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Birds, Agriculture, Farming & Ranching, Farm Animals
Ducks on the Farm by M. Schuh β€” book cover

Ducks on the Farm

by M. Schuh, Gail Saunders-Smith
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Synopsis

Photographs and simple text describe ducks and the lives they live on the farm.

Marilyn Courtot - Children's Literature

The introductory note on the verso of the title page lets parents and educators know that this series was developed to meet the national science standards related to life science. Set up like real reference books this series entitled "On the Farm" features a table of contents, the text and accompanying pictures, a list of new words " Words to Know" that were used in the text and are now defined, and a page with a few references to books and the Fact Hound which will take kids to a variety of appropriate web sites to find out more on the topic. The final page contains an index/word list and notes the word count and early-intervention level. A white duck with big orange feet is depicted and a few body parts are labeled. Readers learn the proper names for the male and female and what ducks eat and certain characteristics about these birds. Ducks can be raised for their meat, eggs and feathers. The word list gives as much information as the text. And the references to other books are reasonably current. A useful book for new readers. 2003, Pebble Books/Capstone, Ages 4 to 7.

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Editorials

Children's Literature

The introductory note on the verso of the title page lets parents and educators know that this series was developed to meet the national science standards related to life science. Set up like real reference books this series entitled "On the Farm" features a table of contents, the text and accompanying pictures, a list of new words " Words to Know" that were used in the text and are now defined, and a page with a few references to books and the Fact Hound which will take kids to a variety of appropriate web sites to find out more on the topic. The final page contains an index/word list and notes the word count and early-intervention level. A white duck with big orange feet is depicted and a few body parts are labeled. Readers learn the proper names for the male and female and what ducks eat and certain characteristics about these birds. Ducks can be raised for their meat, eggs and feathers. The word list gives as much information as the text. And the references to other books are reasonably current. A useful book for new readers. 2003, Pebble Books/Capstone, Ages 4 to 7.
β€”Marilyn Courtot

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 1-These books are designed for early readers with little or no knowledge of domesticated ducks, geese, or rabbits. The sentence structure is simple, and unfamiliar or difficult words are repeated. Large, color photographs face pages with one to three sentences of text that is very basic, almost boring in its simplicity. The average-quality illustrations support the information. Libraries looking for easy-reader nonfiction report sources will find that these titles fill the need as well as similar titles.-Carolyn Janssen, Children's Learning Center of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County, OH Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2003
Publisher
Pebble Books
Pages
24
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780736816618

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