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Books with title Recycle

  • Recycle!

    Gail Gibbons

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback, April 1, 1996)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Explains the process of recycling from start to finish and discusses what happens to paper, glass, aluminum cans, and plastic when they are recycled into new products.
    M
  • Recycle

    Ann-Marie Kishel

    Paperback (LernerClassroom, Jan. 1, 2006)
    Create a classroom of conservationists! Each of these simple books examines ways students can help conserve resources in their community. The simple text and corresponding photographs will support students as they learn about these important concepts.
    C
  • Recycle

    Olivia Nolff, Jessica Nolff

    language (, Dec. 9, 2011)
    This is a book about a piece of gum, a old calculator, and a rubber band that get tossed away and show kids what happens to trash that gets thrown away. This is a funny book that goes through the process of recycling.
  • Recycle!

    Christiane Engel

    Board book (Pan Macmillan, Sept. 1, 2011)
    Two children sort their recycling, save water, and reuse boxes to make toys, in a story with tabs that can be pushed up to show what can be recycled, where water comes from, and what types of refuse can be reused. On board pages.
    B
  • Recycle

    Kay Burnham

    Paperback (Crabtree Pub Co, Oct. 15, 2007)
    Examines the scope of the garbage problem; describes how paper, glass, cans and plastic can be recycled; explains how to reduce waste by reusing materials and buying used goods; and tells how to select environmentally friendly products.
    P
  • Recycle

    Kay Burnham

    Library Binding (Crabtree Pub Co, Oct. 15, 2007)
    Examines the scope of the garbage problem; describes how paper, glass, cans and plastic can be recycled; explains how to reduce waste by reusing materials and buying used goods; and tells how to select environmentally friendly products.
    P
  • Recycler

    Lauren McLaughlin

    eBook (Random House Books for Young Readers, Aug. 15, 2009)
    How do you grow up, if who you are keeps changing?Jill McTeague is not your average high school graduate, she’s a scientific anomaly. Every month for four days she turns into Jack, a guy—complete with all the parts. Now everyone in her hometown knows that something very weird is up with her. So what’s a girl (and a guy) to do? Get the heck out of town, that’s what! With her kooky best friend, Ramie, Jill sets out for New York City. There both she and Jack will have to figure out everything from the usual (relationships) to the not so usual (career options for a “cycler,” anyone?).As in Cycler, the first book featuring Jack and Jill, author Lauren McLaughlin deftly weaves the downright mundane with the outright bizarre in a story that, while defying classification, is peopled with characters that readers can fully relate to.“The sort of book that makes your eyes widen and that you don’t want to put down.”—Bookavore
  • Recycler

    Lauren McLaughlin

    Paperback (Random House Books for Young Readers, Aug. 25, 2009)
    How do you grow up, if who you are keeps changing?Jill McTeague is not your average high school graduate, she’s a scientific anomaly. Every month for four days she turns into Jack, a guy—complete with all the parts. Now everyone in her hometown knows that something very weird is up with her. So what’s a girl (and a guy) to do? Get the heck out of town, that’s what! With her kooky best friend, Ramie, Jill sets out for New York City. There both she and Jack will have to figure out everything from the usual (relationships) to the not so usual (career options for a “cycler,” anyone?).As in Cycler, the first book featuring Jack and Jill, author Lauren McLaughlin deftly weaves the downright mundane with the outright bizarre in a story that, while defying classification, is peopled with characters that readers can fully relate to.“The sort of book that makes your eyes widen and that you don’t want to put down.”—Bookavore
  • Recycle

    Kay Barnham

    Hardcover (Hodder Wayland, Aug. 24, 2006)
    None
  • Recycled

    Sandy McKay

    eBook (Random House New Zealand, Oct. 3, 2014)
    The funny, imaginative, award-winning story of a boy who tries to save the world through recycling.Every year in the developed world, an average person throws away 45 kgs of plastic, two trees worth of paper, 160 cans and 107 bottles. Colin takes his recycling school project to heart and tries to convert his own family first, with great difficulty, before he tries to save the world. He becomes a self-appointed eco-warrior and comes up against his sister, who delivers junk mail, his mother, who sells real estate and hang-glides for de-stressing and his father who spends a lot of time in the garage. Colin becomes involved with the Roseview Rubbish Rescue Centre and the character who runs it. They along with others, organise a campaign to protest selling off the centre for development.This is a well-told story with many hilarious episodes that will delight young readers.The text is playful and imaginative, lighthearted and funny, but also intelligent and informative. It won the Junior Fiction category of the NZ Post Children's Book Awards in 2002.
  • Recycle That!

    Fay Robinson

    Paperback (Childrens Pr, Sept. 1, 1995)
    Explains what recycling means, tells why it's important not to be wasteful, and shows how old cans, bottles, and paper can be made into new products
    K
  • Let's Recycle

    Roderick Hunt, Alex Brychta, Ms Kate Ruttle, Ms Annemarie Young

    eBook (Oxford University Press, March 6, 2014)
    Introduce your child to new situations through these entertaining and sensitively written stories, which are perfect for reading together. Each story is packed with facts and humour to familiarise your child with what to expect from a first experience e.g. what will happen, who they will meet and new things they might see. First Experiences with Biff, Chip & Kipper have been carefully created to help parents explore the wider world with their child, talk about shared feelings and emotions, and build vocabulary through the fun activities included in every book. Each book also includes practical tips and ideas for you to use when reading together. Biff, Chip & Kipper are characters from the Oxford Reading Tree series, which is used in 80% of primary schools. This story has been written by Roderick Hunt, author of the original Oxford Reading Tree stories, and Annemarie Young; superb storytellers with over 50 years educational experience between them. Alex Brychta's humorous and detailed illustrations bring the stories alive and are known to and loved by millions of young readers all over the world. This series is linked to Read with Biff, Chip & Kipper -the UK's best-selling home reading series, and is supported by free advice for parents at www.oxfordowl.co.uk.