Monday, April 18, 2011

Protecting the Environment 2

The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
Written and Illustrated by Lynne Cherry
 Cherry combines illustrations that reveal a naturalist's reverence for beauty with a mythlike story that explains the ecological importance of saving the rain forests. The text is a simply told story about a man who falls asleep while chopping down a kapok tree. The forest's inhabitants--snakes, butterflies, a jaguar, and finally a child--each whisper in his ear about the terrible consequences of living in ``a world without trees'' or beauty, about the interconnectedness of all living things. When the man awakens and sees all the extraordinary creatures around him, he leaves his ax and ``walks out of the rain forest.'' A map showing the earth's endangered forests and the creatures that dwell within ends the book which, like the rain forests themselves, is ``wondrous and rare.'' Ages 4-8.
Additional Resources for Classroom Use:



The Great Kapok Tree Lesson Plan from Teacher Vision (focuses on finding the main idea)

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