HARCOURT Leveled Readers can be used to complement core programs or as the main materials in daily instruction. They help teachers meet all learning needs by building fluency and independence for all students, and provide practice and the application of reading skills and strategies, as well as support small-group instruction. Fiction and nonfiction books help all learners build fluency, independence, and motivation for lifelong reading success. All titles are full color and most are with supporting audio.
Annie Oakley (Famous Figures of the American Frontier)
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Kids | 30 May 2009
7
After meeting--and outshooting--a marksman named Frank Butler, Phoebe Ann Moses married him, and changed her name to Annie Oakley. Together they entertained audiences around the world.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Kids, Audio | 29 May 2009
47
Molly Pepper plays with Franklin P. Shuckles all summer long. But when school starts, she hears the other children making fun of him and an embarrassed Molly dumps her “geeky” friend with a nasty note. When Franklin stops offering to play and tell stories, a lonely Molly realizes how much she misses him. She writes him another note, fervently hoping he’ll forgive her. He does, and they promise to be friends forever.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Kids, Audio | 29 May 2009
19
A child's question prompts another's alphabetic reveries in this invitation to consider the many things and places to read: an atlas at the airport, a biography in bed…..In page-sized cartoons, Enright follows her smiling young bookworm from place to place, showing her reading alone and with company; indoors and out, up a tree, even in a Jacuzzi. Serving as a reminder to parents too, that reading opportunities are all around, this presents an engaging literary game likely to continue well beyond one pass through the ABCs.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Kids, Audio | 29 May 2009
31
This lively concept book shows that the world around us is filled with things to count. Three are the dim sum carts filled with yummy treats, eight are the candles on a birthday cake, and ten are the bamboo stalks growing in a garden. Many of the featured objects are Asian in origin, but all are universal in appeal. With brilliantly colored illustrations, an ear-pleasing text and an informative glossary, this truly multicultural book will make counting a fun part of every child's day!