Stepping Stones is a complete three level English course for children in primary schools. - The topics, tasks, activities, games and songs are all designed to make learning enjoyable and to help children use English meaningfully in a variety of contexts. - The syllabus takes into account the children's educational and social development as well as providing through coverage and recycling of key vocabulary, functions, structures and skills. - The step-by-step approach makes Stepping Stones simple to use and very easy to teach.
Added by: littlecrabpig | Karma: 227.82 | Fiction literature | 7 December 2016
10
Nation's Favourite Children's Poems (Poetry)
The latest edition in this best-selling poetry series brings together the most beloved children's poems, from ""The Owl and the Pussycat"" through ""On the Ning Nang Nong"" to ""I Know Someone Who Can"" to ""Us Two"". The Nation's Favourite Children's Poems will compel and amuse adults and children alike, with poems drawn from themes as diverse as animals, schooldays, summer holidays, fun with friends and family, and fantastic daydreams - whether it is recalling the anxiety of starting school, the magical visit of a mythical beast, or the nostalgic realisation that 'mother always knows best'.
STEPPING STONES is a complete three-level English course for children in primary school.
The topics, tasks, activities, games and songs are all designed to make learning enjoyable and to help children use English meaningfully in a variety of contexts.
The syllabus takes into account the child’s educational and social development as well as providing thorough coverage and recycling of key vocabulary, functions, structures and skills.
The step-by-step approach makes STEPPING STONES simple to use and very easy to teach.
Added by: babakinfos | Karma: 2213.42 | Fiction literature | 1 December 2016
5
The Wind in the Willows (with explanatory notes)
One of the best-known classics of children's literature, a timeless masterpiece and a vital portrait of an age, The Wind in the Willows began originally in Kenneth Grahame's letters to his young son, where he first recounted the adventures of Rat and Badger, of Mole and Toad--all narrated in virtuoso language ranging from lively parody to elaborate fin-de-si�cle mysticism. Yet for a children's book, it is concerned almost exclusively with adult themes: fear of radical changes in political, social, and economic power...