I Spy with My Little Eye


Book Description

A bear and a mouse enjoy a game of "I Spy" in a book that teaches youg readers about shapes and colors.




I Spy with My Little Eye--


Book Description

An I-spy book of animals with a peep-hole on every page.




I Spy Animals


Book Description

An I Spy 8x8 at $3.99 I SPY ANIMALS is based on the bestselling I SPY LITTLE ANIMALS. Toddlers and preschoolers can search photos from the original I Spy series for all kinds of animals. Simple picture clues and rhyming riddles guide the youngest readers through 13 interactive, fun-filled spreads.




I Spy


Book Description

Rhyming verses ask readers to find hidden objects in the photographs.




Halloween Haunt and Find (I Spy with My Little Eye)


Book Description

Help the little ghost scurry about and find his spooky friends quickly! Follow a sweet little ghost as he visits a murky swamp, creepy cavern, and haunted house to collect his ghoulish friends. Little ones will love counting and spotting all the hidden friends along the way in this rhyming, spook-tacular object search filled with mummies, ghosts, goblins, zombies, witches, monsters, and other spooky things! Mixing vibrant illustrations with festive fun, kiddos will be entertained by the enjoyable I Spy book activities and story for hours of fun. Perfect addition to your family's Halloween books for kids! With look and find exercises to help children count, match, and learn colors, this series keeps kids engaged while aiding in language development. I Spy is designed to be a fun, educational experience for kids of all ages, whether they can already read on their own or need someone to read to them. Rhyming text and exciting stories covering all of your favorite children's interests make I Spy with My Little Eye the ultimate search and find series. Collect the entire I Spy with My Little Eye series from Cottage Door Press! Lively, rhyming, and educational, this fun Halloween book asks "I Spy" questions to help engage kids further into the story for an interactive experience. Engaging questions and new vocabulary words found on every page, designed to help build conversation skills and support language development. Designed for kids ages 4-8, this activity book is a great introduction to look, search, and find books, as boys and girls will have fun with guided questions, navigating themselves through the activities. At-home or on-the-go, search and find activity books are ideal for kids on road trips, airplane rides, rainy days, and more!




I Spy with My Little Eye - ABC


Book Description

I Spy With My Little Eye Something Beginning With... ...D! Can you find what it is among the colorful pictures? And, more importantly, can your little one? How does it work? Each riddle focuses on a letter, for example 'B'. Among the many pictures on the page, try to find the one animal or thing that begins with that specific letter. Can you spot it? Turn the page to see if you were right! Playing this I-Spy guessing game together will be so much fun. And at the same time, your kid is learning: The letters of the alphabet What animals & everyday items look like Plus, they'll also develop the ability to concentrate, as well as their observational skills. These are great assets in life! This 'I Spy With My little Eye - ABC' puzzle book is part of our 'I Spy Books for Kids 2-4'. Check out our entire catalog for more superfun 'I Spy' books. To get this 'I Spy' book, scroll to the top of this page and click the 'Buy' button.




A to Zoo


Book Description

Whether used for thematic story times, program and curriculum planning, readers' advisory, or collection development, this updated edition of the well-known companion makes finding the right picture books for your library a breeze. Generations of savvy librarians and educators have relied on this detailed subject guide to children's picture books for all aspects of children's services, and this new edition does not disappoint. Covering more than 18,000 books published through 2017, it empowers users to identify current and classic titles on topics ranging from apples to zebras. Organized simply, with a subject guide that categorizes subjects by theme and topic and subject headings arranged alphabetically, this reference applies more than 1,200 intuitive (as opposed to formal catalog) subject terms to children's picture books, making it both a comprehensive and user-friendly resource that is accessible to parents and teachers as well as librarians. It can be used to identify titles to fill in gaps in library collections, to find books on particular topics for young readers, to help teachers locate titles to support lessons, or to design thematic programs and story times. Title and illustrator indexes, in addition to a bibliographic guide arranged alphabetically by author name, further extend access to titles.







The Activity Year Book


Book Description

Engagement in meaningful activity is an important aspect of human existence, regardless of one's cognitive abilities. Even in the later stages of dementia, people can still be engaged in activities at a level that allows them to be successful. In fact in these later stages, where cognitive abilities may be waning, the need for activity becomes greater, as cognitive stimulation helps preserve what skills remain. For care staff looking after older people, many of whom may have some degree of dementia, coming up with ideas for activities of a suitable level to keep their residents engaged and stimulated can be challenging. The Activity Year Book solves this problem, offering week by week themed activities. From Valentine's Day quizzes to Bonfire Night word searches, it has activities relating to every important date in the calendar, and also encourages reminiscence and discussion around these events. This book will be invaluable to care staff looking for a simple way of improving the lives of their residents, week by week, all year round.




The Quality of Life


Book Description

When Janet Lembke's mother was a sprightly seventy-eight years old, she had made her daughter promise to help her die when the time came. Pills with a stiff bloody Mary and a hug. But when that time came many years later, it was not so simple. Her mother had had a series of strokes that had rendered her incapable of rational thought, and Lembke couldn't, in fact, help her mother die. Watching her mother suspended in a life that wasn't really living prompted Lembke to wonder what could be done. How do we deal with life's end? How might we best approach it? Does human life hold an intrinsic sacredness? How best may those of us who have our wits about us care for old, frail people whose minds are lost forever in the shadows? This book is a result of her quest for answers, of impeccable research into the world of caregiving to the dying. She examines death by choice--suicide, assisted and otherwise; advance medical directives; the bioethics of chasing death down by withdrawal of life support; dementia and how a caregiver may cope with it; Hospice; and the quality of life. The eponymous chapter explores ways to determine quality and discovers objective criteria. Lembke interviewed many people and tells their stories. Among them are two women who helped a mother die, a rabbi, a Muslim bioethicist, and a man, survivor of not one but two kidney transplants, who worked with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross. The book concludes with a list of resources, like the Alzheimer's Association, The Stroke Network, and Life Line, a device for summoning help. Notes and a bibliography follow the resource list.