Books

Websites

Books

This list contains Teacher Resources and all items listed in the Books section.


Teacher Resource    Denotes California Department of Education recommended titles

Non-Fiction
101 Things Everyone Should Know about ScienceLevel: 3-12
Author: Dia Michels and Nathan Levy ISBN: 0-9678020-5-9
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Science Naturally!, 2006
Description: 101 Things Everyone Should Know About Science uses a question-and answer format to entice the reader into learning more about key concepts in biology, chemistry, physics, earth, and general science. This book is perfect for anyone interested in gaining a better understanding of how science impacts everyday life. Some questions include “Why do you see lightning before you hear thunder?” “What keeps the planets orbiting around the sun?” “Why do we put salt on roads when they are icy?”

Non-Fiction
Alexander Graham Bell: An inventive LifeLevel: 3-5
Author: Elizabeth MacLeod ISBN: 1-550-74456-9
Illustrated by: Barbara SpurllPublisher: Kids Can Press, 1999
Description: This biography follows Bell’s life from his birth in Scotland through his many inventions and achievements, and concludes with his last few experiments and his death at his home in Canada. Equal attention is given to all of Bell’s interests, such as his devotion to advancements for the hearing impaired and his later interest in flight. The subject, his family, and sketches of his many inventions appear in photos and reproductions.

Non-Fiction
CDE recommended Always inventing: A Photobiography of Alexander Graham BellLevel: 3-5
Author: Tom L. Matthews ISBN: 0-792-27391-5
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: National Geographic Society, 1999
Description: This biography has photographs and quotes from Bell himself. It follows this well-known inventor from his childhood in Scotland through his lifelong efforts to come up with ideas that would improve people’s lives.

Non-Fiction
Awesome Experiments in Electricity and MagnetismLevel: 4-6
Author: Michael Dispezios ISBN: 0-806-99819-9
Illustrated by: Matt Lefleur, Catherine LearyPublisher: Sterling Publishing Co., 1999
Description: More than 70 experiments explore electric charges, static electricity, currents, circuits, switches, and magnetism. Each one includes a brief introduction, a list of materials, directions, and a scientific explanation of the results.

Non-Fiction
Batteries, Bulbs, And WiresLevel: 3-6
Author: David Glover ISBN: 0-753-45510-2
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Kingfisher Books/Larousse Kingfisher Chambers, 2002
Description: The hands-on projects in this book explore electricity and its origins, from simple magnets to creating a circuit or a motor.

Non-Fiction
Breaking Secret CodesLevel: 3-9
Author: Jillian Gregory ISBN: 978-1-4296-4568-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2011
Description: Coded information may look confusing, but most codes provide hints that can help you break them. Learn how to find and interpret code patterns and repetitions. With your new super-sleuthing skills, youÕll be cracking codes in no time!

Non-Fiction
Charged Up: The Story of ElectricityLevel: 3-6
Author: Jacqui Bailey ISBN: 1-404-80568-0
Illustrated by: Matthew LillyPublisher: Picture Window Books, 2004
Description: Describes how electric energy is generated in power stations and how it travels through pylons, power cables, and wires into people’s homes. Includes bibliography.

Non-Fiction
Circuits, Shocks, and Lightning: The Science of ElectricityLevel: 3-5
Author: Celeste A. Peters ISBN: 0-739-80143-0
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Raintree Publishers, 2000
Description: Explains the different kinds of electricity and describes how we use electricity every day. Includes related projects and experiments.

Non-Fiction
Electrical CircuitsLevel: 3-4
Author: Delta Education ISBN: 1-59242-256-X
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Delta Education, 2003
Description: Describes electric circuits and how they are made.

Non-Fiction
ElectricityLevel: K-3
Author: Rebecca Olien ISBN: 0-736-81404-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2002
Description: Static electricity, electric storms, and storing, making, and moving electricity are just a few of the topics covered. Readers will gain an understanding of words such as protons, neutrons, electrons, spark, and particle.

Non-Fiction
ElectricityLevel: 3-5
Author: Darlene Lauw ISBN: 0-778-70561-7
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Crabtree, 2002
Description: Explains static electricity, magnetism, and how electricity travels. Highlights leading scientists, Earth-friendly facts, and important vocabulary.

Non-Fiction
ElectricityLevel: 2-5
Author: Adele Richardson ISBN: 0-7368-5444-4
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2006
Description: Have you ever shocked someone after rubbing your feet on the carpet? The shock is electricity jumping from you to another person. Look in this book for a dozen questions that will get you thinking about how electricity powers your world

Non-Fiction
Electricity and MagnetsLevel: 3-5
Author: Sarah Angliss ISBN: 0-753-45349-5
Illustrated by: David Le JarsPublisher: Houghton Mifflin Co., 2001
Description: Explore science in action with a wide variety of experiments using everyday materials.

Non-Fiction
ElectromagnetismLevel: 5-6
Author: Delta Education ISBN: 1-592-42522-4
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Delta Education, 2004
Description: Students explore the relationship between electricity and magnets.

Non-Fiction
Experiments with MagnetsLevel: 3-5
Author: Salvatore Tocci ISBN: 0-613-54210-X
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Sagebrush, 2002
Description: A variety of experiments investigate magnets.

Non-Fiction
Guglielmo Marconi: Inventor of Radio and Wireless CommunicationLevel: 4-6
Author: Victoria Sherrow ISBN: 0-766-02280-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Enslow Publishers, 2004
Description: This biography of Guglielmo Marconi describes his work with wireless transmissions, the development of radio, and short waves and microwaves.

Non-Fiction
Inventing The Future: A Photobiography of Thomas Alva EdisonLevel: 4-6
Author: Marfe Ferguson, Ferguson Delano, Jennifer Emmett ISBN: 0-792-26721-4
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: National Geographic Society, 2002
Description: Presents a biography of the tireless Thomas Edison, illustrated with many photos of his life and inventions.

Non-Fiction
The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field TripLevel: 3-6
Author: Joanna Cole ISBN: 0-590-44683-5
Illustrated by: Bruce DegenPublisher: Scholastic, 1997
Description: Ms. Frizzle takes her class on a field trip through the town’s electric wires so they can learn how electricity is generated and how it is used. Also available in library binding.

Non-Fiction
Magnetic and Non-MagneticLevel: K-3
Author: Angela Royston ISBN: 1-403-40855-6
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Heinemann Library, 2003
Description: Explains that not all materials are magnetic, that magnetism can pass through materials, and how a compass works.

Non-Fiction
MagnetismLevel: 3-5
Author: John Woodruff ISBN: 0-817-24946-X
Illustrated by: Chris FaircloughPublisher: Raintree Publishers, 1998
Description: Introduces the basic concept of magnetism through simple experiments that can be performed at home. Includes a glossary, a list of books, and an index.

Non-Fiction
MagnetismLevel: 2-5
Author: Adele Richardson ISBN: 0-7368-5447-9
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2006
Description: Learn in this book why magnets stick to some things and not to others, why sometimes they push away from each other, and many more facts about magnets.

Non-Fiction
MagnetsLevel: 3-4
Author: Delta Education ISBN: 1-59242-371-X
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Delta Education, 2004
Description: Examines magnets and their properties.

Non-Fiction
MagnetsLevel: K-3
Author: Rebecca Olien ISBN: 0-736-81406-X
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2002
Description: Portrays magnetism as a form of energy, how magnets attract or repel objects, Earth’s magnetic field, and why a compass needle always points north.

Non-Fiction
Making Secret CodesLevel: 3-9
Author: Jillian Gregory ISBN: 978-1-4296-4567-6
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2011
Description: Throughout history, army generals, spies, and even scientists have guarded information through secret codes. Find out how they did it and learn how to create your own secret codes. You and your friends can share secrets that will leave everyone else scratching their heads.

Non-Fiction
The RadioLevel: 3-5
Author: Gayle Worland ISBN: 0-736-82217-8
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2003
Description: Explore the history of the radio and discover how this invention developed into the radios we use today. Describes the people and events behind the radio and shows how it works. Includes bibliography.

Non-Fiction
Samuel MorseLevel: 3-5
Author: Margaret Hall, M. C. Hall, Jennifer Blizin Gillis ISBN: 1-403-45337-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Heinemann Library, 2004
Description: Introduces the life of Samuel Morse, including his childhood in Massachusetts, his early inventions and career as an artist, and his invention of the telegraph, as well as the special code used to send messages.

Non-Fiction
Science Experiments With ElectricityLevel: 3-5
Author: Sally Nankivell-Aston, Dorothy Jackson ISBN: 0-531-14580-8
Illustrated by: Ray MollerPublisher: Franklin Watts, 2000
Description: Experiments in electricity include building simple switches and circuits. Electric symbols are illustrated.

Non-Fiction
Science Experiments with MagnetsLevel: 3-5
Author: Sally Nankivell-Aston ISBN: 0-531-14576-X
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Franklin Watts/Scholastic, 2000
Description: Experiments test ideas such as magnetic strength, magnetic force fields, and Earth as a magnet.

Non-Fiction
The Science of Lighting a City: Electricity in ActionLevel: 3-6
Author: Jim Whiting ISBN: 978-1-4296-4856-1
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2010
Description: Click! The lights come on, and it seems like the most natural thing in the world. But without science, youÕd be left in the dark. Come take a closer look at the science that makes lighting a city possible.

Non-Fiction
The Science of Lighting A City: Electricity In ActionLevel: 3-6
Author: Jim Whiting ISBN: 978-1-4296-3954-5
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2010
Description: The lights come on, and it seems like the most natural thing in the world. But without science, youÕd be left in the dark. Come take a closer look at the science that makes lighting a city possible.

Non-Fiction
The Shocking World of Electricity with Max Axiom, Super Scientist (Series) (Interactive ebook)Level: 3-9
Author: Liam O'Donnell ISBN: 978-1-4296-1159-6
Illustrated by: Richard Dominguez, Charles Barnett IIIPublisher: Capstone Press, 2007
Description: Max Axiom is a super-cool-scientist. Using powers he acquired in a freak accident, Max demonstrates and explains the science of electricity.

Non-Fiction
The Shocking World of Electricity with Max Axiom, Super Scientist (Series)Level: 3-9
Author: Liam O'Donnell ISBN: 978-0-7368-6835-8
Illustrated by: Richard Dominguez, Charles Barnett IIIPublisher: Capstone Press, 2007
Description: Max Axiom is a super-cool-scientist. Using powers he acquired in a freak accident, Max demonstrates and explains the science of electricity.

Non-Fiction
Sources of Forces: Science Fun with Force FieldsLevel: 3-5
Author: Vicki Cobb ISBN: 0-761-31574-8
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Millbrook Press, 2002
Description: With this book, you take ordinary objects and test different properties of force fields. Make an electric field detector out of a film can, a plastic drinking straw, tape, and a pencil. Build a device that measures electric current using a compass, a soda can, some string, and some tape.

Non-Fiction
The TelephoneLevel: 3-5
Author: Marc Tyler Nobleman ISBN: 0-736-82218-6
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2003
Description: Explore the history of the telephone and discover how this invention developed into the telephones we use today.

Non-Fiction
CDE recommended What Makes A Magnet?Level: K-4
Author: Franklyn M. Branley ISBN: 0-064-45148-8
Illustrated by: True KelleyPublisher: HarperCollins, 1996
Description: Addresses the properties and behaviors of magnetism and the history and uses of magnets. Activities include making a magnet and a compass.

Non-Fiction
Why Does a Battery Make it Go? Projects About ElectricityLevel: 3-5
Author: Jackie Holderness ISBN: 0-761-32820-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Millbrook Press, 2002
Description: Simple text and experiments illustrate the properties of electricity.

Non-Fiction
Wind PowerLevel: 2-5
Author: Josepha Sherman ISBN: 0-736-82475-8
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Capstone Press, 2004
Description: Describes how we use the wind to power our lives, including windmills, electricity, and the future of wind power.

Teacher Resource    Denotes California Department of Education recommended titles

Fiction
Ben and Me: A New and Astonishing Life of Benjamin Franklin as Written by His Good Mouse AmosLevel: 3-5
Author: Robert Lawson ISBN: 0-316-51730-5
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Little, Brown and Co., 1988
Description: Amos the mouse, good friend of Benjamin Franklin, tells the “real” story of the great patriot’s life. The events he retells include the invention of the Franklin stove, the invention of electricity, and the Revolutionary War. This delightful read-aloud book can enhance the history/social science curriculum and is often overlooked for newer fiction.

Fiction
CDE recommended Dear Mr. HenshawLevel: 3-6
Author: Beverly Cleary ISBN: 0-688-02405-X
Illustrated by: Paul O. ZelinskyPublisher: HarperTrophy, 2000
Description: A boy named Leigh wants to be a writer. His parents have just divorced, and he must learn to make friends in a new community. One of the subplots in the book includes a lunch box thief. Leigh devises a lunch box alarm to catch the thief.


Teacher Resource    Denotes California Department of Education recommended titles

Teacher Resource
Driving Force: The Natural Magic of MagnetsLevel: 3-6
Author: James D. Livingston ISBN: 0-674-21645-8
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Harvard University Press, 1997
Description: From the “new” science of materials to everyday technology, this book makes the workings of magnets a matter of practical wonder. It informs and entertains technical and nontechnical readers alike and will give them a clearer sense of the force behind so much of the working world.

Teacher Resource
Janice VanCleave’s Machines: Mind-Boggling Experiments You Can Turn into Science Fair ProjectsLevel: ---
Author: Janice Pratt VanCleave ISBN: 0-471-57108-3
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Wiley and Sons, 1993
Description: A collection of science projects and experiments exploring simple machines such as levers and screws.

Teacher Resource
Magnetism and Electricity: Poster PackLevel: 3-4
Author: Delta Education ISBN: ---
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: Delta Education, 2004
Description: Brilliant, full-color, 17” x 22” posters make a great complement to your FOSS modules or science curriculum. The posters extend the science content and use of vocabulary developed in the FOSS investigations and provide a focus for classroom discussions and student projects. Includes five posters, five question strips, and a teacher instruction folio. Item number: 162-2655

Teacher Resource
The Role of Public Policy in K–12 Science EducationLevel: ---
Author: George E. DeBoer, editor ISBN: ---
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: AAAS Project 2061 (Research in Science Education Series). IAP–Information A, 2011
Description:

http://infoagepub.com/products/The-Role-of-Public-Policy-in-K-12-Science-Education

Linda De Lucchi and Larry Malone, co-directors of the FOSS Project, have co-written a chapter entitled “The Effect of Educational Policy on Curriculum Development: A Perspective from the Lawrence Hall of Science” as part of this publication. The goal of this volume of Research in Science Education is to examine the relationship between science education policy and practice and the special role that science education researchers play in influencing policy. It has been suggested that the science education research community is isolated from the political process, pays little attention to policy matters, and has little influence on policy. But to influence policy, it is important to understand how policy is made and how it is implemented. This volume sheds light on the intersection between policy and practice through both theoretical discussions and practical examples.

This book was written primarily about science education policy development in the context of the highly decentralized educational system of the United States. But, because policy development is fundamentally a social activity involving knowledge, values, and personal and community interests, there are similarities in how education policy gets enacted and implemented around the world.

This volume is meant to be useful to science education researchers and to practitioners such as teachers and administrators because it provides information about which aspects of the science education enterprise are affected by state, local, and national policies. It also provides helpful information for researchers and practitioners who wonder how they might influence policy. In particular, it points out how the values of people who are affected by policy initiatives are critical to the implementation of those policies.

Teacher Resource
Stop Faking It! Electricity and MagnetismLevel: K-8
Author: William Robertson ISBN: 0-873-55236-9
Illustrated by: ---Publisher: NSTA Press, 2005
Description: Helps teachers get past memorizing all those electricity-related formulas, rules, and procedures so they can understand the subject at a level deep enough to teach it with confidence and comfort.

This list contains Teacher Resources and all items listed in the Books section.


Websites

AC/DC: What’s the Difference? (student and teacher resource)
Find out about AC (alternating current) and DC (direct current) and why both are used at this PBS American Experience website, Edison’s Miracle of Light. Includes a teacher guide.
American Experience: Hoover Dam (student and teacher resource)
A PBS website devoted to the film entitled “Hoover Dam.” Rising more than 215 meters (700 feet) above the raging waters of the Colorado River, it was called one of the greatest engineering works in history. This website includes information about the film, people and events, a timeline, maps, and a teacher guide that supports the film. Includes a teacher guide.
Antisocial Balloon (teacher resource)
This is an interesting experiment using a balloon and a computer monitor.
The Blobz Guide to Electric Circuits (student and teacher resource)
This is an interactive website for students to use. The website has 5 sections: what makes circuits work?, conductors and insulators, all about switchs, changing circuits, and diagrams. Each section has three parts: useful information,an activity/game, and a quiz. A very engaging student-friendly site!
Chronology: Bell Labs (student and teacher resource)
Time line of technologies pioneered at AT&T’s Bell Laboratories, beginning with the telephone in 1876 and continuing through 1993. Covers such innovations as electronic recording, sound motion pictures, transatlantic telephone services, stereo recording, transistors, the solar cell, and cellular phones.
Circuits and Conductors
See which object completes the circuit.
Electric Circuits (student and teacher resource)
A really good game for making and changing electrical circuits that can be switched from model to circuit diagram. The game allows the manipulation of cells, wires, bulbs buzzers and resistors to complete circuits.
Electrical Safety Foundation International (teacher resource)
Find out about how to be safe with electricity.
Hoover Dam: A National Historic Landmark (student and teacher resource)
This website about Hoover Dam is sponsored by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR). It includes the Story of Hoover Dam, Education Information, and notes about visiting Hoover Dam. Adult guidance may be needed.
How It Works: Connected Earth (student and teacher resource)
Find out how telegraphs, telephones and other electronic devices actually work via a range of interactive activities designed to be fun and informative. Young students may need to adult assistance.
How Solar Cells Work (student and teacher resource)
Find out how solar cells convert the sun’s energy directly into electricity. Young students may need adult assistance.
How Speakers Work (student and teacher resource)
Find out how a speaker (or headphone) translates electrical signals and translates them back into physical vibrations to create sound waves that you can hear. Young students may need adult assistance.
The Magnetic Earth (student and teacher resource)
Here´s a website to begin learning about the Earth´s magnetic field. This NASA website includes information, movies and pictures about magnetism, the magnetosphere and how Earth´s magnetic field shields the planet from solar storms.
Magnets
Play the game to see what you know about magnets.
Theater of Electricity, Boston Museum of Science (student and teacher resource)
This site from the Boston Museum of Science includes load of information about their amazing Theater of Electricity. You can find information about the history and construction of the theater and its world´s largest air-insulated Van de Graaff generator, Tesla coils, and lightning, plus photos, movies, and teacher resources.
Toshiba NSTA ExploraVision (teacher resource)
From the site: "ExploraVision is a competition for all students in grades K–12. It is designed to encourage students to combine their imagination with their knowledge of science and technology to explore a vision of the future. Teams of students select a technology, research how it works and why it was invented, and then project how that technology may change in the future. They must then identify what breakthroughs are required for their vision to become a reality and describe the positive and negative consequences of their technology on society. Winning ideas have focused on things as simple as ball-point pens and as complex as satellite communications."
Tryscience.org Field Trips (student and teacher resource)
Find out about more than 400 science and technology centers and museums worldwide. Use an interactive map of the world to find and explore a science and technology center or museum near you. You can also find online adventures and field trips, ideas for experiments at home, plus live webcams. TryScience.org is your gateway to experience the excitement of contemporary science and technology through on and offline interactivity with science and technology centers worldwide. TryScience is brought to you through a partnership between IBM Corporation, the New York Hall of Science (NYHOS), the Association of Science-Technology Centers (ASTC), and science centers worldwide.
What Is Static Electricity?
This site from Science Made Simple describes how static electricity is created and its effects.