Gr 2–3—With an unusual format but conventional content, these volumes are framed as animal-observation journals from children. Several clear, bright color photos enhance each spread. Beginning with calls, egg sightings, or other indirect signs of a mating season in progress ("Today I saw two red kangaroos having a fight!"), each "notebook" tracks a typical animal's course from birth and growth to maturity. Even for the spider and the monarch butterfly, death gets but a single mention and takes place offstage, if at all. Thought-exercise questions and study suggestions are scattered throughout the volumes, which all end with a relevant small-scale activity.
These easy-to-read books discuss the stages of development, dietary habits, and habitat of the jumping spider and Monarch butterfly. Bright, close-up photographs and kid-friendly text, presented as observations in a child's notebook, make the information accessible. Text boxes with questions and facts encourage further insight and thinking. Related activities are included in the "Science Lab" section. Reading list. Glos., ind. Review covers these Animal Diaries: Life Cycles titles: A Butterfly's Life and A Spider's Life.
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