A Tree Is Growing

by Arthur Dorros

Paperback, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

BOTA

Publication

Scholastic (1997), paperback

Description

Tells about the structure of trees and how they grow, as well as their uses.

User reviews

LibraryThing member mrstelford
Excellent nonfiction book about trees. Labeled pictures and captions give tons of information about trees of all kinds.
LibraryThing member lalenaz
This is an awesome book that has many information about trees. It has information about how trees grow, the photosynthesis process, pollination, different kinds of trees, the process of defoliation, and many more information.
The illustration and the captions teaches different kinds of leaves,
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birds and some other small animals that live in or around trees.
This book is a great book for children to learn about trees. I liked both the simple but informational writing and also the illustrations which had extra information.
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LibraryThing member abbrown1
This is a great book for the inquisitive child (or adult) who wants to know more about different types of trees and their life cycles. The book uses beautiful illustrations which are just as attractive to a child as any fictional story's pictures would be. The story doesn't use very technical
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language throughout but uses enough technical terminology for a reader to have an informed, educated conversation about the life cycle of trees. The text includes sidebars that would make great extra information for fun facts or that would create great questions. the most impressive thing, I found, about this book was that it was factual but maintained the imagination and fancy-freedom of a fiction story. The book talks of the seasons in ways that appeals to our senses and in ways that relates to what we have experienced. This book is a top-notch text and worth the read!
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LibraryThing member broach
This book shows how leaves, sap, bark, and roots all play a part in nourishing trees through seasonal changes and years of growth. This is a great book that teaches young children how trees and forests grow. It tells how each part of the tree is a vital part for the tree to form.
LibraryThing member csloan
This is a good to read when learning about trees and how they grow. This book is very well illustrated with the different seasons of the oak tree. It shows the different stages and years and how the tree changes. This is an educational book.
LibraryThing member lhamed
This is an informational science book about how different trees grow and the process trees go through. It shows the different stages, years, and how the tree changes. It is an excellent way to teach children about nature.
LibraryThing member jroy218
We read this book every year in my third grade class. It is included in out basal. This year we were able to conincide the reading of it with the science chapter on plants and animals. This book is very complex and some is above the students' heads. If you stick to the base text, the children seem
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to have a good understanding. It's when they throw the captions in that the students seem to get thrown off. The book is working out better than the past because we are on plants in science. The students are connecting with it and will connect with it further throughout the week.
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LibraryThing member dms02
we are crazy for trees in this house and enjoyed this book. Reminded me of A Seed is Sleepy or an Egg is Quite. Illustrations like a field guide.
LibraryThing member kdufrene
This book talks about nature and goes into a little detail of it. It talks about leaves, what a tree needs to live, roots, minerals, bark, the age of trees, tree flowers and the seasons of a tree. I like this book because of the details and nature of a tree. I would read this book for children to
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have a deeper understanding of a life of a tree. The illustrations are average and doesn't pop at you.
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Language

Physical description

32 p.; 11.25 inches

ISBN

0590453009 / 9780590453004

Barcode

2987

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