Kids Books - Education
Dream Snow
By Eric Carle
I love reading this book every year, around this time. It is a fun read aloud for our youngest students, with a fun surprise ending! Eric Carle's collage illustrations always remind me that beautiful things can be created from the most unexpected materials.
En Busca de La Maravilla Perdida (Spanish Edition)
By Geronimo Stilton
geronimo stilton saw a prity girl and he liked her but at the end he dident like her anymore...
101 Books to Read Before You Grow Up: The must-read book list for kids (101 series for Kids)
By Bianca Schulze
This book features tons of classic kids' story summaries. You also get to review these books yourself, like on this site; (but DOGO books is way cooler!). There are even a couple secret facts about each book. I enjoyed reviewing Matilda and El Deafo in this book; very inspiring stories.
Oh, Yikes!: History's Grossest Wackiest Moments
By Joy Masoff
really good and funny i have learned a lot
The Adventure of a Lifetime
By Ravina Thakkar
This book was so amazing! I can't believe a 13-year-old wrote this! It's about a girl, Betty who feels that life is boring. Soon, she gets sucked into Amber the Brave's newest book and goes on an adventure. There's a twist that's so suspenseful, you're not going to believe it!
Writer's Toolbox: Learn How to Write Letters, Fairy Tales, Scary Stories, Journals, Poems, and Reports
By Nancy Loewen
This book reminds me of how I first learned to tell stories in kindergarten. It teaches you how to write suspenseful scary stories, funny fairytales, detailed letters, and more. I really enjoyed it. I also liked reading about how to write your own life journal for beginners. Great for kids!
Making of A Champion: Rugby Union Star
By Andrew Langley
I love rugby union here are some differentses with rugby and rugby union: The two forms of rugby share the same basic rules of the game and use a similar-shaped ovoid ball. The aim is to score more points through tries, conversions, penalty goals and drop goals than the opposition within the 80 minutes of play. Goals are scored when the ball is kicked between the two posts and over the cross-bar, either during open play or as the result of a penalty. A try is scored when the ball is touched down on or beyond the defending team's goal-line. The try-scoring side is given the chance to score two additional points by kicking a conversion similar to a penalty goal attempt in a whichever point along a line which is perpendicular to the place where the try had been scored. The ball can be taken forward in three ways—by kicking, by a player running with it or as the result of a set-piece. The ball can be passed from hand to hand between teammates in a backward or sideways direction; it may not be passed forwards although it can be kicked forwards. Dropping the ball in a forwards direction results in a scrum, a set-piece that restarts the game, except on the sixth tackle in league where the game restarts with a handover to the opposition. Only the player holding the ball may be tackled. A rugby tackle is an attempt to bring the ball carrier to the ground or to stop his forward progress. Play restarts with the ball being transferred to another player. The playing positions are divided into "backs"—generally faster and more mobile who score most of the points and the larger, stronger "forwards" who are involved in the more physical aspects of rugby and generally do more tackling.









