Children Just Like Me: A New Celebration of Children Around the World
by Catherine Saunders
Children Just Like Me
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Highlights the lives of children from over thirty countries around the world, explaining how their experiences are different, and yet the same, all over the globe.Tags
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Anew edition of a 1995 favorite, this volume will draw in today’s children with the immediacy of its photos of 44 international children.
Six sections feature, in turn, North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Southeast Asia and Australasia. Each begins with a generalized two-page spread of information including a “fact file,” a large map, headshots of each region’s children, a famous place (the usual suspects, such as the Grand Canyon and the pyramids), one animal, and a food item. Profiled children are presented in large active photos (set on white backgrounds in familiar DK style) with smaller images of family and home, favorite activities, typical foods, toys, and, often, pets. Each child’s signature (in show more appropriate writing systems), the word(s) for “hello” (with pronunciation), small maps (difficult to make out), and facts about their localities are also included. Text is limited to short paragraphs and photo captions. It is the engaging photos that pop, showing children in both contemporary, Western-style dress and traditional clothes still worn for special occasions. There are nuclear, extended, single-parent, and divorced families; Alonso from Mexico has a sister who has a wife; Morgan from France is the son of a mixed-race couple (living separately); Andre, of Australian Aboriginal descent, lives with his grandparents; New Zealander Jamie has a Maori mother and white father.
More important than ever to combat intolerance and encourage interest in readers’ young peers, this highly visual overview is well worth the update. (Nonfiction. 8-11) show less
Six sections feature, in turn, North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Southeast Asia and Australasia. Each begins with a generalized two-page spread of information including a “fact file,” a large map, headshots of each region’s children, a famous place (the usual suspects, such as the Grand Canyon and the pyramids), one animal, and a food item. Profiled children are presented in large active photos (set on white backgrounds in familiar DK style) with smaller images of family and home, favorite activities, typical foods, toys, and, often, pets. Each child’s signature (in show more appropriate writing systems), the word(s) for “hello” (with pronunciation), small maps (difficult to make out), and facts about their localities are also included. Text is limited to short paragraphs and photo captions. It is the engaging photos that pop, showing children in both contemporary, Western-style dress and traditional clothes still worn for special occasions. There are nuclear, extended, single-parent, and divorced families; Alonso from Mexico has a sister who has a wife; Morgan from France is the son of a mixed-race couple (living separately); Andre, of Australian Aboriginal descent, lives with his grandparents; New Zealander Jamie has a Maori mother and white father.
More important than ever to combat intolerance and encourage interest in readers’ young peers, this highly visual overview is well worth the update. (Nonfiction. 8-11) show less
I still have my copy of the original version that came out in the 90's, and I was super excited to see that this had been updated and republished. I still remember a lot of information about the kids from the original, and I think this is a great book for showing kids what other children's lives are like around the world. Fantastic update, and one I will definitely recommend at any opportunity.
A little too happy to be believable. Children will be fascinated, but if they have any other source of imagery of the people of the world, they'll have questions.
I especially like the matter-of-fact inclusion of the Mexican boy's sister's wife.
I especially like the matter-of-fact inclusion of the Mexican boy's sister's wife.
I still have my copy of the original version that came out in the 90's, and I was super excited to see that this had been updated and republished. I still remember a lot of information about the kids from the original, and I think this is a great book for showing kids what other children's lives are like around the world. Fantastic update, and one I will definitely recommend at any opportunity.
Highlighting 36 countries, this book presents the daily lives of 44 children. An excellent informational text that would make a great addition to any social studies classroom or library. Glossary, Index.
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Geography Through Photography for Kids
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- Canonical title
- Children Just Like Me: A New Celebration of Children Around the World
Classifications
- Genre
- Nonfiction
- DDC/MDS
- 305.23 — Society, government, & culture Social sciences, sociology & anthropology Social group - Age, Gender, Ethnicity Age groups Young people up to 20
- LCC
- HQ781 .S33 — Social sciences The family. Marriage, Women and Sexuality The Family. Marriage. Women The family. Marriage. Home Children. Child development
- BISAC
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- 322
- Popularity
- 98,964
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.86)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
























































