So... you may have noticed over the summer that I love bugs. Ants, bumble bees, clear-winged hummingbird moths, beetles of all colors and kinds! And I found a cool field guide perfect for kids who want to learn more about insects.
Ultimate Explorer Field Guide: Insects
By Libby Romero
160 pages; ages 8-10
National Geographic Children’s Books, 2017
This is so much more than a field guide. Introductory pages
tell where to find insects, how to be safe around insects (avoiding stings,
bites, and defensive chemicals), and how to protect insects. Each page
introduces an insect, giving its scientific name along with notes about ecology
and behavior and photos. There are text boxes noting things to look for, listen
to, plus hands-on activities (how to draw a dragonfly), plus plenty of “Insect
Inspector” side bars. Every few pages you’ll find an “Insect Report” focusing
on specific features: wings, how to tell an insect from a “bug”, and the art of
insect deception.
Helpful back matter includes a photographic “Quick ID
Guide”, a list of books and apps for discovering more, a glossary, and index.
And all of that is in a pocket-sized guide with tough, flexible covers.
by Stacy Tornio and Ken Keffer; illustrated by Rachel Riordan
104 pages; ages 5 - 13
Cornell Lab Publishing Group, 2016
The subtitle for this book is "activity journal and log book for young birders." It is meant to be written in, drawn in, shared with friends. Part activity book and part
birding journal, Bird Brainiacs is the perfect book to tuck in a backpack, or toss in the picnic basket when heading off to the
park. There are quizzes, “mad-lib” fill-in-the-blanks, games, nature
challenges, personality questionnaires, word scrambles, and bird facts. I love
the hands-on science stuff: a do-it-yourself bioblitz, bird count, and
nest-watching. There are enough bird-log pages to get you started on a summer’s
worth of birding plus some how-to-draw pages for the doodler in us all. I know
the age range is for up to 13 years, but heck, this looks like fun for the
whole family.
Drop by the STEM Friday blog for more science books and
resources. Review copies from publishers.
I love these kinds of books. They both look great. Thanks for telling me about them.
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