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Books with title Community

  • An Animal Community

    Bobbie Kalman

    Paperback (Crabtree Pub Co, Jan. 15, 2010)
    Describes life in a prairie dog town and demonstrates the characteristics it has in common with a human society.
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  • Community Helpers

    Tom Evans

    language (World Book, Inc., June 5, 2018)
    What kind of doctor takes care of animals? What do firefighters use to put out forest fires, and how do they spread it over the fire? How many people become teachers? Colorful illustrations, photographs, and simple text combine to show real-world examples. Young readers follow along to learn about the people who contribute to their community.With two-page colorful illustrations, World Book’s Learning Ladders series is for young learners with a primary reading level of grades K-2 looking to learn the basics about nature, science, and their communities. Each nonfiction book was created for children to learn about topics they’re most curious about. Each book in the 10-volume series features colorful illustrations, fun facts, and easy to understand sentences. Words in bold type help early readers build vocabulary skills.
  • Communities

    Sarah L. Schuette

    Paperback (Capstone Press, July 1, 2009)
    Building from nuclear to extended families, and then on to people in the community, these richly photographed books help children see how they fit in the world.
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  • Map My Community

    Harriet Brundle

    Paperback (Crabtree Publishing Company, Aug. 10, 2018)
    Finding your way around your community can be confusing if you dont understand symbols and directions. This simply-written title provides readers with the exact information they need to understand and make a map of their own neighborhood or community.
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  • Community Helpers

    Inc. World Book

    Paperback (World Book, Inc., June 1, 2016)
    Learn about teachers, police officers, firefighters, and other people who work in a community. This richly visual learning library introduces basic lessons tied closely to early childhood curriculum topics. Each spread includes introductory text, colorful illustrations with detailed captions, and photographs that show real-world examples of the featured topic. Puzzle pages, fun facts, and true/false quizzes appear at the end of each volume.
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  • Map My Community

    Harriet Brundle

    Hardcover (Crabtree Publishing Company, Aug. 10, 2018)
    Finding your way around your community can be confusing if you dont understand symbols and directions. This simply-written title provides readers with the exact information they need to understand and make a map of their own neighborhood or community.
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  • Communities

    Neil Morris, Rebecca Rissman

    Paperback (Heinemann, Sept. 4, 2009)
    What is a community? Who are the leaders in communities? Which languages are most spoken in the world? This series encourages geographical enquiry with an interactive, investigative, and visual approach to a wide range of core curriculum topics.
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  • Sacred Community

    Jamie Roach

    language (Beacon Hill Press, Sept. 7, 2011)
    In the book of Acts the followers of Jesus were referred to as "The Way". In other words, they were defined more by the way they lived than a clearly articulated set of doctrines. They were the church living in the way of Jesus. Sacred Community will inspire you to go beyond being a group to being a community that lives together as the tangible body of Christ, right where you are. This journal will guide you through a way of prayer, restoration, sharing, including, suffering, going, and storytelling by engaging your whole self: heart, mind, body and soul. By combining meditation with action, reading with doing, talking with listening, times in solitude, and times in community, discover what it means to live in sacred community with one another.
  • My Community

    Errol Manhof

    Paperback (Rosen Classroom, Aug. 1, 2008)
    This title looks at some of the foundations of every local community including: the fire station, the post office, and the school. Supplemented with full color photographs, this title helps teach readers the basics of communities through easy-to-follow language.
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  • Sacred Community

    Jamie Roach

    Paperback (Barefoot Ministries of Kansas City, April 15, 2010)
    In the book of Acts the followers of Jesus were referred to as ’The Way’. In other words, they were defined more by the way they lived than a clearly articulated set of doctrines. They were the church living in the way of Jesus.Sacred Community will inspire you to go beyond being a group to being a community that lives together as the tangible body of Christ, right where you are. This journal will guide you through a way of prayer, restoration, sharing, including, suffering, going, and storytelling by engaging your whole self: heart, mind, body and soul.By combining meditation with action, reading with doing, talking with listening, times in solitude, and times in community, discover what it means to live in sacred community with one another.Download a FREE sample chapter!
  • Communities

    Gail Saunders-Smith

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, Sept. 1, 1997)
    Describes various kinds of workers in a community including police officers, doctors, teachers, coaches, veterinarians, dentists, fire fighters, mail carriers, and construction workers, and explains the service that each occupation provides.
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  • CommuniTree

    Andrea Skyberg, Milwaukee Parkside School for the Arts

    language (Wooden Nickel Press, June 1, 2013)
    On the surface we look like individuals, but hidden below, like the roots of the great Quaking Aspen trees, we are connected. In the same way a family has a family tree, our community has a CommuniTree. On a family tree, each branch represents a person. On a CommuniTree, individuals are connected by our roots of shared values and collective ideas. Our connections take form in our collaborations, the music we make together, our trust in one another, and in the seeds of love that we continuously plant. CommuniTree was created in collaboration with 686 students (K4 - 8th grade) from Dover School and Tippecano School for the Arts & Humanities, during a time when these two separate schools were merging together to form Milwaukee Parkside School for the Arts. In an effort to take an active role in building their new school, students worked with artist and author Andrea Skyberg to develop a children s picture book about community.