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Teaching - Reading, Language Arts - English Language, Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Animals, Phonics, Puzzles
Where Dinosaurs Walked by Ben Josephs β€” book cover

Where Dinosaurs Walked

by Ben Josephs, Wiley Blevins
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Synopsis

Discusses the fossils left by dinosaurs in an easy-to-read text that incorporates phonics instruction and rebuses.

Marilyn Courtot - Children's Literature

Each of the titles in this series follows a standard format. After the table of contents page there is a letter directed to parents or caregivers. It explains the purpose of these early readers which is to teach specific phonic sound and words that kids would normally encounter. The opposing pages contains Mother Goose rhymes, many of which will be known, but some may be more obscure and difficult for kids to relate to, although they do contain the phonic sounds emphasized in the book. The simple text is printed in large type and most of the page is filled with a crisp, clear colorful photograph. The books are available in three levels (A, B, and C) and the complexity increases as you move along in the alphabet with longer sentences, multi-syllabic words and a decrease in rebus support. At the end of each title there is a word list, game that reinforces the learning objective (instructions provided), and a very short bibliography of at least three age appropriate and fairly recent titles that complement and or expand on the focus of the text. There is also an index. Dinosaurs are a source of great interest to kids, probably due to their size and the fact that they are extinct. In this title, kids see fossils and drawings that show what some dinosaurs might have looked like. Part of the "Compass Point Phonics Readers" series, Set C. 2004, Compass Point, Ages 6 to 7.

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Editorials

Children's Literature

Each of the titles in this series follows a standard format. After the table of contents page there is a letter directed to parents or caregivers. It explains the purpose of these early readers which is to teach specific phonic sound and words that kids would normally encounter. The opposing pages contains Mother Goose rhymes, many of which will be known, but some may be more obscure and difficult for kids to relate to, although they do contain the phonic sounds emphasized in the book. The simple text is printed in large type and most of the page is filled with a crisp, clear colorful photograph. The books are available in three levels (A, B, and C) and the complexity increases as you move along in the alphabet with longer sentences, multi-syllabic words and a decrease in rebus support. At the end of each title there is a word list, game that reinforces the learning objective (instructions provided), and a very short bibliography of at least three age appropriate and fairly recent titles that complement and or expand on the focus of the text. There is also an index. Dinosaurs are a source of great interest to kids, probably due to their size and the fact that they are extinct. In this title, kids see fossils and drawings that show what some dinosaurs might have looked like. Part of the "Compass Point Phonics Readers" series, Set C. 2004, Compass Point, Ages 6 to 7.
β€”Marilyn Courtot

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2003
Publisher
Coughlan Publishing
Pages
24
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780756505318

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