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Burton Albert

Forfatter af Where Does the Trail Lead?

12 Works 314 Members 6 Reviews

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Omfatter også følgende navne: Jr Burton Albert, Jr. Albert Burton

Værker af Burton Albert

Where Does the Trail Lead? (1991) 89 eksemplarer
More Codes for Kids (1979) 47 eksemplarer
Code Busters! (1985) 34 eksemplarer
Codes for Kids (1976) 33 eksemplarer
Journey of the Nightly Jaguar (1996) 25 eksemplarer
Sharks and whales (1979) 18 eksemplarer
Windsongs and Rainbows (1993) 17 eksemplarer
What Makes My Daddy Best (1998) 15 eksemplarer
Mine, Yours, Ours (1977) 12 eksemplarer
Top Secret!: Codes to Crack (1987) 9 eksemplarer

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for younger ages but it is a great way for them visualize the events that happen in the book. it has great pictures. students can visualise based on the past event
 
Markeret
kurdistansami | 2 andre anmeldelser | Aug 23, 2017 |
I use this book for effective questioning. The illustrator has painted beautiful pictures that create opportunities to engage prior knowledge and to ask before during and after questions. I would use this book for children K-2nd grade
 
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JackieOttman | 2 andre anmeldelser | Jul 26, 2017 |
I use this book for effective questioning. The illustrator has painted beautiful pictures that create opportunities to engage prior knowledge and to ask before during and after questions. I would use this book for children K-2nd grade.
 
Markeret
LeesaT | 2 andre anmeldelser | Jul 26, 2017 |
Journey of the Nightly Jaguar Traditional Fantasy
By Burton Albert, Illustrated by Robert Roth

“Journey of the Nightly Jaguar” is a traditional fantasy picture book about Mayan Indians in Central American. These Indians believed that happenings in nature were caused my G-ds. These happenings sometimes took forms of animals. The jaguar is the most feared and most G-d like animal. One of the strongest aspects of this book is the comparison the author makes to provide visualization for readers. For example, Albert describes the raindrops to golden coins. The raindrops feel heavy and were treasured to the Mayan Indians in Central America. The Mayans believed that the rain made the sports on a jaguar. Albert says, “A spray of shimmering bubbles that hang in the air like silver cymbals”. The comparisons (similes) really took “Journey of the Nightly Jaguar” to the next level. In the end the Jaguar bursts in to the sun and the sun rises a glorious red again. One thing I didn’t really like about the book was the fact that it was unclear if the jaguar only comes out when it rains or only at night. It was a cute traditional fantasy story, but I thought the ledged of the jaguar was sort of vague. It would not be my first tradition fantasy choice, but I thought it was a good one that depicted a tale of Mayan Indians in Central America.… (mere)
 
Markeret
LBurro2 | 1 anden anmeldelse | Oct 20, 2015 |

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Associated Authors

Jill McDonald Illustrator

Statistikker

Værker
12
Medlemmer
314
Popularitet
#75,177
Vurdering
½ 3.4
Anmeldelser
6
ISBN
22

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