National Geographic Kids, the reason why they’re a go-to for elementary age

I’m a substitute teacher who mainly works in elementary schools, precisely four of them in the area where I live. This gives me a wider-than-average compression of books and styles. Some of the libraries and classrooms that I visit are next-level, whereas some need more attention to their catalog. The one constant in all of the classrooms and libraries that I teach in is that the reference books from National Geographic and National Geographic Kids are there. It doesn’t matter how old the National Geographic Kids Almanac is, it’s still there, read and enjoyed. I was in a library the other day and saw fourth graders thumbing through the almanac for 2013. We received a couple of the current releases from National Geographic and wanted to highlight a couple of the pros of each of them.

Whether it’s back to school or essays for ages 7 and up, these National Geographic Kids titles are the go-to resource for them.
It’s elementary school go-to for essays on most subjects

National Geographic Animal Encyclopedia, 2nd Edition

Starting in third-grade students will write essays on various subjects and more often than not, they’ll choose animals. It could be an essay on a wacky critter with a disgusting name, cool characteristic, or unique attribute, but kids like to write about what they love, and they love these books. National Geographic Animal Encyclopedia 2nd Edition is by Dr. Lucy Spelman and is broken up into mammals, birds reptiles, amphibians, invertebrates, and fish. Each of those categories is then provided with dozens of animal examples that make up those areas. For example, I had no idea what a tapir is and how they’re related to rhinos.

Whether it’s back to school or essays for ages 7 and up, these National Geographic Kids titles are the go-to resource for them.

Those two pages alone have enough information for those elementary school ages to create an age-appropriate essay on those thick-skinned beasts that live in Africa, Asia, and South America. This is curiosity food 101 with photographs being the cat videos that bring home the bacon. Kids will listlessly open the book, marvel at the colors in the pictures, become curious about Tomato Frog from Madagascar, and then start sharing facts with you about it.

Treasure of Greek Mythology

Treasury of Greek Mythology: Classic Stories of Gods, Goddesses, Heroes & Monsters is a National Geographic reference book that takes a slightly different approach. It looks at 25 characters who make up that mythology, including a timeline, map, and more resources. Each profile has gorgeous, painted illustrations that introduce its mythos and shows them at work. You’ll see how Hephaestus was born with a deformed foot and cast to an island where he could throw rocks into a volcano.

Whether it’s back to school or essays for ages 7 and up, these National Geographic Kids titles are the go-to resource for them.

This led him to invent many things made of metal, like a chair with wheels on it which allowed him to move more quickly. His love life didn’t fare so well initially, but patience and ingenuity pay off, which led to his marriage to Aphrodite, who is covered in the next profile. That’s what will interest young readers, Treasure of Greek Mythology has narrative story elements that allow even those who haven’t embraced the Percy Jackson books will enjoy.

5,00 Awesome Facts (About Everything)

5,000 Awesome Facts (About Everything) from National Geographic Kids is that random, impossible-to-resist, rabbit hole of knowledge that captures ages seven and up for a period of their schooling. It captures them, blazes their eyes with photographs they never thought they’d see, and aligns them with droplets of information and anything and everything.

Whether it’s back to school or essays for ages 7 and up, these National Geographic Kids titles are the go-to resource for them.

The glossary at the end of the book proves that any conceivable interest area is covered. Zorses, yeti, jug bands, creepy facts, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and thousands of others have their page number listed so that young readers can dig deep and quickly. Those ages don’t need to explore, they can just thumb any page in the book and be entertained by something. Then they’ll turn to the next page and discover something even more fascinating. Those kids will run into your office and then share with you that tidbit of things that they just discovered. Enjoy the ride, it’s education and this is the process of getting them curious and asking themselves “what is something that I don’t know?”

National Geographic Kids Almanac 2023

National Geographic Kids Almanac 2023 is the elephant in the room. This is the elementary school armchair traveler that ages 7 and up will go gaga for. Its soft format makes it akin to Grays Sports Almanac. Those ages can bend it, thumb through to different categories, and impress their erstwhile present-day Biff friends as they drop knowledge on any topic under the sun. It’s organized and a steady resource for those essays that elementary school kids will have to do. Like 5,000 Awesome Facts, its glossary is comprehensive and can shortcut readers to exactly the spot they want to research.

Whether it’s back to school or essays for ages 7 and up, these National Geographic Kids titles are the go-to resource for them.

Every elementary school library needs this edition and every fifth-grade classroom would benefit from it. Because I work in various elementary schools I know some of the parents who I’ve seen at schools or out in the community. Sometimes they will ask me what they can do to help. Depending on the subject that their child is in I will tell them that the National Geographic Kids Almanac, 5,000 Awesome Facts or Animal Encyclopedia are low-hanging fruit. They’ll retort that they really want to help, and short of being the room parent and organizing the year’s events; I’ll tell them that these books can do more to help the classroom than almost anything else.

The Almanac retails for only $15.99 and is pound-for-pound one of the most widely read books that any elementary school library has. Depending on the time of year and the schedule for the ELA essays there will be a queue to check them out, so a library having more than one is never a bad thing.

National Geographic Kids Almanac 2023, National Geographic Kids 5,000 Awesome Facts (About Everything), Treasure of Greek Mythology, and National Geographic Animal Encyclopedia 2nd Edition are  National Geographic Kids.  

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The Ultimate Biography of Earth is smarter than most who won’t read it

That’s a bold claim, isn’t it? Actually, any book that has ‘ultimate’ in its title is aiming high or asking for trouble. The Ultimate Biography of Earth is a graphic novel that meets that metric, as long as you’re willing to walk down a certain STEM path. And that path is 100% STEM, The Ultimate Biography of Earth is by Nick Lund with illustrations by Jason Ford and is solidly aimed at those middle elementary through middle-middle school students who want to make the history of Earth fun.

The Ultimate Biography of Earth is a STEM graphic novel that’s very smart and will satiate those ages 9 and up that want entertainment with their education.
It’s not a dare…unless you think that it is…..

The Kid’s World Factbook, the straight, smart reference book that kids need

The Kid’s World Factbook is a research book for elementary school students that’s presented in a way that those audiences might not expect. It’s also priced at a point that parents aren’t expected. Of course, the price of a book is meaningless, dependent upon whether or not kids will actually willingly read it and engage with the content. This book succeeds on both fronts, wildly surpassing the former and exceeding the first qualifier for most young readers.

The Kid’s World Factbook is a no nonsense look at every country in the world, their main stats and things kids need to know.
A smart, go-to reference for ages 10 and up

Mammal Takeover! is a full immersion educational graphic novel

Graphic novels can be so much more than entertaining and fun to read. They can be educational!! Really, they can be and they’re so much more than what some parents, educators or kids might think that they are. The Earth Before Us series from Amulet Books is a great example of how much and how different a graphic novel can be. Mammal Takeover! is the third book in this entertaining and educational series that is about old school Earth.

Mammal Takeover! is a semi-deep dive graphic novel into the prehistoric story of Earth

Ready to Read adds non-fiction and emerging readers will love it

The Ready to Read book series from Simon & Schuster are one of our favorite books for emerging readers. They’re jammed with color, are perfectly priced and have large-but not too large of a font size. If the font is too large then the inference is that it’s a baby book and they are not baby books. The reading level is labeled as perfect as a children’s book can be. From the front cover you can see what level the book is and on the back cover you can read a more detailed explanation about each of the levels so that readers can have something to aim for on the next level. We love these books. The only problem, until now is that there were no non-fiction titles.

If You Love Dolphins You Could Be….. is the first in a growing line of non-fiction books from the awesome series of Ready to Read books.

They’ve solved this problem with If You Love Dolphins You Could Be and If You Love Video Games You Could Be. Each book has the same format of the Ready to Read books that parents have enjoyed for years, but with an educational, fun and non-fiction direction. Both of these books work and elementary school readers will enjoy the more ‘adult’ content matter.

If You Love Dolphins You Could Be….. is the first in a growing line of non-fiction books from the awesome series of Ready to Read books.

Adult is all relative. We’re not talking about unicorns or superheroes here. The presentation is the same, but in these books we’re learning about a variety of careers that people can aspire to be. In If You Love Dolphins You Could Be has a detailed overview of three careers that involve dolphins or other sea life. On one page there is a glossary of some other sea based careers like an oceanographer, environmental lawyer, underwater archeologist and more.

If You Love Dolphins You Could Be….. is the first in a growing line of non-fiction books from the awesome series of Ready to Read books.

For us these books are perfect. We have a 7 year-old that is a little slow in reading. He is able to read lots of sight words and some bigger words, but has trouble putting them together as he reads. He’s also behind, according to his teachers and that could impact his confidence. As a parent, we want him to read what he wants to read (which means more reading!), but we also would prefer it to be something educational. Call it the Trojan Horse approach to getting books in the hands of emerging readers.  

If You Love Dolphins You Could Be….. is the first in a growing line of non-fiction books from the awesome series of Ready to Read books.

The price point for these books, relative to their colors and how much kids enjoy them is also a great value. The request for non-fiction books in the Ready to Read series was presented to the publisher by lots of educators and teachers. Like me, they loved the format of the books and how much kids love reading them, but wanted more educational options. At the end of each of these books is a graphic that announces that more books are coming. That is a great and needed thing. Kids love to dream about what they’ll do when they get big and there are thousands of options beyond the stereotypical firefighter, lawyer or doctor.

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