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Write Source: A Book for Writing, Thinking, and Learning

by Dave Kemper Patrick Sebranek Verne Meyer Chris Krenzke

This powerful classroom toolkit provides a variety of additional resources to help you make the most of the Write Source program: - SkillsBook Practice for essential mechanics, usage, and grammar skills (SkillsBook Teacher's Edition also included.)- Assessment Book Copymasters for a pretest, interim tests, and posttests to help prepare students for stare assessments- Overhead Transparencies Graphic organizers, assessment rubrics, and benchmark papers for whole-class instruction- Interactive Writing Skills CD-ROM Animated grammar lessons, engaging, interactive activities, and printable and e-mailable reports- Daily Language Workouts Quick 5-to-10 minute activities in mechanics, usage, grammar, and writing.

Write Source: A Book for Writing, Thinking, and Learning (Grade #2)

by Dave Kemper Patrick Sebranek Verne Meyer

In Write Source you will learn to write letters, reports, stories, poems, and more. Besides writing, you will learn how to listen, speak, and take tests in class.

Great Source Write on Track: A Handbook for Young Writers, Thinkers and Learners

by Dave Kemper Ruth Nathan Patrick Sebranek

This book contains The Process of Writing, The Forms of Writing, The Tools of Learning, The Proofreader's Guide, Using Punctuation, The Student Almanac, etc.

Write Traits Student Traitbook

by Vicki Spandel Jeff Hicks Erik Martin Judy Bernheim Alex Culpepper Jim Higgins Mark Dagrossa Scott Van Buren

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Great Source Write Source: Student Edition Grade 2

by Dave Kemper Patrick Sebranek Verne Meyer

Write Source book includes lessons and tips about writing. You will learn to write letters, reports, stories, poems, and more. Besides writing, you will learn how to listen, speak, and take tests in class. Finally, a special section, called the "Proofreader's Guide," explains the rules of writing.

Math to Learn: A Mathematics Handbook

by Mary C. Cavanagh

Designed for students that are just starting out, Math to Learn presents basic math concepts in a simple-to-learn format. Lots of illustrations and clear explanations help students understand math concepts including numeration, addition and subtraction, money and time, basic geometry, measurement, graphing, and patterns.

Don't Throw It To Mo!

by David A. Adler

Winner of the 2016 Theodor Seuss Geisel Award Mo Jackson is a little boy with a big passion for sports. He may not be the biggest, the strongest, or the fastest player, but he won't let that stop him from playing! <P><P>Mo is the youngest kid on the Robins, his football team. His classmates don't mind, but the kids on their rival team tease him for being a "butterfingers" who's too tiny to catch the ball. But Mo's coach has a plan to turn Mo's little size into a big win for the Robins!

The Speedy Car Mystery (Young Cam Jansen #16)

by David A. Adler Susanna Natti

At her school's Green Fair, Cam and her friends are learning how to keep the earth green. Everyone is having fun at the exhibits until a student's remote controlled car goes missing! Was it stolen? It's up to Cam and her amazing memory to find Speedy.

Cork and Fuzz: Good Sports

by Lisa Mccue Dori Chaconas

Cork is a short muskrat who likes to win at games. Fuzz is a tall possum who also likes to win at games. Two best friends. Both like to win. What will happen when they play games against each other? An Easy-to-Read series that critics compare to "the measured dialogue and sweet illogic of Arnold Lobel's Frog and Toad.

Ellray Jakes Is Not a Chicken (Ellray Jakes #1)

by Sally Warner

Eight-year-old EllRay Jakes is sick of getting picked on. But every time he tries to defend himself against class bully Jared Matthews, EllRay is the one who winds up in trouble. It's just not fair! Then his dad offers him a deal: If EllRay can stay out of trouble for a week, they'll go to Disneyland! But being good for one whole week is not so easy. . . . This humorous and true-to-life story kicks off the EllRay series, which is just right for boys (and girls!) who are beginning to read chapter books.

Sandy's Circus: A Story About Alexander Calder

by Tanya Lee Stone Boris Kulikov

As a boy, Alexander ?Sandy? Calder was always fiddling with odds and ends, making objects for friends. When he got older and became an artist, his fiddling led him to create wire sculptures. One day, Sandy made a lion. Next came a lion cage. Before he knew it, he had an entire circus and was traveling between Paris and New York performing a brand-new kind of art for amazed audiences. This is the story of Sandy?s Circus, as told by Tanya Lee Stone with Boris Kulikov?s spectacular and innovative illustrations. Calder?s original circus is on permanent display at the Whitney Museum in New York City.

Building Manhattan

by Laura Vila

A picture book for city lovers everywhere! Vibrant illustrations and a spare text come together in this striking picture book to tell the story of the building of Manhattan. There was a time when the city was little more than an undeveloped island. But as the small patch of land shifted from Native American to Dutch to English to American hands, it was built, layer on top of layer, into the bustling metropolis it is today.

Wanda Gág: The Girl Who Lived to Draw

by Deborah Kogan Ray

Wanda Gág (pronounced Gog) is well known as the author and illustrator of "Millions of Cats," one of the best-loved children's books ever published. But not many people know how interesting and inspiring her life was. Following in the footsteps of her beloved artist father, Wanda led an idyllic childhood, drawing and listening to old-world fairy tales. But when her father died, it was teenage Wanda who worked hard to keep her seven younger siblings fed, clothed, and laughing. She never lost sight of her love of art, however, and her tremendous willpower won her a coveted scholarship to the Art Students League in New York City and then led to a gallery show of her artwork where an editor of children's books got an idea for a book. The rest, as they say, is history!

The Golden Serpent

by Walter Dean Myers

The wise man Pundabi tries to help the king see the poverty and suffering in his kingdom by solving the mystery of the Golden Serpent.

Madeline's Rescue

by Ludwig Bemelmans

The lively adventures of the twelve famous little girls and Genevieve, the dog, take us once more to Bemelmans' unique and delightful Paris. Images and image descriptions available.

The Mousewife

by Rumer Godden

From the book: The mousewife goes about her duties just like all the other mice. Life is simple; survival is a matter of finding flannel scraps and tart crumbs, and contentment is there for the asking. Why, then, does the mousewife yearn for more? Creeping into a cage one day to gather some peas, the mousewife is frightened by the fluttering of wings. Thus begins the first of many encounters she has with the wild turtledove, the creature who longs for freedom. Based on a story in Dorothy Wordsworth's diary: "The Mouse and the Dove." Includes picture descriptions. Other books by Rumer Godden are available from Bookshare. This file should make an excellent embossed braille file.

The Snowy Day

by Ezra Jack Keats

No book has captured the magic and sense of possibility of the first snowfall better than The Snowy Day. Universal in its appeal, the story has become a favorite of millions, as it reveals a child's wonder at a new world, and the hope of capturing and keeping that wonder forever. Images and image descriptions available.

Tim O'Toole and the Wee Folk: An Irish Tale

by Gerald Mcdermott

Tim O'Toole and his wife, Kathleen are so poor they have not a penny or a potato between them. Even their mice are too skinny for the cat to chase. What Tim O'Toole needs is a job. But when he goes out to find one, he stumbles upon a troop of the little people--laughing, singing, and carrying on. And the little people provide Tim with something better than a job: a gray goose that lays golden eggs, and a linen tablecloth filled with food to last Tim and Kathleen for the rest of their lives. But when the evil McGoons trick poor, guileless Tim out of his fortune, he must team up with the little people once more to regain it. Spirited art by Caldecott winner Gerald McDermott amusingly illustrates Tim O'Toole's plight and his triumphant revenge on the McGoons.

Babe Didrikson: Athlete of the Century (Women of Our Times)

by R. R. Knudson

A biography emphasizing the early years of Babe Didrikson, who broke records in golf, track and field, and other sports, at a time when there were few opportunities for female athletes.

Eleanor Roosevelt: First Lady of the World (Women of Our Time)

by Doris Faber

Eleanor Roosevelt's life was as complex and changing as any in the 20th century. An outcast child, debutante, wife and mother, she became the beloved first lady of the United States and the world. Her story is written "as intimate(ly) as a conversation. ... A unique work of art". --The Horn Book. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.

Grandma Moses: Painter of Rural America (Women of Our Time)

by Zibby Oneal

Although she did not start painting until she was nearly 80 years old, Grandma Moses became one of America's best-loved artists. She lived to be 101, painting until the last year of her life. Outspoken and witty, Grandma won admirers for her down-home attitude as much as for her beautiful paintings. Her primitive landscapes reflect an old country charm that Americans love to recall, just as Grandma Moses herself lived the simple lifestyle of earlier generations. Picture descriptions or captions included from picture pages.

Dolly Parton: Country Goin' to Town (Women of Our Time)

by Susan Saunders

Dolly said every country girl dreamed of goin' to town--but Dolly knew how to make her dreams come true. She grew up in poverty in the heart of the Smoky Mountains in Tennessee. Dolly was composing music before she could write and singing as soon as she could speak, and always believing in herself. Singing in her uncle's backwoods church, on 4:00 a.m. radio programs, and finally in the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Dolly was heading for the heights of country music stardom. Her heart remains in the country, but Dolly Parton has become a star acclaimed throughout the world.

Laura Ingalls Wilder: Growing Up in the Little House (Women of Our Time)

by Patricia Reilly Giff

A biography of the author of the "Little House" books, including the years of her marriage to Almanzo Wilder.

Carol Burnett: The Sound of Laughter (The Women of Our Time)

by James Howe

A biography emphasizing the early years of actress and comedienne Carol Burnett, whose down-to-earth humor brought her fame on Broadway, in films, and in her own hit television series. Other books in this series, and other books about Carol Burnett, are available in this library.

Mother Teresa: Sister to the Poor (Women of Our Time)

by Patricia Reilly Giff

A biography emphasizing the early years of the nun who is world renowned for her work with the poor, sick, and uneducated in India and in other parts of the world.

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