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Five green and speckled frogs
by Priscilla Burris
In a new spin on a favorite nursery song, five frogs eat bugs as they sit on a log, but one by one they jump into the cool pool until all are gone.
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Quack and count
by Keith Baker
Playful, rhyming text and bold collage illustrations capture the excitement of a day's adventure as a family of lively ducklings slip, slide, leap, and dive--grouping themselves in all the different combinations that add up to seven.
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A day with Miss Lina's ballerinas
by Grace Maccarone
An original skill-building reader based on the popular Miss Lina's Ballerina stories depicts the little ballerinas jumping, spinning and pointing their toes before dancing everywhere they go after class is finished.
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12 ways to get to 11
by Eve Merriam
Uses ordinary experiences to present twelve combinations of numbers that add up to eleven. Example: At the circus, six peanut shells and five pieces of popcorn.
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Domino addition
by Lynette Long
Explains basic addition through the use of dominoes.
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Actual size
by Steve Jenkins
Discusses and gives examples of the size and weight of various animals and parts of animals.
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Is a blue whale the biggest thing there is?
by Robert E. Wells
A playful comparison in words and pictures of all things great and small takes the reader on a fascinating journey through the natural world to find the biggest thing imaginable.
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If you were a plus sign
by Trisha Speed Shaskan
Primary math concepts are introduced using creative examples, easy-to-understand text and engaging art illustration.
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If you were a minus sign
by Trisha Speed Shaskan
Primary math concepts are introduced using creative examples, easy-to-understand text and art illustration.
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Math fables : lessons that count
by Greg Tang
Simple tales and colorful computer art provide readers with an approachable guide to doing basic math, such as addition and subtraction, while providing new ways to think about problem solving.
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Mighty Maddie
by Stuart J. Murphy
For Mighty Maddie a toy train is heavy and a teddy bear is light, but you don't have to be a superhero to learn the difference between light and heavy. .
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Two of everything : a Chinese folktale
by Lily Toy Hong
A poor old Chinese farmer finds a magic brass pot that doubles or duplicates whatever is placed inside it, but his efforts to make himself wealthy lead to unexpected complications.
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