Science

Thomas A. Edison: Young Inventor

Book cover: 'Thomas A. Edison: Young Inventor'
Author(s): 
Sue Guthridge
Copyright: 
1959
Review: 

This is a fascinating and often humorous story of one of the most renowned inventors of all time. As a boy, Edison was fascinated by the world around him and full of questions about everything. Although he had many mentors as a boy, his first grade teacher reacted so negatively to his natural curiosity that his mother took him out of school and taught him at home. His adventures involving chemistry, trains and printing newspapers make for enjoyable and interesting reading. Edison was clearly a boy of creativity and ingenuity and a positive role model for children of today in sharing Edison's scientific interests and natural curiosity. My six year old boy, in particular, was completely enthralled when we read this story aloud.

Publisher: 
Childhood of Famous Americans/Aladdin
Binding: 
Paperback
Number of pages: 
192 pages
Additional notes: 

Copyrights 1947/1959

Review Date: 
1-4-01
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Thomas A. Edison: Young Inventor

Trains

Author(s): 
Gail Gibbons
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1987
Review: 

I really like it when authors of children's books remember that details of how things work are fascinating to children. Gail Gibbons is definitely one of those authors. Her book is filled with very simple illustrations and text about trains, but the various parts of the trains are labeled and the text explains things like how the trains link together and the differences between gondola cars, hopper cars, boxcars and tank cars.The back page contains a chart of signs and signals relating to trains. Appropriate for preschool or kindergarten age children.

Publisher: 
Holiday House
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
30 pages
Review Date: 
1999
Reviewed by: 
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Trains

What Lives in a Shell?

Book cover: 'What Lives in a Shell?'
Author(s): 
Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1994
Review: 

This beautifully illustrated book, designed for preschool and kindergarten, explains different kinds of shells and the creatures that inhabit them. The shells are compared to the shelter occupied by people and by other animals. We learn that some shells do grow larger along with certain animals while other animals must shed their out-grown shell in favor of a new one. Many shells are beautifully depicted and identified and the story-format of the text is very easy and interesting for young children to follow.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
11-17-99
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What Lives in a Shell?

What Makes Day and Night?

Book cover: 'What Makes Day and Night?'
Author(s): 
Franklyn M. Branley
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1986
Review: 

The clearly written text is combined with simple, colorful pictures to make the concepts of day and night and the rotation of the earth in relation to the sun very understandable for both young children and their parents. : ) Included is a very simple hands-on "experiment" requiring only your child and a desk lamp. Some information about the moon is also covered. Like other books in this series, this book is a great solution for satisfying some of those "why" questions that young children constantly ask.

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

Copyrights 1962/1986

Review Date: 
1999
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What Makes Day and Night?

What the Moon is Like

Book cover: 'What the Moon is Like'
Author(s): 
Franklyn M. Branley
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1986
Review: 

This book covers the appearance of the moon from the earth (in regards to its surface rather than its changes over the month), the explanations people have given for the appearance of the moon (man in the moon, etc.) and why it really looks that way. It covers many interesting details about the surface of the moon (including a simple map of the moon's surface marked with the locations of moon landings), its atmosphere, the length of day and night on the moon (and the extreme temperature difference between the two), the difference in gravity on the moon, etc. The book is fully illustrated and quite engaging although I think some of the ideas on how the moon was formed are still open for discussion. A final page offers a few simple moon-related projects and a few related websites for further information.

Publisher: 
HarperTrophy
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
1-29-01
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What the Moon is Like

Who Eats What? Food Chains and Food Webs

Book cover: 'Who Eats What? Food Chains and Food Webs'
Author(s): 
Patricia Lauber
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1995
Review: 

This book explores the notion of various plants and animals that are linked together based on "who eats what." Children will learn about some simple food chains such as - leaf, caterpillar, wren and hawk. They also see how one plant or animal can belong to several food chains and that members or these related food chains (food webs) have a certain amount of dependence on each other. The text goes on to explain, through an example of a problem with over-hunted otters around the turn of the century, that when part of a food chain is disturbed, the other members will also be affected. There are some mild "environmental" messages in this text which our family used as an opportunity to discuss good stewardship of what God has given us.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
1999
Reviewed by: 
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Who Eats What? Food Chains and Food Webs

Why Do Leaves Change Color?

Book cover: 'Why Do Leaves Change Color?'
Author(s): 
Betsy Maestro
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1994
Review: 

Our family has really enjoyed this book which explains why leave fall off the trees before winter, where the different colors come from, how weather affects the brilliancy of the colors and lots more. It's written in a very simple manner, so that it's quite understandable even for preschoolers or kindergarteners, and yet it contains substantial information so that even moms (like me) realize that they don't know everything : ) You'll also find labeled pictures of the leaves from different kinds of trees, a cross section of a leaf, an explanation of how trees make food, and how to make leaf rubbings and preserve leaves by ironing them between sheets of waxed paper.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
1999
Reviewed by: 
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Why Do Leaves Change Color?

Why I Sneeze, Shiver, Hiccup and Yawn

Book cover: 'Why I Sneeze, Shiver, Hiccup and Yawn'
Author(s): 
Melvin Berger
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
2000
Review: 

A simple book with cartoon-like illustrations that explains reflexes and the related workings of the nerovus system - focusing, of course, on those four topics mentioned in the title. The story also invites children to try out a few simple experiments to observe reflexes for themselves. A "Find Out More" section provides "Things to Think About", additional "Test Your Reflexes" ideas and "Fun Facts".

Publisher: 
HarperTrophy
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
3-20-01
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Why I Sneeze, Shiver, Hiccup and Yawn

Wild Animals Coloring Book

Book cover: 'Wild Animals Coloring Book'
Author(s): 
John Green
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1987
Review: 

A very nice, detailed and academic-oriented coloring book for learning about wild animals. In addition to beautiful drawings of each animal, the text provides common and scientific names and details about appearance, location, habits, size, etc. The index covers common and scientific names as well. Illustrations are copyright free (within certain conditions) and may be copied for use within your family.

Publisher: 
Dover
Binding: 
Stapled Softcover
Number of pages: 
48 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
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Wild Animals Coloring Book

The Joy of Science

Aristotle Leads the Way
Author(s): 
Joy Hakim
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
2004
Review: 

Joy Hakim is a talented story-teller, as readers of her American history series can attest. Her presentation of the history of science, ably illustrated with colored images of scientists and their apparatus and their books will engage the student and readily acquaint him with all that he is likely to be expected to know (in the politically correct sense) about the history of science.

It is the "politically correct" aspect that warrants some caution.

Joy Hakim is not herself either a scientist or a historian, and several annoying but commonplace and politically correct assumptions about science are reinforced by her work, to wit:

  • That religion and science are in conflict.

  • That the history of science basically begins with the Greeks, pauses for the Dark Middle Ages, and resumes for the Reformation/ Enlightenment.
  • That science involves a particular type of thought, in the long run the best kind of thought and the only one that is really dependable and serious.
  • That science fiction is a source of suggestive ideas about the nature of man, and since it has a veneer of science, these suggestions will be welcomed by all men of good intelligence.

Here are some of the details of her thought about religion being in conflict with science.

The presentation of science as a constant conflict with religion begins at the beginning of the text. On p. 48, for example we learn that the religious and political leaders were "aghast" with the ideas of Anaxagoras (500 – 428 B.C.), who said that the Moon had mountains and shone by the reflected light of the sun. It is a curious fact that in writing this first volume, titled: Aristotle Leads the Way, Hakim does not note that Aristotle himself, several generations after Anaxagoras, in 350 B.C., rejected these ideas about the Moon. This is important because it shows that the academics were in disagreement among themselves, not busily making "Scientific Progress" except as inhibited by hysterical religious leaders.

The battle continues on p. 91 (in a sidebar) where Hakim laments that unfortunately we can't read the works of Democritus because they were destroyed by religious zealots. Whom does she mean? Plato wanted to burn his writings, but did not have the power to do so; worth mentioning to recognize that there were academic conflicts about his ideas. Some claim that the books were burned in 391 by Christian monks; this refers to some sort of political chaos in which the Library at Alexandria was damaged, but it has nothing to do with singling out Democritus. Caliph Omar ordered that all the books in the Alexandrian Library – excepting the works of Aristotle -- be burned to heat their baths in 642. Again, Democritus was not singled out. And by the way, now we know why Aristotle so dominates our knowledge of Greek thought. Thanks, Omar.

Finally, it is worth mentioning that the books in this library contained a mixture of sorcery and science; this was the source of the discord. I would probably burn a good number of the books myself if they were found in my family library. Of course I would want to sort them first, and 700,000 books is more than I can sort…

So much for religious zealots.

Skipping ahead, chapter 22 is entitled, "A Saint who was No Scientist" referring to St. Augustine. Actually, for his time Augustine was moderately good at science, considering that it was not his primary vocation. He specifically urged that the Christians not say things about science that pagans would certainly dismiss as stupid for this might cause them to dismiss the gospel, -- good advice today. And he made a mammoth effort to bring the understanding of Genesis 1 up to date – his date.

To her credit, Hakim mentions that some scholars dispute the idea that the dark ages were so very dark, and she urges her readers to do their research. This is a little unfair. The idea of writing a textbook is that you are laying out the essentials and the readers may do further research. She doesn't even list the people they might research in order to consider the merits of Medieval science:

- St. Isidore of Seville in the 7th century, St. Bede in the 8th century, and Rabanus Maurus in the 9th century all worked on encyclopedias, humble efforts to set forth what was known in an orderly manner. Coming out of the piracy that marked the fall of Rome, these efforts were humble but important for the resumption of culture.

- John Scotus Eriugena (12th century) set forth a layout of the heavens with Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars and Jupiter orbiting the Sun, though not Saturn.

To be sure, Hakim's book actually has marginal notes and side bars with other resources that might be pursued, but since these are not well-integrated into the text, a student might not notice them as a resource for further research.

Publisher: 
Smithsonian Books
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Number of pages: 
282 pages
Review Date: 
2-27-07
Reviewed by: 
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Joy of Science