Photo de l'auteur

Judith Herbst

Auteur de The Golden Book of Stars & Planets

25 oeuvres 447 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Judith Herbst

The Golden Book of Stars & Planets (1988) 147 exemplaires
Big Hand, Little Hand (1997) 32 exemplaires
The Mystery of UFOs (1897) 29 exemplaires
Hoaxes (The Unexplained) (2004) 22 exemplaires
Monsters (The Unexplained) (2004) 22 exemplaires
Esp (The Unexplained) (2005) 17 exemplaires
Aliens (The Unexplained) (2005) 15 exemplaires
Lands of Mystery (The Unexplained) (2004) 14 exemplaires
Beyond the Grave (The Unexplained) (2004) 13 exemplaires
Ufos (The Unexplained) (2004) 13 exemplaires
Vanished (The Unexplained) (2004) 13 exemplaires
Bio Amazing (1985) 11 exemplaires
Sky Above and Worlds Beyond (1983) 10 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

An appealing set of verses on half-size pages above a clock face with two movable hands is designed to teach toddlers how to tell time. The verses take them through the day, from 6 in the morning when it's time to wake up, until twelve o'clock midnight, when everyone is fast asleep. In between, children meet Farmer Fred, and the farm animals, as well as other friendly creatures who live nearby--a mouse, a porcupine, a pair of squirrels, and others.
 
Signalé
wichitafriendsschool | 1 autre critique | Feb 11, 2020 |
Big Hand, Little Hand How to Tell Time is a rhyming picture book that teaches children how to tell time. In my opinion this is a great book. One reason I really enjoyed this book was that there was a big clock attached beneath the small flip book at the top. Children can manipulate the clock’s hands to make them match the small picture of the clock on each page in the story. For example, on the page with the rhyme about waking up the famer at quarter after six, there was a picture of the farmer sleeping, and on his bedside table there was a small alarm clock with the big hand on the three and the little hand on the six. Children can look at the small clock in the picture and move the hands on the large clock to match it. A second reason that I really liked this book was because it was a long rhyme about the day that goes chronologically from sunup to sundown. Each page contained a rhyme about a certain time of day. For example, the pages moved from waking up the sheep at six, to waking up the farmer at quarter after six, to eating breakfast at seven, and so on throughout the day.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MelissaPatek | 1 autre critique | Feb 10, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
25
Membres
447
Popularité
#54,865
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
2
ISBN
53

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