A New Celebration of Children Around the World (Children Just Like Me)

by DK (Author)

A New Celebration of Children Around the World (Children Just Like Me)
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
A favorite in classrooms, libraries, and homes, Children Just Like Me is a comprehensive view of international cultures, exploring diverse backgrounds from Argentina to New Zealand to China to Israel. With this brand new edition, children will learn about their peers around the world through engaging photographs and understandable text laid out in DK's distinctive style.Highlighting 36 different countries, Children Just Like Me profiles 44 children and their daily lives. From rural farms to busy cities to riverboats, this celebration of children around the world shows the many ways children are different and the many ways they are the same, no matter where they live.Meet Bolat, an eight-year-old from Kazakhstan who likes to cycle, play with his pet dogs, and play the dromba; Joaquin from New Jersey who enjoys reading and spending time with his family, and whose favorite food is bacon; or Yaroslav from Moscow who likes to make robots. Daily routines, stories of friends and family, and dreams for the future are spoken directly from the children themselves, making the content appropriate and interesting to draw in young readers.To celebrate the twentieth anniversary of this special project, all-new photography, maps, and facts give unique insight to children's lives in our world today showing their homes, food, outfits, schools, families, and hobbies.A passport to a celebratory journey around the world, Children Just Like Me is perfect for children who are curious about the children of the world and their stories.
Select format:
Hardcover
$19.99

Find books about:

Kirkus Reviews

A new 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 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)

Publishers Weekly

More than 20 years after Children Just Like Me, this updated version of the book introduces 44 new children who live in countries that include Ethiopia, France, Japan, Kazakhstan, and Vietnam. As the book moves continent by continent, readers receive a geographic overview of each region followed by profiles of each child that fill a full page or spread. Photographs of the children and the peoples, places, and things in their lives are joined by concise descriptions of their homes, schools, interests, and cuisines: Shigo, a Maasai girl from Tanzania, enjoys porridge-like ugali and making beaded jewelry, while seven-year-old Shaowei from Beijing declares, "I want to create a robot that can solve everyone's problems." Rich with cultural detail, it's a vibrant resource that celebrates global diversity while underscoring commonalities that bridge nation, faith, and upbringing. Ages 7-10. (Sept.)

Copyright 2016 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

Factual, respectful, and insightful...provides just the right balance of information and visual interest. — School Library Journal

Provide[s] hours of fascinating browsing and the beginnings of real insight into other cultures. — Horn Book Magazine

The candid, approachable text, accompanying quotes, and nuggets of information make the lives of these children as vivid as a friend's. — Family Fun

[T]his volume will draw in today's children with the immediacy of its photos of 44 international children. — Kirkus Reviews

The information is succinct, the photographs bold and friendly, and the children span a wide range of races and cultures...An informative and enjoyable read for the home, library, or classroom. — Booklist

[R]eaders get an eye-opening glimpse of the lives of 44 children living in countries across the globe today. — Publishers Weekly

DK
We believe in the power of discovery. That's why we create books for everyone that explore ideas and nurture curiosity about the world we live in.

From first words to the Big Bang, from the wonders of nature to city adventures, you will find expert knowledge, hours of fun and endless inspiration in the pages of our books.

https: //www.dk.com/
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9781465453921
Lexile Measure
850
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
DK
Publication date
September 20, 2016
Series
Children Just Like Me
BISAC categories
JNF052020 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Social Science | Customs, Traditions, Anthropology
Library of Congress categories
Geography
Juvenile works
Children

Subscribe to our delicious e-newsletter!