects and guano deter you from this fun and informative book!

Publisher: 
Sylvan Dell Publishing
Perspective: 
Catholic
Number of pages: 
35 pages
Review Date: 
6-26-2012
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Home in the Cave

How a Seed Grows

Book cover: 'How a Seed Grows'
Author(s): 
Helene J. Jordan
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1992
Review: 

A very simple, charming book that explains to young children what seeds are and takes them through the development of some bean seeds. The growth present each day is illustrated in the book and the child is invited to try grow the beans themselves and watch the progress in real life. The book also introduces children to different kinds of seeds (for trees, flowers, vegetables, etc.), and how each seed will grow into the same kind of plant that it came from, and the basic things necessary to make a plant grow.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Additional notes: 

Copyrights 1960/1992

Review Date: 
12-27-99
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How a Seed Grows

How do Apples Grow?

Book cover: 'How do Apples Grow?'
Author(s): 
Betsy Maestro
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1992
Review: 

The development of apples is presented, from leaf and flower buds in the winter, thru blossoms in the spring, pollination and the actual growth of the apple. In addition to beautiful scenic pictures of trees in blossom and bees pollinating the trees, there are more technical drawings which illustrate the parts of a flower, show flowers in the different stages of development and show the connections between the original blossom and the ripe apple. The text also introduces some important terminology that will be useful in later science studies (pollen, stamen, pistil, etc.). Overall, a very nice and useful book.

Publisher: 
HarperTrophy
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
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How do Apples Grow?

How Do Bees Make Honey?

Book cover: 'How Do Bees Make Honey?'
Author(s): 
Anna Claybourne
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1994
Review: 

A small, inexpensive book filled with pictures and lots of other information picture about bees and other insects. You'll learn how to tell bees apart from other insects, how bees live together in colonies and all about their beehives, how bees communicate with each other (my children have really enjoyed trying to re-enact the bee's dances) and of course how bees make honey. The one thing I didn't like is that the material is so disjointed because it jumps around between different kinds of insects.

Publisher: 
Usborne
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
24 pages
Review Date: 
1999
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How Do Bees Make Honey?

How do Birds Find Their Way?

Book cover: 'How do Birds Find Their Way?'
Author(s): 
Roma Gans
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1996
Review: 

A nicely illustrated and interesting look at the amazing phenomenon of bird migration, what we know about how migration works and some various theories about details that are still being studied. Includes a chart of how high various birds fly.

Publisher: 
HarperTrophy
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
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How do Birds Find Their Way?

How We Learned the Earth is Round

Book cover: 'How We Learned the Earth is Round'
Author(s): 
Patricia Lauber
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1990
Review: 

A history and science picture book that covers the development of man's understanding of the shape of the earth focusing on the discoveries of the Greeks and on the voyages of Christopher Columbus and Magellan.
Currently out-of-print

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
4-5-01
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How We Learned the Earth is Round

Incredible Comparisons

Book cover: 'Incredible Comparisons'
Author(s): 
Russell Ash
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
1996
Review: 

This picture book designed for "big kids" gives side-by-side comparisons according to length, height, area, life-span, speed, etc. of all kinds of things - animals, mountains, countries, modes of transportation, man-made structures and much more.

Segments of the book include: "On the Surface" (compares land-size of various countries, islands, different uses of land), "Into the Earth" (canyon depths, cave lengths and depths, etc.), "Going into Space" (compares power and speeds of rockets vs. airplanes, comet tail size comparison with various planets, etc.), "The Solar System" (compares planet sizes and distances, etc.), "Great Lengths" (compares lenghts of airplanes, highways, major rivers, telecommunications cables, etc.). Other chapters cover animal speeds, ladn and water speeds, human population etc. Does include some environmental and politically correct content. The segment on human population was much better than I expected. To give a sampling.... "A population explosion has seen the number of people in the world more than triple since 1900 - from less than 2,000,000,000 to close to 6,000,000,000. Each day, enough people to fill the largest stadium in the modern world are added to the total. Thankfully, the world is a very big place. All the people in the world today could actually fit, standing shoulder to shoulder, on the small Indonesian island of Bali."

Publisher: 
Dorling Kindersley
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Number of pages: 
64 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
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Incredible Comparisons

Insects do the Strangest Things

Author(s): 
Leonora and Arthur Hornblow
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1968
Review: 

Interesting and informative stories of the strange but fascinating behavior of various types of insects. The pictures are of the somewhat cheezy 60s variety, but the text is quite good and written at approximately a second grade level.

Publisher: 
Random House Step-Up Books
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Number of pages: 
60 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
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Insects do the Strangest Things

Journey into Amazing Caves

Subject(s): 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
2004
Review: 

This weekend we rented Journey into Amazing Caves (an IMAX film). It's a beautifully filmed documentary that traces a group of scientists' explorations into caves in the Grand Canyon, ice caves in Greenland and underwater caves on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. The scientists are searching for "extremophiles" - bacteria and other small creatures that survive extreme conditions and may be useful for medicines.

Just the natural beauty of these remote places is absolutely breathtaking. But watching the "making of" gives you an even greater appreciation as you realize the challenges and dangers of "extreme photography". Wow.

My children saw this before I had a chance to. I heard them from the other room going ... Woah... Woooah.... Wooooooah... as the team kayaked down a beautiful river.

The movie references the website of one of the team members who also works as a teaching assistant and put this website together for her grade school class...Nancy's Expedition Diary (I especially liked the Q & A in the "Ask Nancy" part.)

We love these kinds of documentaries that "work" for a wide age range and help spark an interest in science while providing some real substance. I have to admit that it was quite delightful the next day to see my 8 year old daughter out in our cold, snowy backyard digging into our sandbox and pretending she was a scientist "out exploring."

Publisher: 
IMAX
Binding: 
Other
Review Date: 
3-6-06
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Journey into Amazing Caves

Life is a Blessing

A Biography of Jerome Lejeune: Geneticist, Doctor, Father
Book cover: 'Life is a Blessing'
Author(s): 
Clara Lejeune
Setting: 
Translator(s): 
Michael J. Miller
Grade / Age level: 
ISBN: 
898 708 125
Copyright: 
2000
Review: 

Written by his daughter, this book brings us a portrait of a great Christian, loving husband and father, and devoted son who was also one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century.

Seeking to help his beloved patients, Lejeune succeeded in tracing the cause of Down syndrome to an extra 21st chromosome. He could have named the syndrome after himself, but with his characteristic humility, he named the condition "Trisomy-21". While his work did succeed in removing the stigma from Downs (it had previously been thought that maternal syphilis caused it), Lejeune was heartbroken to see his discovery turned into a weapon against the ones he loved so much.

Further discoveries in the field of genetic medicine followed, including Trisomy-13 and monosomy-9. But despite his pioneering work, which opened up the field of genetically-based diseases, he was never awarded a Nobel Prize, likely due to his unwelcome pro-life views. There was worse to come. Because of his defense of the innocent and defenseless, Lejeune found himself increasingly sidelined. Nevertheless, he continued to bear a hope-filled Christian witness, forgetful of self, a shining example to us all.

Toward the end of his life, Dr. Lejeune worked to found the Pontifical Academy for Life and was (very briefly) its first president. He died on Easter Sunday, a circumstance in which his friend Pope John Paul II found a particular significance.

A beautiful book about a great man.

Publisher: 
Ignatius Press
Binding: 
Sewn Softcover
Perspective: 
Catholic
Number of pages: 
160 pages
Additional notes: 

Originally published in French by Criterion, Paris, 1997.

Review Date: 
8-7-2008
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Life is a Blessing