A fascinating set of information books on a popular children's topic, suitable for guided, shared or independent reading, with good cross-curricular links. These books exemplify the different text types required by the National Literacy Strategy - recount/record, alphabetical reference,report, instructions. "Spots and other Lumps and Bumps" (report, recount) - All sorts of spots, from chicken pox and freckles to the Black Death (Jenner, Ramessess II, beauty patches Lots of ugh! factor for children here) "Experiments on Myself" (instructions, report) - Information about the human body and experiments to prove it. Is your foot as long as your forearm? How many smells can you sense in a day? How does holding your nose affect taste? Models scientific approach and writing "A Body Dictionary" (alphabetic reference, report) - A classic reference book with an entry for every letter, sometimes two. Vital facts and some wacky ones too - you have enough blood to fill 15 drink cans, people eat the weight of 8.5 elephants in a lifetime "A History of the Flu" (report, recount) - Charts various outbreaks showing how deadly (and otherwise) this virus can be. Includes first-hand accounts and newspaper reports.
The Human Body
The Human Body
Cynnal y corff
The Body and Society: Explorations in Social Theory
Skin - Muscles - Bones - Heart and circulation - Lungs and breathing - Eating and digestion - Kidney - Liver - Brain and nervous system - Seeing and hearing - Teeth, taste and smell - Reproduction - Exercise and sleep.
Ultimate Human Body 2.0: Windows
In this original and highly entertaining book, Dr. Jonathan Miller considers the functioning of the body as a subject of private experience.
Your body is a very complex piece of machinery. It has lots of different parts which work together to keep you alive. In this book, you can find out how it functions and how to look after it. After all, it's the only one you'll get!
This book will prove to children that their body is simply amazing, with masses of parts, some of them very strange and others incredibly yucky.
By asking questions such as What do your taste buds do?" and "Why is exercise important for you body?" this book shows children how science relates to them.