The Magic School Bus Inside Ralphie: A Book About Germs
by Beth Nadler
The Magic School Bus TV Tie-In (1), The Magic School Bus (TV Tie-ins — TV tie-in 01)
On This Page
Description
Ralphie is crushed when a fever keeps him home from school on the day he is scheduled to host the Frizzle News Network television broadcast on health, but he ends up hosting anyway--as the specimen under study.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
This science fiction book does a wonderful job at making parts of the body and learning about germs fun! The storyline, use of illustrations, and characters all work together to depict what the inside of the body looks like and how bacteria and white and red blood cells work. The story, how they go inside Ralphie's body and explore, really engages children, makes learning fun, and really brings the science down to the students' levels. This book is great and I would absolutely use this in my classroom as soon as I had the chance!
This is a fun and engaging book that can be used to teach students about the human body and what it means to be sick. It provides an unexpected perspective when looking at and thinking about the body that is very engaging for students in the upper elementary grades. This may be a little over the heads of K-2 students. This book makes the exploration of the human body relatable by exploring the route of the sickness traveling through a student's body.
This book is an interesting mix of fantasy and non-fiction. When Miss Frizzle's class finds out that Ralphie is sick, they want to know what's causing it. So, they get on the bus, shrink down to microscopic size, and go into Ralphie's body through a scrape on his knee and find out themselves.
This book is more engaging than if the information were presented without the shrinking of Ralphie's classmates. It makes the reader feel like they're really there, even though they could never really go inside Ralphie to see what a germ looks like. It's very informative as well as very fun.
This book is more engaging than if the information were presented without the shrinking of Ralphie's classmates. It makes the reader feel like they're really there, even though they could never really go inside Ralphie to see what a germ looks like. It's very informative as well as very fun.
The Magic School Bus is a great series for students to learn from. Inside Ralphie was very informative and interesting. I really liked the storyline and the illustrations through out the book.
The storyline grabs the reader in and keeps the reader wanting more till the last page. The story starts off with a student who is sick and the crazy teacher who takes the students on a field trip inside of the sick boy. Many people can relate to feeling sick and not wanting to take the icky medicine. The author was able to explain to the readers why it is important to take medicine through a unique and informative way.
The illustrations through out the story were defiantly attention grabbers. Yes, we all know it is impossible for a bus to show more shrink up and go inside of a person; however, what the class found inside the body was realistic. The illustrations of the human body was very interesting in the fact that it was not to graphic but it was detailed. There was even a point when Ralphie’s mom thought he was watching a real anatomy show on the television (she did not know it was the inside of her son). The cells were drawn like cells that are in anatomy books.
The main story line was to inform the reader how bacteria works in the body and how important it is to take medicine. The class field trip inside of Ralphie was able to watch the cells work with the medicine to attack the bacteria. If it was not for the medicine the bacteria would of grown and Ralphie would have gotten sicker. show less
The storyline grabs the reader in and keeps the reader wanting more till the last page. The story starts off with a student who is sick and the crazy teacher who takes the students on a field trip inside of the sick boy. Many people can relate to feeling sick and not wanting to take the icky medicine. The author was able to explain to the readers why it is important to take medicine through a unique and informative way.
The illustrations through out the story were defiantly attention grabbers. Yes, we all know it is impossible for a bus to show more shrink up and go inside of a person; however, what the class found inside the body was realistic. The illustrations of the human body was very interesting in the fact that it was not to graphic but it was detailed. There was even a point when Ralphie’s mom thought he was watching a real anatomy show on the television (she did not know it was the inside of her son). The cells were drawn like cells that are in anatomy books.
The main story line was to inform the reader how bacteria works in the body and how important it is to take medicine. The class field trip inside of Ralphie was able to watch the cells work with the medicine to attack the bacteria. If it was not for the medicine the bacteria would of grown and Ralphie would have gotten sicker. show less
There's action! Adventure! Excitement! All inside Ralphie's body. He's sick and has to stay home from school. So Ms. Frizzle and the class take the Magic School Bus to Ralphie's bedroom. They shrink, go inside his body, and travel in his bloodstream to his sore throat. The kids find out what's making Ralphie sick, and see his white blood cells fight the bacteria in a raging battle. Ralphie's winning! But there's one problem. Now the white blood cells think the Magic School Bus is a germ. How can the class escape?
This is a cute little book to read. I read it to my five year old niece and she adores it. It makes me glad that I can read this to my niece and maybe my kids in the future.
This book was so much fun and would be an engaging way to teach students about what happens inside out bodies when we are sick.
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Children's Books About Science and Math
461 works; 12 members
Author Information
7 Works 2,143 Members
Some Editions
Series
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Is an adaptation of
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Magic School Bus Inside Ralphie: A Book About Germs
- Original publication date
- 1995
- Related movies
- Inside Ralphie (1994 | IMDb)
- Disambiguation notice
- Based on The Magic School Bus series written by Joanna Cole and illustrated by Bruce Degen; based upon an episode of The Magic School Bus TV Series by John May and Jocelyn Stevenson
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, Children's Books
- DDC/MDS
- 616.079 — Applied science & technology Medicine & health Diseases, Allergies, Skin Conditions Pathology; Diseases; Treatment Pathology Immunology; Immune system
- LCC
- RC113 .M24 — Medicine Internal medicine Internal medicine Infectious and parasitic diseases
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 2,076
- Popularity
- 9,989
- Reviews
- 19
- Rating
- (4.11)
- Languages
- English, French, Spanish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 10
- UPCs
- 3
- ASINs
- 2






















































