Entertaining your curious Key Stage 1 child at home is easy with My STEM Day, which is packed with experiments, projects and activities for readers to try at home. What does it really mean when you give 100%? How does money work? Can you measure your volume while taking a bath? With the help of dynamic illustrations and fun activities, My STEM Day - Maths is perfect for children as young as 5 years old and explains how marvellous maths is right behind a whole host of everyday activities. Follow the clock through an average day and find out how maths makes a difference in a huge amount of activities around the home. The pages are filled with unique, fun and original illustrations, not to mention projects and experiments that turns maths from a scary challenge into a fun activity for parents and children.
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My STEM Day - Maths explains how marvellous maths is right behind a whole host of everyday activities. Includes experiments and projects.
What is STEM? Time to wake up! What do you do all day? Looking good! Blocks and blanks Don't get lost! Program a friend! Out and about All at sea! Running around Design a house Fair shares Play fractionary You're 100%! Super sock survey What are the chances? Testing probability Stopping at the shop Make a fortune! Make a model How tall is a tree? Going for a dip How big is your hand? Tile-tastic Tessellating toast Staring at stars Lots and lots and lots Quiz and answers.
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Informs young minds by relating everyday experiences to the STEM subjects.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781783124305
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Vendor
Welbeck Children's Books
Høyde
270 mm
Bredde
216 mm
Aldersnivå
J, E, 02, 04
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
64

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

I write short books for short children and longer books for longer people. I've been writing fiction and non-fiction for young people, and non-fiction since the last millennium - luckily, the end of the last millennium and I'm not even nearly 1000 years old. I particularly enjoy reading and writing stories with a bit of a twist and, for older readers, an element of horror. I definitely have a Gothic streak. Writers I really admire include Minnie Gray, Oliver Jeffers, Shaun Tan, Edward Gorey, Tove Jansson, Marcus Sedgwick, Siobhan Dowd and Melvin Burgess. I love being a writer because (a) it gives me the chance to be enthusiastic about things and share my enthusiasm with other people (b) I get paid for telling lies and (c) I don't have to do as I'm told, unlike people with a real job. I like to listen to music when I'm writing, and usually pick a few pieces of music that go with each book and listen to them again and again - most of them are opera. Although I spend most of my time writing, I also spend some helping other people with their own writing - mostly young people, who are doing a degree at university. This is great fun as I get to read lots of stories by writers who are just starting. I live in Cambridge, which is a very ancient city in the east of England with lots of ornate and pointy buildings. It's very flat in Cambridge, so it's easy to go everywhere by bicycle, but it's also rather wet. If I could live anywhere at all, it would probably be in Venice, which is also flat, ancient and full of pointy buildings. It's even wetter than Cambridge, and people go everywhere by boat.