Browse all books

Books in My First Activity Book: Draw Learn series

  • My First Spot the Difference: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Joe Potter, Marta Costa Virgili

    Paperback (B.E.S., April 1, 2018)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles.Straightforward questions spur them on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete colorful pictures. Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves. Search for differences in each picture, practice visual thinking, and perfect hand-eye coordination with lots of fun problems.
    C
  • My First Unicorn Dot-to-Dot: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Joe Potter, Elizabeth Golding, Faye Buckingham

    Paperback (B.E.S., March 1, 2019)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles. WWTUD? (What Would the Unicorn Do?) Complete the dots, color them in, and follow the unicorn into lots of exciting, fun adventures. Straightforward questions spur children on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete each one. They can even color them in, too! Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves.
    L
  • My First Mazes: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Elizabeth Golding, Isabel Aniel

    Paperback (B.E.S., Feb. 1, 2017)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes. In My First Mazes, young kids will enjoy completing mazes and solving questions like, "What did the pirate find?", "Where did the king go?", "How many friends did the frog find?", and more. Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. It offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and find answers all by themselves.
    F
  • My First Dot-to-Dot: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Elizabeth Golding, Sonia Baretti, Maria Neradova

    Paperback (B.E.S., Feb. 1, 2017)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple dot-to-dot puzzles. In My First Dot-to-Dot, young kids will enjoy tracing over dots, connecting them, and revealing a colorful picture with these fantastic throw-downs that will have them answering questions, writing words, counting items, and solving problems. Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. It offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and find answers all by themselves.
    L
  • Draw + Learn: People

    Harriet Ziefert, Tanya Roitman

    Paperback (Blue Apple Books, April 24, 2012)
    Colorful pages include white space for kids to fill in what's missing, or just to add color to certain elements. In People, emerging artists will see a page that shows basic body parts, then pages where kids can fill in missing arms, legs, hands, trunks, feet, etc. They can also add these things to a robot and a monster to further extend their facility and fun.
    G
  • My First Odd One Out: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Joe Potter

    Paperback (B.E.S., March 1, 2019)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles. Which cow, chick, daisy, or balloon is the odd one out? Straightforward questions spur children on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete each one. They can even color them in, too! Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves. Help young readers practice visual thinking by solving simple puzzles.
    F
  • My First Color By Numbers and Shapes: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Moira Butterfield, Anna Clariana Muntada

    Paperback (B.E.S., April 1, 2018)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles.Straightforward questions spur them on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete colorful pictures. Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves. Youngsters will enjoy coloring in the numbers to reveal a fantastic picture as they answer questions, write words, count items, and solve problems.
    C
  • Draw + Learn: Faces Everywhere

    Harriet Ziefert

    Paperback (Blue Apple Books, Feb. 26, 2013)
    No kid wants to pick up a book that promises to "develop important learning skills." Have no fear! Kids will be too busy coloring a face on an ice cream cone, or a face on a baseball mitt, to notice the fiber amid the fun. This First Activity Book combines the immediate pleasure of doodling and coloring with the development of anatomy recognition, perspective, scale, and artistic skills. First Activity Books are ideal for kids who've just learned to draw or write. They offer high-quality construction, large pages, good paper, plenty to keep kids occupied for hours - pack them up and go!
    F
  • My First Alphabet Dot-to-Dot: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Elizabeth Golding, Jake McDonald

    Paperback (B.E.S., March 1, 2019)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles. Youngsters will enjoy connecting the dots even as they practice answering fun questions, coloring pictures, alphabet sequencing in upper and lower case, and more. Straightforward questions spur them on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete each one. They can even color them in, too! Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves.
    L
  • My First Picture Puzzles: Over 50 Fantastic Puzzles

    Moira Butterfield, Natasha Rimmington

    Paperback (Perseus Distribution, April 1, 2018)
    Help your little readers practice their visual thinking, pen control, and hand-eye coordination with these simple mazes and dot-to-dot puzzles.Straightforward questions spur them on to solve puzzles while tracing over and connecting dotted guidelines helps them to complete colorful pictures. Get them thinking, writing, counting, and laughing as they take on each intriguing challenge. This book offers hours of age-appropriate fun to kids that are just starting to enjoy thinking through problems and finding answers all by themselves. Children will challenge themselves as they solve questions like, "What did the pirate find?" "Where did the king go?" "How many friends did the frog find?" and more.
    J
  • Draw + Learn: Faces Everywhere

    Harriet Ziefert, Yukiko Kido

    Paperback (Blue Apple Books, Feb. 26, 2013)
    No kid wants to pick up a book that promises to "develop important learning skills." Have no fear! Kids will be too busy coloring a face on an ice cream cone, or a face on a baseball mitt, to notice the fiber amid the fun. This First Activity Book combines the immediate pleasure of doodling and coloring with the development of anatomy recognition, perspective, scale, and artistic skills. First Activity Books are ideal for kids who've just learned to draw or write. They offer high-quality construction, large pages, good paper, plenty to keep kids occupied for hours - pack them up and go!
    F
  • Draw + Learn: Animals

    Harriet Ziefert, Tanya Roitman

    Paperback (Blue Apple Books, July 12, 2011)
    In these first activity books, kids can complete and color all kinds of faces: boys, girls, tigers, monkeys, even ladybugs. At first, toddlers might only draw a circle for a face, not adding eyes, nose, or mouth. But in time, they will fill in the different features, from eyelashes to teeth; from curly hair to whiskers. With bold and bright art, these are ideal activity books for children who have just learned to hold a crayon or pencil. First scribbles and drawings are important, precursory steps to reading and writing!
    G