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ȿ 츮 ְ, 츮 ü , ü Ե ֽϴ. 鿩 ڱ ġ Ӹ ƴ϶, ϴ ҳ ִ ġ Ȯ ֽϴ. پ , ȿ ܼ ġ ܿ 迡 ĥ ֵ Բ ϵǾ ֽϴ.
å ̵ ؼ ִ ְ ݴϴ.
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Paperback: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0517885573
ISBN-13: 978-0517885574
å ũ: 22.8cm x 22.8cm
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Book Description
"Using the premise that simple drawings can be maps, the book begins with crayon drawings of the floor plans of the girl's room and house. The concept becomes progressively more complex, as her horizons expand from home to street, to town, to state, to country, and finally to the world".--"School Library Journal". Full color.
From Publishers Weekly
A girl explains maps, beginning with her bedroom and expanding to a map of the world. "Sweeney encourages the cartographer in every child," said PW.
From School Library Journal
A nameless child introduces the world of cartography. Using the premise that simple drawings can be maps, the book begins with crayon drawings of the floor plans of the girl's room and house. The concept becomes progressively more complex, as her horizons expand from home to street, to town, to state, to country, and finally to the world. Colorful illustrations show a composite of the entire area that is being charted on the facing page. On each successive page, the child points out her street, hometown, state, and country. The process then reverses as she finds the U.S. on a world map and works back down the scale to her own room again. The text concludes with the statement that "...everybody has their own special place on the map." Not an essential purchase, but one that could be useful for teaching basic skills at the primary level.
From Booklist
A small girl introduces the concept of maps, beginning in her own room, then reaching further out to her house, street, town, country, and the globe, and back again, step by step, to herself at home. It's a game kids love to play. The collagelike illustrations show each place and then the child pointing to a diagram of that scene. We see her in her room, then she makes a crayon picture, a map of that room. Then we see her making a map of her house and her street. For her town, country, and globe, there's a scenic painting, and then we see her pointing to a map and where she is on it. Like Cohen's Where's the Fly? , the pictures play with scale and perspective and help children expand their personal address.
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Me and the Measure of Things - Me ø, ۹, ۹
Me and the Measure of Things Me ø, ۹, ۹ |
* ֱ ǰ Ͻ е ٸ |
This Story Is for You å, ϵĿ, ۹ |
Anno's Counting Book ALA Notable Childrens Book, ۹, ۹ |
Bear Country: Bearly a Misadventure The Chicken Squad ø, ۹ |
Bridge to Terabithia , ̱ 100 , ۹ |
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