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This book presents children with fifteen problems, none of which have easy answers. Children must consider the problems, answer questions about them, and complete related activities. The activities teach children the valuable skills of compromise, making the best of a situation, and looking for a new way of accomplishing a goal.
By: Kathryn T. Hegeman, Ed.D.
$16.95
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This book presents seventeen age-appropriate problems that have no easy answers. In each problem, youngsters confront a high-interest, adolescent-type situation—the kind of situation that requires them not just to problem-solve but to think hard about what kind of people they want to be as they develop into young adults. This valuable book will get kids thinking critically and problem-solving creatively.
By: 
$16.95
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This classic book is a delightful "how-to-draw" showing the reader ways to illustrate a variety of buildings, animals and people.
By: E. G. Lutz
$10.50 – $26.50
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Read and find out about meteorology and why the weather can be hard to predict in this colorfully illustrated nonfiction picture book.
By: Lynda DeWitt
$9.99
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Read and find out about what makes something alive, and what all living things need to stay healthy, in this colourfully illustrated nonfiction picture book.
By: Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld
$10.99
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If you want to win races, never race a cheetah--no animal on earth can run faster!
A peregrine falcon can swoop faster than a cheetah can run, but that can't even compare to an airplane, a rocket, or the speed of light.
By: Robert E. Wells
$11.50
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What's for lunch? Your body needs lots of different things to eat, and every kind of food has a different job to do.
Did you know drinking milk makes your bones strong? Or that eating carrots helps you see better?
By: Sarah L. Thomson
$8.50
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Want to learn more about the bird that chirps outside your window? Ignotofsky crafts a perfect read out loud with a touch of humour and compassion for our friends with wings in the sky!
By: Rachel Ignotofsky
$26.99
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Butterflies soar in the sunlight. While moths flutter under the moon and stars. Find out more about these mysterious and majestic insects similarities and differences, and their awe-striking metamorphosis!
By: Rachel Ignotofsky
$25.99
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From the creator of the
New York Times bestseller
Women in Science, comes a new nonfiction picture book series ready to grow young scientists by nurturing their curiosity about the natural world--starting with what's inside a flower.
By: Ignotofsky, Rachel
$23.99
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You can't breathe underwater, but a fish can. You can't eat underwater, but a fish does every day.
Named a Best Children's Science Book of the Year by Science Books & Films, this picture book features graceful text that invites young readers to imagine what it's like to have gills, fins, and scales.
By: Wendy Pfeffer
$10.99
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Come along on an animal adding adventure.
Add baby animals to the adults to see how many there are all together. And while you are at it, learn what some of the zoo animals eat or what the baby animals are called.
By: Suzanne Slade
$15.50
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You can celebrate the huge difference caring people make for endangered animals while you practice subtraction skills.
By: Suzanne Slade
$13.95
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Chesterton gives his remarkably perceptive analysis on social and moral issues more relevant today than even in his own time. In his light and humorous style, yet deadly serious and philosophical, he comments on feminism and true womanhood, errors in edication, the importance of the child and other issues, using incisive arguments against the trendsetters' assaults against the family.
Chesterton possessed the genius to foresee the dangers if modernist proposals were implemented. He knew that lax moral standards would lead to the dehumanization of man, and in this book he staunchly defends the family, its constituent elements and character over against those ideas and institutions that would subvert it and thereby deliver man into the hands of the servile state. In addressing what is wrong, he also shows clearly what is right, sane and sensible and how to change things in that direction.
By: G.K. Chesterton
$24.50
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From the Publisher: This book introduces students to the ones and tens place value using popsicles as a fun learning tool.
By: Shirley Duke
$10.99
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Children can test their math skills and learn the Pythagorean Theorem alongside young Pythagoras in this STEM adventure. Pythagoras’ curiosity takes him from Samos to Alexandria, where he meets a builder named Neferheperhersekeper, who introduces him to the right angle. While building, Pythagoras uses geometry to learn how to measure angles and discovers all he needs to know about right triangles. With playful puns and wordplay Ellis creates the perfect STEM/STEAM resource for introducing young readers to a fundamental mathematical equation. A fun and accessible way to get young minds asking “what’s your angle?”.
By: Julie Ellis
$8.95