Zoos: Back to Nature? is a Persuasive text covering Science, Design and Technology, and PSHE and Citizenship themes for Year 6. It is part of Four Corners, the most visually compelling series of cross-curricular books to motivate all readers from 4 to 11.
Travel through the zoo and learn about zoo animals through rhyme. Count up all of the animals you have seen. Includes section "For Creative Minds" with cards and activities.
Kathleen Krull and Marcellus Hall bring witty insight, jazzy style, and a globe-trotting eye to our millennia-long history of keeping animals -- and the ways animals have changed us in turn.
Split pages with pop-up features allow the reader to create unusual creatures by mixing parts of such real animals as an owl, rabbit, moose, and fox.
This historical text examines community leaders' successful advocacy for zoo construction in the context of poverty and widespread suffering, arguing that they provided employment, stimulated tourism, and democratized leisure.
As kids read the story and lift the flaps, they can help Danny and his friends do their work, and meet the meerkats, crocodiles, panda bears, and monkeys that are new at the zoo.
Children can engage in spotting the new additions to the zoo and, as the other animals change position and interact with each other, they are tasked with finding their favourite creatures in an ever-expanding scene.
This collection immerses readers in the lives of animals and their experiences of captivity and asks us to reflect on our own assumptions about both humans and animals.
ZooBorns showcases the newest and cutest animal babies from accredited zoos and aquariums around the world.
All the zoos in New York City have one thing in common when it comes to saving the best of the architecture . Whether the buildings were demolished or renovated , paving stones , chimneys , weathervanes , brick trim , friezes , and ...
Zoos have changed a lot over the past hundred years. Zoos still display animals for people to marvel at and enjoy. But that's not all they do. Zoos work to conserve wildlife.