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Books with title The Weather Report: Early

  • The Weather Report: Early

    Pam Holden, Richard Hoit

    Paperback (Flying Start Books, Sept. 30, 2005)
    This Robot came to visit the young boy. The Robot had never been outside before. He saw things that he had never ever seen. He asked lots of questions about the weather. Can you read his questions with the Robots voice?
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  • The Weather Report

    Delphine Kalinowski

    Paperback (Rosen Publishing Group, Jan. 1, 2001)
    Book by Kalinowski, Delphine
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  • Early Themes: Weather

    Ann Flagg

    Paperback (Scholastic Teaching Resources, Jan. 1, 1999)
    Ready-to-Go Activities, Games, Literature Selections, Poetry and Everything You Need for a Complete Theme UnitChildren learn about weather with easy-to-do, innovative activities and games. Plus poster.
  • Weather Report

    Jane Yolen

    Library Binding (Wordsong, March 1, 1993)
    Boyds Mills Press publishes a wide range of high-quality fiction and nonfiction picture books, chapter books, novels, and nonfiction
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  • Weather Report

    Rhonda Batchelor

    eBook (Dundurn, April 16, 2002)
    Like the shifting and often turbulent skies of our own emotional meteorology, Rhonda Batchelor’s poems forecast the shifting patterns of a marriage from quiet moments of a graceful dawn to stormy seas of absence, from brilliant love-strewn sunshowers to dark moments of loss and bitter nights upon the shore. In three sections, "Backbone of the Moon", "Ghostly Dialogues" and "Still Breathing", Batchelor explores the fleeting forever trilogy of expectations, unions and releases that comprise the tidelike phases of a lover’s cycle. Dedicated to respected Canadian poet Charles Lillard, Batchelor’s late husband, this work keens to the notes of a personal lament but emerges triumphantly healed and ultimately blessed.
  • The Weather Report

    Delphine Kalinowski

    Paperback (Rosen Publishing Group, Jan. 1, 2005)
    None
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  • The Weather Report Set

    Joanne Randolph

    Library Binding (Enslow Pub Inc, Aug. 15, 2017)
    None
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  • The Weather Report

    Pam Holden, Richard Hoit

    Paperback (Flying Start Books, June 1, 2017)
    None
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  • Weather Report

    Alison Hawes, Manya Stojic

    Paperback (Collins Educational, Sept. 1, 2007)
    A non-fiction report about different types of weather over the course of a week. Photographs of each weather accompany illustrations of how people might act and dress in different weather conditions, while the repetitive pattern of text reports on each day’s weather.• Red A/Band 2A books offer predictable text with familiar objects and actions, combined with simple story development.• Text type - A non-fiction report.• A summary ‘Weather Report’ on pages 14 and 15 provides children with the opportunity to recap the different weather types and days of the week.• This book has been levelled for Reading Recovery.
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  • Weather Report

    Alison Hawes, Manya Stojic

    Paperback (Collins Educational, June 1, 2012)
    A non-fiction report about different types of weather over the course of a week. Photographs of each weather accompany illustrations of how people might act and dress in different weather conditions, while the repetitive pattern of text reports on each day’s weather.• Red A/Band 2A books offer predictable text with familiar objects and actions, combined with simple story development.• Text type - A non-fiction report.• A summary ‘Weather Report’ on pages 14 and 15 provides children with the opportunity to recap the different weather types and days of the week.
    I
  • The Weather and Us: Weather Report

    Ted O'Hare

    Library Binding (Rourke Pub Group, Aug. 1, 2002)
    Answers basic questions about weather, including "What causes weather changes?", "How does climate differ from weather?", and "Which places have the most extreme weather?"
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  • Weather Report

    Rhonda Batchelor

    Paperback (Dundurn, April 16, 2002)
    Like the shifting and often turbulent skies of our own emotional meteorology, Rhonda Batchelor’s poems forecast the shifting patterns of a marriage from quiet moments of a graceful dawn to stormy seas of absence, from brilliant love-strewn sunshowers to dark moments of loss and bitter nights upon the shore. In three sections, "Backbone of the Moon", "Ghostly Dialogues" and "Still Breathing", Batchelor explores the fleeting forever trilogy of expectations, unions and releases that comprise the tidelike phases of a lover’s cycle. Dedicated to respected Canadian poet Charles Lillard, Batchelor’s late husband, this work keens to the notes of a personal lament but emerges triumphantly healed and ultimately blessed.