Poke & Look Learning Books
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INTRODUCTION
Dear Teacher,
All children are curious about the world around them. Poke & Look Learning
Books open the door to nonfiction subjects in a way that is both informative
and fun. With large, durable, board-book pages, spiral bindings, and intriguing
die-cut openings, these books beg to be opened.
THEMES
Poke & Look Learning Books are perfect learning tools, in the home or in
the classroom. To enable you and your class to get the most out of them, we
offer you this Teacher's Guide, which contains helpful suggestions for using
each book.
Look Inside a Tree
Look Inside the Ocean
Look Inside a Farm
Look Inside a Rainforest
Look Inside an Airplane
Look Inside a House
Look Inside Your Brain
Look Inside Your Body
Look Inside a Ship
Look Inside a Car
Look Inside the Earth
Let's Look at Dinosaurs
Look Inside a Tree
This book explains in a simple manner the "workings" of a tree –
from its roots to its leaves – and the importance of trees to animals and
people.
Using the Book
1. Before you read, ask children to help you draw a tree by naming its different
parts.
2. Ask what animals might live in this tree, and what might grow on the tree besides leaves – and put these in your tree picture. You might show pictures of different kinds of trees.
3. Take a walk around your neighborhood to identify the variety of trees there.
4. Upon returning to the classroom, write a group story, including all the things children noticed about trees on their "tree walk" – animals in the trees, the feel of the bark, the shapes and colors of the leaves, and so on.
5. Torn-paper tree collages are fun to make. Have children tear long pieces of brown construction paper for the trunk and branches, smaller pieces of green for the leaves, and other pieces limited only by their own imaginations. No two trees will look the same!
Look Inside the Ocean
Who lives among the rocks, wanders in the seaweed, and hides in the sand deep
in the ocean? Lots of fascinating animals and plants – treasures that we
must understand and protect.
Using the book
1. Before you read, ask children to think of plants and animals that live in
the ocean. The book shows some amazing adaptive features.
2. Can your class think of ways other animals have adapted to their environments (a tiger's stripes, a polar bear's fur)?
3. Discuss why the ocean is so important to us and why we must take care of it.
4. If possible, visit a local aquarium for a close-up look at ocean-dwelling flora and fauna. Make ocean pictures. Have children draw real or imaginary sea creatures with crayons. Then have them make a wavy fingerpainting. The painting can be pressed over the drawing, then lifted off – and the sea creatures are swimming in water!
Look Inside a Farm
A simple, colorful, and informative introduction to the farm – who lives
there, what grows there, and why farms are important places, all around the
world.
Using the book
Before you read, ask children what a farm is for, and what people, animals,
and plants they might see on a farm. Get into the farm spirit by singing familiar
farm songs, with lots of animal sounds to enjoy.
1. Bring in a variety of fresh fruits and vegetables, both familiar and unfamiliar, to slice up and taste. (Examples: peas in the pod, carrots, apples, tomatoes, zucchini, broccoli, red peppers, spinach, potatoes, stringbeans.)
2. Talk about how each grew on a farm before finally being delivered to the store for us to buy and eat. You may find that children are willing to sample foods they might not otherwise choose, because of the shared "picnic"!
3. Leftover potatoes, carrots, zucchini, etc. can be sliced into chunks, then dipped in paint and used to make interesting print designs.
Look Inside a Rainforest
This colorful book tells about plants and animals of the rainforest and other
forests, and gives a basic idea of their ecology and geography.
Using the book
Before you read, ask children to imagine they are walking in a deep rainforest.
Encourage use of the senses – what do you hear? see? feel? smell? The book
explains that more than half of the species of plants and animals on earth live
in the Amazon rainforest, and important medicines are made from plants found
there. Ask what might happen to these animals and plants if forests start to
disappear because we cut them down or don't take care of them.
1. Visit a zoo or museum with a man-made forest or rainforest environment.
Brought to you by Penguin Young Readers Group.
The Penguin Group is the second-largest English-language trade book publisher in the world. The company possesses perhaps the world's most prestigious list of best-selling authors and a backlist of unparalleled breadth, depth, and quality. Penguin Young Readers Group features books by authors and illustrators including Judy Blume, Brian Jacques, Eric Carle, and beloved characters like Winnie-the-Pooh, Madeline, The Little Engine that Could, and many, many more.
Asian-Pacific-American Heritage Month
May is Asian-Pacific-American Heritage Month! Don't overlook this opportunity to study and enjoy activities about the history and culture of Asian-Pacific American communities.
The recent rash of tornadoes in Oklahoma, which killed at least two dozen people, may have your students wondering why such natural disasters occur, how they may be affected by them, and what they can do to help. Use these resources to teach the geography of Oklahoma and the Southwestern United States, to explain tornadoes, and to discuss the resulting crises with your class.
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May Calendar of Events
May is full of holidays and events that you can incorporate into your standard curriculum. Our Educators' Calendar outlines activities for each event, including: Backyard Games Week (5/23-29) and Memorial Day (5/27). Plus, celebrate Asian-Pacific-American Heritage Month, Clean Air Month, and Physical Fitness & Sports Month all May long!
Common Core Lessons & Resources
Is your school district adopting the Common Core? Work these new standards into your curriculum with our reading, writing, speaking, social studies, and math lessons and activities. Each piece of content incorporates the Common Core State Standards into the activity or lesson.



