by Carla Mooney (Author), Alexis Cornell (Illustrator), Carla Mooney (Author), Alexis Cornell (Illustrator)
Why do humans walk on two legs? Why do fish have gills? Life on Earth is incredibly diverse and part of the reason for this is evolution, or the theory that living things change with time. Evolution: How Life Adapts to a Changing Environment explores the theory of evolution, its history, how we think it works, examples of creatures who have evolved in response to specific circumstances, and what this might mean for the future of our planet. For billions of years, the amazing story of life on Earth has been unfolding. Millions of years ago, life on earth was nothing like it is today. Dinosaurs roamed the earth and pterosaurs flew through the skies. Millions of years before the dinosaurs, it was even more different. Strange ocean creatures lived in the seas, while the land was barren. Throughout its history, Earth has been home to an incredible diversity of living things that have changed dramatically over the many millennia. How have these living creatures changed so much? And how did that change happen? The answer: evolution! In Evolution: How Life Adapts to a Changing Environment, readers ages 9 to 12 will study evolution, or the process by which living things change over time. One of the most important ideas in biology, evolution explains why there are so many different living organisms on earth. It also explains why you are the way you are. Because of evolution, you walk on two legs and communicate with language. And although evolution is the story of our past, it also helps us understand our future and how we continue to evolve. Throughout Evolution, investigations and experiments provide hands-on, problem-solving opportunities for students, incorporating various challenges and tools. Readers simulate the process of natural selection, trace the blue whale's evolutionary tree, and examine how fossils provide evidence of evolution and adaptation. Using readily available household and recycled materials, each activity takes the reader through an inquiry-based, open-ended investigation that leaves plenty of room to explore individual creativity. Evolution: How Life Adapts to a Changing Environment takes readers on a journey from our common ancestry to our shared future on an incredibly diverse planet.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 128
Publisher: Nomad Press
Published: 30 Nov 2017
ISBN 10: 1619305976
ISBN 13: 9781619305977
Book Overview:
*$40,000 marketing and publicity budget (for series)
*Exhibiting at national and regional conferences including:
*American Library Association (ALA: 60,000 members)
*National Science Teacher Association/STEM (NSTA: 60,000 members)
*American Association of School Librarians (AASL: 10,000 members)
*Public Library Association (PLA: 11,000 members)
*Texas Library Association (TLA: 7,000 members)
*National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS: 25,000 members)
*International Literacy Association (ILA: 60,000 members)
*Association for Middle Level Education (AMLE: 40,000 members)
*Advertising in the following publications: SLJ display ads (3-4 times for series)
*Booklist/Booklinks display ads (3-4 times)
*Booklist/Booklinks online ads Follett Library Ingram (Children's Advance 2 times)
*Baker & Taylor (Growing Minds)
*Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements at bookstores, libraries, schools, museums, events, and conferences. Extensive social media outreach via Facebook (www.facebook.com/authorLauraPerdew), Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, Goodreads, LinkedIn, and author's website at Lauraperdew.com
Momreadit.com
Nomad Press has enjoyed shelf space in my library for a while. They have great science project books and consistently win awards because they blend hands-on projects with text readability. Evolution is a great update to Nomad's collection and my science projects shelf. First of all, the book is in color; my Nomad books have normally been black and white, and this is as eye-catching on the inside as it is on the cover. The book progresses from a basic overview of evolution and how it works, through natural selection, species and speciation, through to classification and human evolution. Twenty-five projects allow kids to map early human migration; find sidewalk fossils (awesome for my urban library kiddos), and research an endangered species and create a plan to save it. There's a glossary, lists of resources, and an index. I love this new direction Nomad seems to be taking and want to see more! Great for library shelves.