Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

March 01, 2013

Check Out Our Free 90 Day Trial of Our Multi-User eBooks


We are pleased to announce that we now have multi-user PDF eBooks available through Enslow.com. Now is a great time to take advantage of a FREE 90 day trial! Click here to check out our listing of 19 series currently available with the following features:

  • Kid-friendly in-browser reading with pages that "flip"
  • Simultaneous, multi-user access, site license
  • Read in the library, classroom, home, or anywhere with an Internet connection
  • Access eBooks 24/7
  • Keyword search, bookmarks, notes, and other interactive features!
  • Free patron usage reports for your library
  • Read on interactive whiteboards, iPads, iPhones, iPods and many Android devices.

For a limited time you can save 35% off the multi-user eBook + Library Bound Combo.

Still have questions? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions Page or call us at 800-398-2504. We'll be happy to assist you!

January 25, 2013

International Holocaust Remembrance Day

January 27 is designated as International Holocaust Remembrance Day. It is the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, this year's theme is "Rescue during the Holocaust: The Courage to Care."

Through the powerful words of Holocaust victims—the survivors and the murdered—bystanders, and perpetrators, the books in our The Holocaust Through Primary Sources series highlight a variety of individual experiences describing major events of the Holocaust. Gripping primary source accounts give the text a strong emotional element and keep the reader interested. Filled with color photos of primary source artifacts and black-and-white period photos, each book contains stories from men, women, and children.


 As the Warsaw ghetto in Poland went up in flames in April 1943, Jewish fighters fought bravely for twenty-seven days against Nazi soldiers. With deportation to a death camp all but certain, young Jews in the ghetto decided not to go quietly. Although the Nazis defeated the Jewish resistance group, the spirit of the uprising lived on. For Jews living in Europe during the Holocaust, survival was often the only form of resistance. But Jews in ghettos, concentration camps, and partisan groups across Europe did fight back. Told through the words of teen resisters, author Ann Byers details the stories of courageous young people who fought back against Nazi Germany in our second Holocaust series, True Stories of Teens in the Holocaust.You can read a free chapter clicking here.

January 10, 2013

Guess the African-American Icon


We've created a word cloud using words that describe an African-American icon that we have just published a new biography about. Can you guess who it is?

January 04, 2013

Did You Know That Louis Braille Could See When He Was Born?



Braille is named after the person who invented it. Louis Braille was born on January 4, 1809 in a town near Paris, France. He could see when he was born but when he was three years old, he had a terrible accident. One day, he went to his father's workshop and poked himself in the eye while playing with one of the very sharp tools. His eye became infected and the infection spread causing Louis to become blind.

When Louis was ten, he was sent to a special school for blind children. They had some books written in large capital letters that were raised so that the students could feel them and put them together to figure out the words. Louis read these books, but he thought he could figure out a better way to make books for blind people.

One day when Louis was twelve, a soldier named Charles Barbier visited the school. He told Louis and the other children about his invention called night writing that used raised dots and dashes to represent words. The soldiers used this system to talk to each other in the dark and without speaking so enemy soldiers could not hear them.

Louis thought he could change night writing to make a code for blind people. At fifteen years old, after many tries, Louis created a dot code. He called his system Braille. In 1829, when Louis was twenty years old, he published the first Braille book.

Today, blind people all over the world use Braille to read. Thanks to Braille, words, numbers, and musical notes are no longer just something people see. They are also things people can feel.

View a sample chapter here of What is Braille? from our Overcoming Barriers series which is available from EnslowBarnes and Noble, Amazon, or your preferred vendor.




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June 28, 2012

4th of July Celebrations

On July 4th families around the country will most likely be celebrating with parades, fireworks and barbecues. Remember to take some time to explain to children why we celebrate this American holiday.



The 4th of July
ISBN: 978-0-7660-3806-6
FREE Educator's Guide Available
Grades PreK–1




Check out Family Fun for some great 4th of July ideas for your celebration.


June 15, 2012

Community Helpers and Common Core Standards

Look what's new for fall 2012! All About Community Helpers series will help to support your unit on community helpers and satisfy Common Core State Standards ELA, Speaking and Listening
Standards #1, #2, #3 for grades K–1.












Books in the series include:

Dentists Help Us
EMT's Help Us
Firefighters Help Us
Nurses Help Us
Police Officers Help Us
Sanitation Workers Help Us
Teachers Help Us
Veterinarians Help Us

Use nonfiction books to teach students about different community helper careers. Have each student choose a career they find interesting. They can use their speaking skills to discuss, in front of the class, what they learned about that career. Invite speakers such as police officers or firefighters into your classroom to speak about their career. Students can practice their listening skills and ask and answer questions during and after the visit. You can also ask students to use their speaking skills to present to the class, in an organized manner,  what they learned from their community helper.




June 08, 2012

Who Will Win the Stanley Cup?

Library Binding: ISBN: 978-0-7660-3869-1
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-59845-357-7
Unlike other trophies, a new Stanley Cup is not made every year. Cup winners keep this trophy until another winner is crowned the following year. Who will win this year's Stanley Cup? That is yet to be determined.

Young hockey players who are inspired, by watching the top two teams battle it out, will want to brush up on their skills so they too can dream of playing on a professional team one day.

Top 25 Hockey Skills, Tips, and Tricks by Jeff Savage, includes tips on skating, controlling the puck, shooting, defense and how to get ready to play. For grades 4–up, this book provides basic instruction for the beginner and advanced tips, drills, and tricks that are used by the pros. This book, and others in the series, Top 25 Sports Skills, Tips, and Tricks, supports the National Standards for Physical Education and is great for students who play school or club sports.

June 07, 2012

National Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Month

How are you celebrating National Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Month?

The United States Department of Agriculture has several great resources on how schools can partner with their local farms.

They also offer a 10 Tips Nutrition Education series in a printable format perfect for posting on refrigerators or school bulletin boards along with MyPlate Graphic Resources.

To reinforce healthy eating and good food choices you might consider our All About Good Foods We Eat series for grades PreK–1 to support your lessons on nutrition.

These books are available in both library binding and paperback. Serve them up today!



May 08, 2012

It's National Teacher Day

It's National Teacher Day and many communities are honoring their educators. If you're a teacher tell us how you are being honored or if you're a parent tell us how you are honoring your child's teacher.


ISBN: 978-0-7660-4045-8
PreK–1
24 pp.
School & Library Price: $15.95
Enslow's new title coming out this fall, Teachers Help Us, lets beginning readers explore what a teacher does while helping young readers learn to recognize simple words as they are reinforced with supporting color photos. This is just one of eight titles in our new All About Community Helpers series that will be available this fall. Reserve your copy today!

March 08, 2012

Have you ever wondered what it's like to be blind?


ISBN: 978-0-7660-3768-7
School & Library Price: $17.95
Grades 3–4


People with normal sight have 20/20 vision. That means they can see at twenty feet what the average person sees at that distance. People with vision of 20/200 or less are legally blind. When people have 20/200 vision, they see at twenty feet what most people can see from two hundred feet away.

Have you ever wondered what it might be like to be totally blind or have vision of 20/200 or less? How do people who are blind participate in sports? How do they get around? Our new title, What is it Like to Be Blind? from our Overcoming Barriers series answers many of these questions and more. Young readers can learn about the tools that people who are blind use, including canes and seeing eye dogs. This book also includes first-hand stories of children who are blind in order to help readers get a personal look at some kids who "see" the world in a different way.

November 10, 2010

Book Giveaway!

I was cleaning off my desk today and I uncovered one our of new titles, Plant and Animal Science Fair Projects, Revised and Expanded Using the Scientific Method by Kenneth G. Rainis from our Biology Science Projects Using the Scientific Method series. All of the books in this series provide exciting science fair project ideas and tips for science fair presentations using easy-to-obtain materials. For Grades 5–up, they are 160 pages and contain a list of suppliers, a further reading list, Internet addresses, and an index. The books in this series cost $25.95 each for schools and libraries, but today I'm giving my copy away for free! Help me clear my desk. Who wants it? Science fair season is just around the corner!