No Backbone! The World of Invertebrates
The World of Invertebrates
Series of 1 titles ⁎
This series contains:
All pricing information listed above reflects this.
Children are about to discover that in the world of insects, almost anything is possible! Some of these tiny creatures jump 20 times the length of their bodies. Others fly through the air at more than 35 miles per hour (56 kph). Some insects can kill people. Others just want to drink their blood. In this beautifully designed introduction to insects, large, eye-popping photos and clear, grade-appropriate text will engage emergent readers as they learn about the natural habitat, physical characteristics, diet, and behavior of some very unique invertebrates.
Interest Level | Kindergarten - Grade 3 |
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Reading Level | Grade 2 |
Category | Nonfiction |
Subject | Animals |
Copyright | 2008 |
Publisher | Bearport Publishing |
Imprint | Bearport Books |
Language | English |
Number of Pages | 24 |
Publication Date | 2008-01-01 |
Reading Counts! Level | 3.2-4.7 |
Reading Counts! Points | 1.0 |
BISACS | JNF003120 |
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Dewey | 595.7-595.78'9 |
Graphics | Full-color photographs |
Dimensions | 10 x 8 |
Lexile | 550-610 |
Guided Reading Level | L |
ATOS Reading Level | 3.8-4.3 |
Accelerated Reader® Points | 0.5 |
Reviews
No Backbone! Insects
These accessible, fully illustrated guides illuminate the invertebrate world for young readers. Enlarged photographs.
No Backbone! Insects
These accessible, fully illustrated guides illuminate the invertebrate world for young readers. Enlarged photographs.
No Backbone! Insects
These books introduce readers to invertebrates, chronicling such information as how praying mantises keep clean and the different colors of stinkbugs. The close-up photos are vivid and engaging.
No Backbone! Insects
[Starred review]. I recommend the No Backbone! The World of Invertebrates series highly. The engaging, informative text and bright dramatic photography will delight emergent readers as well as adults reading to young children. The books will be a useful supplement to a life sciences curriculum and would be a welcome addition to elementary school classrooms and school and public libraries.