Can one seed change a life? A surprising delivery delights and frustrates a boy and girl until they discover the secret of the magic seed. It changes their lives forever and teaches them the value of sharing.But the story doesn't end there. In the second half of the book, your children write their ideas about sharing on activity pages and imagine their own version of the tale. All profits from this book go to TheSchoolFund.org, helping change the world one student at a time. See students who've already been helped at debbienewhouse.wordpress.com
'The Magic Seeds' is a fantastical story about a modern-day urban family that faces the average daily challenges that many people face. However, in this story -- as in all fairy tales -- there's a very happy ending.
Magic Seeds is a moving tale of a man searching for his life and fearing he has wasted it, and a testing study of the conflicts between the rich and the poor, and the struggles within each.
A children's book highlighting the three magic seeds of literacy development: 1) Read to all children starting from birth, 2) Hold conversations with all children starting from birth and 3) Limit screen time for babies.
Jane Buchanan's rhythmic prose and Charlotte Riley-Webb's vibrant and striking illustrations bring to life a story of community, connection, hope, and unexpected beauty.
The reader is asked to perform a series of mathematical operations integrated into the story of a lazy man who plants magic seeds and reaps an increasingly abundant harvest.
The Magic Seed
Monico is an 11-year old American boy with a hunchback, big chest, and small legs.
The class decides to plant a garden and Ms. Frizzle takes them on a field trip, where they learn about the cycle of plant life.
A young boy plants a seed that, with water, sunlight, care, and patience, grows into a strong, tall tree.
Half a Life is the story of Willie Chandran, whose father, heeding the call of Mahatma Gandhi, turned his back on his brahmin heritage and married a woman of low casteāa disastrous union he would live to regret, as he would the children ...