Rocks and Minerals to Aluminum

From the Series Where Materials Come From
  • Interest Level: Grade 1 - Grade 3
  • Reading Level: Grade 3

What is aluminum and how is it made? Using images and simple text, Rocks and Minerals to Aluminum helps young readers understand what a metal is, where it is found, and how humans process it to make things used in everyday life. Aluminum Facts features explain where on Earth the world's most common metal is located. Free downloadable Teacher's Guide available.

Format Your Price Add
978-1-0398-0661-0
$21.95
978-1-0398-0687-0
$8.95
978-1-0398-0711-2
$24.00
Interest Level Grade 1 - Grade 3
Reading Level Grade 3
Age Range 6 - 8
Dewey 546
Lexile 680L
ATOS Reading Level 4.6
Guided Reading Level N
Subjects Science
Genres Nonfiction
Publisher Crabtree Publishing
Imprint Crabtree Seedlings
Copyright 2023
Number of Pages 24
Dimensions 7 x 9
Graphics Full-color photographs
BISACS JNF045000, JNF061000, JNF051120
Rights Included WORLD
Language English

Where Materials Come From series - School Library Journal, Spring 2023 Series Made Simple

A good addition to libraries looking to expand their environmentalist collection related to sourcing to bridge younger generations.

Where Materials Come From series - School Library Journal

A visual reader collection that looks at the sourcing of materials of objects we use every day, from aluminum foil to plastic bags. The explanations of polymer science for young audiences are particularly well done here and really dig into the fossil fuel questions younger readers may have. The text is light with vocabulary scaled to match readers’ levels, but inclusive of critical science literacy terms for growth. VERDICT A good addition to libraries looking to expand their environmentalist collection related to sourcing to bridge younger generations.

Where Materials Come From series - Booklist

Kids are constantly bombarded with messages reminding them to recycle and be mindful about consuming natural resources. This series, Where Materials Come From (4 titles), helps readers make connections among everyday products and the raw materials used to create them. The titles share the same author and format, with two-page chapters describing raw materials, their uses, and how they’re transformed into new products as well as environmental problems caused during production and solutions to mitigate those negative impacts. Cotton to Clothing follows step by step as fibers from cotton plants are turned into finished outfits, while recognizing how harmful cotton farming can be, urging readers to buy organic, and recycle old clothes. Graphics-rich pages feature short sentences, word balloons, fact boxes, full-color photos, and photo insets laid out in busy, agreeable formats. These titles give kids accessible and relatable reasons to recycle, reuse, and renew.

Author: Robin Johnson

Author/Illustrator biography
Educational front/back matter
Glossary of key words
Index
Table of contents
Teaching guides
Full-color photographs