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Max Goes to Jupiter

A Science Adventure with Max the Dog

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
多様性と宇宙冒険で評価されたシリーズの三巻目。科学的に正確に描かれたイラストと、情報満載の補足がこの物語をより魅力的にしています。設定は未来で、犬のマックスの友達のトーリはすっかり大人になり、木星ミッションの主任科学者になっています。マックスと乗組員は、未来的な宇宙エレベーターで宇宙船に向かいます。木星に到着して大気を探検し、人類が協力すれば、このようなすばらしいことができることにみんなが感激します。そして、木星の2個の衛星、火山活動をしているイオと、氷におおわれたエウロパを探検します。教育的にデザインされた「ビッグキッドボックス」は、ページごとの場面に関係する科学を、子どもと親が理解するのに役立ちます。父兄や教師は、ビッグキッドボックスや巻末のアクティビティーを使って、家族や教室で学ぶ経験をすることができます。『マックス木星へ行く』は、NASAの「宇宙からの朗読プログラム」により、国際宇宙ステーションの中で英語で朗読されました。このビデオはwww.StoryTimeFromSpace.comで自由に見ることができます。
Scientifically-accurate illustrations and information-packed sidebars enrich this fascinating tale, the third in this acclaimed series about diversity and space exploration. Set in the future, Max the Dog's friend Tori is all grown up and is the chief scientist of the Jupiter Mission. In order to reach their spacecraft, Max and his crew must take an amazing ride on a new device called the Space Elevator. Once they've probed the planet's atmosphere, Max and friends begin exploring two of Jupiter's moons—the volcanically active moon Io and the ice-encrusted moon Europa. On Europa, Max once again saves the day by locating a weak spot in the ice to launch a submarine and explore the ocean below.
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    • School Library Journal

      October 1, 2008
      Gr 3-4-A small human crew and a rambunctious rottweiler ride out to the Jovian system to drop off a pair of probes and to step onto the surfaces of the moons Io and Europa. Teaching values as well as astronomy, the authors intersperse discussions of the discovery and nature of Jupiter and its satellites with remarks about selfish people, international cooperation, and the necessity of caring for our own planet. The scientific and technological details are realistic, but the plot is so slight and the characters so sketchy that, like the dog bounding around various painted extraterrestrial locales in his jointed metal vacuum suit, they're more of a distraction than an enhancement. Consider this outing only after choosing among the plethora of conventional informational treatments of our solar system's second-largest member, such as Adele Richardson's "Jupiter" (Capstone) or Elaine Landau's "Jupiter" (Children's Press, both 2007)."John Peters, New York Public Library"

      Copyright 2008 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:6.9
  • Lexile® Measure:1150
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:5

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