Young readers will be introduced to the concept of the changing weather through the view from their very own window. Children will learn about rain, clouds, sunshine, and more in simple, age-appropriate language paired with colorful photos. Look and Learn introduces children to the subject on one page and then shows it in real-life context on the next.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS inspires young adventurers to explore the world through award-winning magazines, books, website, apps, games, toys, television series and events and is the only kids brand with a world-class scientific organization at its core.
"The “Look & Learn” series encourages interactive learning by presenting little ones with an observation (“The tiger cleans its fur with its tongue”) followed by related directions (“Find the tiger’s tongue. Stick out your tongue.”). The clean layout and vibrant photos set these books apart—readers won’t be able to resist such images as a toddler enjoying a pile of leaves or the head-on quizzical stare of a snow leopard." -- School Library Journal
Young readers will be introduced to the concept of the changing weather through the view from their very own window. Children will learn about rain, clouds, sunshine, and more in simple, age-appropriate language paired with colorful photos. Look and Learn introduces children to the subject on one page and then shows it in real-life context on the next.
Creators
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS inspires young adventurers to explore the world through award-winning magazines, books, website, apps, games, toys, television series and events and is the only kids brand with a world-class scientific organization at its core.
"The “Look & Learn” series encourages interactive learning by presenting little ones with an observation (“The tiger cleans its fur with its tongue”) followed by related directions (“Find the tiger’s tongue. Stick out your tongue.”). The clean layout and vibrant photos set these books apart—readers won’t be able to resist such images as a toddler enjoying a pile of leaves or the head-on quizzical stare of a snow leopard." -- School Library Journal