If the Solar System\'s planets were shrunk down to the size of sports balls, and Earth were the size of a baseball, what size would the other planets be? This question and others are explored in this innovative and visually appealing book about very big concepts made accessible when scaled down to kid-friendly size.
There is also a full page of resource information at the back of the book..
For those who want to delve a little deeper, Smith has included six suggestions for classroom projects.
It will find the most use, however, as an excellent classroom reference that can be reached for again and again when studying scale and measurement in math, and also for any number of applications in social studies, science and language arts.
The children who just love these kinds of fact-filled, knock-your-socks-off books will want to read this one from cover to cover.
By simply reducing everything to human scale, Smith has made the incomprehensible easier to grasp, and therefore more meaningful.
Accompanying each description is a kid-friendly drawing by illustrator Steve Adams that visually reinforces the concept.
Smith has found clever devices to scale down everything from time lines (the history of Earth compressed into one year), to quantities (all the wealth in the world divided into one hundred coins), to size differences (the planets shown as different types of balls).
Author David J.
So begins this endlessly intriguing guide to better understanding all those really big Ideas and Numbers children come across on a regular basis.
But what if we took these big, hard-to-imagine objects and events and compared them to things we can see, feel and touch? Instantly, we\'d see our world in a whole new way.
Some things are so huge or so old that it\'s hard to wrap your mind around them.
Full color.
If the Solar System\'s planets were shrunk down to the size of sports balls, and Earth were the size of a baseball, what size would the other planets be? This question and others are explored in this innovative and visually appealing book about very big concepts made accessible when scaled down to kid-friendly size