After having his lunch repeatedly stolen by a bully twice his size, Loudmouth George and his friend Harriet teach the bully a lesson he'll never forget.
A Year in Picture Books: Linking to the Information Literacy Standards
Added by: bl007 | Karma: 5748.45 | Black Hole | 22 January 2014
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A Year in Picture Books: Linking to the Information Literacy Standards
This book of lesson plans using common picture books to teach the AASL/AECT Information Literacy Standards is targeted for grades K-3, complete with reproducible patterns and immediately usable reproducible activities providing lessons for each grade level (K-3) for each month of the school year. Each lesson will teach information literacy skill based on the AASL/AECT Information Literacy Standards
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The Rosetta Stone software utilizes a combination of images, text, and sound, with difficulty levels increasing as the student progresses, in order to teach various vocabulary terms and grammatical functions intuitively, without drills or translation. Their award-winning method is called the Dynamic Immersion method. The goal is to teach languages the way first languages are learnt.
Waldo, One, Two, Three is mainly a book that is for educational purposes. So I would say that this book is good for an any time book just to pass the time and if you are trying to help your child learn a few things.
Waldo, One, Two, Three is a book about a dog by the name of Waldo, who is going to teach your child how to count. Waldo teaches your child how to count by counting animals and what they are doing. With each page, the animal goes consecutively with the number. It states what type of animal it is and what it will be doing. So not only does this book teach your child how to count, but it also teaches your child about animals as well.
Based on empirical research and written by an expert, this book provides the information a media specialist needs to teach information literacy skills in a meaningful, useful, and strategic manner.