Children's books and activities
Nature: Our Green World
Do you know any outdoorsy kids who are happiest dipping their toes in a freshwater pond, searching for animal tracks, listening for birds, or hiking to a waterfall? We've gathered up a great collection of books, activities, apps, and websites for learning all about nature.
Try pairing fiction with nonfiction books and exploring different genres (like poetry and biographies) and formats (like graphic novels and audio books). You'll be creating your own "text sets" — collections of texts focused on a specific topic, such as nature and the environment. Reading widely in this way helps children build background knowledge, vocabulary, and comprehension skills.

Great Fiction & Nonfiction Books
Age Level: 3-6 years old


Stones look like birds. And birds look like stones. Imagine a day in the boyhood of Japanese American artist, Isamu Noguchi. Wandering through an outdoor market, through the forest, and then by the ocean, Isamu sees things through the eyes of a young artist ... but also in a way that many children will relate.
A Boy Named Isamu: A Story of Isamu Noguchi
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Once there was a river flowing through a forest. The river didn't know it was capable of adventures until a big bear came along. But adventures aren't any fun by yourself, and so enters Froggy, Turtles, Beaver, Racoons, and Duck.
Bear Came Along
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Sharp eyes are needed to see most of the well-camouflaged creatures in the Costa Rican rainforest presented in stunning, realistic illustrations. A simple, repeated sentence lets emerging readers know what (e.g., bird, snake) to look for in each double page spread. The animals are specifically identified on the final page.
Can You See Me?
Age Level: 3-6 years old

The garden that Eddie and his Mum plant while his younger sister "helps" grows in the warm earth with the help of sun, rain, and beneficial creatures like worms. Eddie learns that other creatures, like slugs, eat plants. This gentle, engaging family story informs and illuminates many aspects of gardening.
Eddie's Garden and How to Make Things Grow
Age Level: 3-6 years old

As the seasons change, a large black bear prepares for hibernation. In his search for a den, he startles a bobcat, a grouse, and other smaller animals. Striking watercolors and brief text, drawn from the artist's observations of a bear behind his Vermont home, explain the balance found in nature and the cycles of life.
Every Autumn Comes the Bear
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Endpages show swimming tadpoles; turn the page and the progression from tadpole to frog appears within brief frog facts. There are over 5,000 kinds of frogs that live all over the world. Turn the page and some of them are introduced in lively but short text and dramatic, colorful illustrations. Alliterative, onomatopoeic frog sounds are effectively incorporated into page designs of this informative and engaging book
Fabulous Frogs
Age Level: 3-6 years old

The many ways seeds get to where they can grow is revealed in poetic language enhanced by understandable illustrations. Though the information is brief, the sound of the words makes this a unique introduction to this cycle in nature.
Flip, Float, Fly: Seeds on the Move
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Green
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Green grass is wide and fresh and clean for a family to play in, and brown dirt is perfect for digging a garden. But when gray buildings start to rise up and a whole city builds, can there be any room for green space? The neighborhood children think so, and they inspire the community to join together and build a garden for everyone to share in the middle of the city.
Green Green: A Community Gardening Story
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Gently motivates kids and their families to be observant when exploring parks, backyards, balconies, city streets, beaches, and skies. An engaging read-aloud, perfect for budding naturalists.
Hello, Crow
Age Level: 3-6 years old

An introduction to the water cycle and water conservation for the youngest readers. Join a young girl as she explores her surroundings and sees that water is everywhere. But water doesn't always look the same, it doesn't always feel the same, and it shows up in lots of different shapes. Water can be a lake, it can be steam, it can be a tear, or it can even be a snowman.
Hey, Water!
Age Level: 3-6 years old

How Did That Get in My Lunchbox? The Story of Food
Age Level: 3-6 years old

In the Small, Small Pond
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Inside Outside
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Jo MacDonald Had a Garden
Age Level: 3-6 years old

A wild wind blows on the tippy-top of a steep hill, turning everything upside down for the man who lives there. Luckily, Kate comes up with a plan to tame the wind. With an old wheelbarrow full of young trees, she journeys up the steep hill to add a little green to the man's life, and to protect the house from the howling wind.
Kate, Who Tamed the Wind
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Caroline doesn't see much of the name of their new street, Meadowview, as she and her family move to their new suburban neighborhood. When she saves a single flower from the lawn mower, she starts to change not only her backyard but ultimately the entire neighborhood. Soft illustrations and understated text convey story and an important concept.
On Meadowview Street
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Out on the Prairie
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Picture a Tree
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Plant a Little Seed
Age Level: 3-6 years old

A dazzling celebration of the colorful variety in a flower garden and the cyclical excitement of gardening. A young child relatesthe yearly cycle and process of planning, planting and picking flowers in a garden. Mother and child plant bulbs in fall, order seeds from catalogs in winter, eagerly anticipate the first shoots of spring, select seedlings in summer and then "watch the rainbow grow."
Planting a Rainbow
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Plants Feed Me
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Giant redwoods are usually found in the Northwest United States, so how does a boy on a New York subway get to the redwoods canopy? That's just what happens in this informative, illustrated journey from underground to atop the world's tallest trees. The redwoods can be found in national parks in northern California and southern Oregon.
Redwoods
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Secrets of the Garden
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Seed, Soil, Sun: Earth's Recipe for Food
Age Level: 3-6 years old

How many types of green exist? There’s “anaconda green, electric-eel green, green-iguana-in-the-sun green” and more as presented in the fresh language and imaginative illustrations that show a seemingly simple color in a rich new way.
The Big Green
Age Level: 3-6 years old

The Curious Garden
Age Level: 3-6 years old

A young girl and an older woman, Honey, bond over Honey’s garden and her chickens. When Honey must move away, the narrator is devastated until new neighbors move in and the girl can show them how to maintain the garden. An author’s note reveals that her story is loosely based on a Talmudic story about the value of effort not simply the harvest.
The Forever Garden
Age Level: 3-6 years old

George Washington Carver was always curious and grew into a recognized scientist in spite of the challenges of the time in which he lived. His life and accomplishments become accessible to younger children through the voice of a tree planted by young George, augmented by child-like full color illustrations.
The Little Plant Doctor: A Story About George Washington Carver
Age Level: 3-6 years old

The determined story of an Ojibwe grandmother (nokomis), Josephine Mandamin, and her great love for nibi (water). Nokomis walks to raise awareness of our need to protect nibi for future generations and for all life on the planet.
The Water Walker
Age Level: 3-6 years old

There Was a Tree
Age Level: 3-6 years old

An exploration of color and the seasons in a lyrical, philosophical way that is rooted in a child's sensibilities. In a nonlinear, vignette fashion, seasons change as do feelings of frustration to wonder, capturing a child's imagination, mindfulness, and inquiry.
They Say Blue
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Sorell, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, offers readers a look at contemporary Cherokee life as she follows a family through the seasons of the year as they take part in ceremonies and festivals. The book opens, “Cherokee people say otsaliheliga to express gratitude. It is a reminder to celebrate our blessings and reflect on struggles—daily, throughout the year….”
We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga
Age Level: 3-6 years old

An Ojibwe girl confronts a grave situation by channeling age-old wisdom. The “black snake” of an oil pipeline was set to cross their land, endangering their water supply, and in her culture women must protect the water, men the fire. Inspired by the movement that brought Indigenous nations together to protest with the Standing Rock Sioux.
We Are Water Protectors
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Two people in bright, stylized garb sail to the islands known as the Galapagos. On successive days of the week, they see a variety of the animals that live there with the repeating refrain, “We’re sailing to Galapagos….I wonder who we’ll see.” End notes describe in greater detail the location and inhabitants of the Galapagos as well as a brief piece about Charles Darwin who sailed there.
We're Sailing to Galapagos: A Week in the Pacific
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Where the River Begins
Age Level: 3-6 years old

Why do we need bees? Where do they live? Who's who in a beehive? This lift-the-flap book answers young children's questions about the world around them.
Why Do We Need Bees?
Age Level: 3-6 years old
Age Level: 6-9 years old


In a small village in India, a boy grows up to make a huge difference in his community by planting trees to celebrate the birth of every girl. Based on a true story, this book celebrates environmental sustainability, community activism and ecofeminism.
111 Trees: How One Village Celebrates the Birth of Every Girl
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Callum and his sister, Emmy learn that the U.S. has lost a lot of birds in recent years ― and that there are lots of things their family can do to help. First, they set out feeders and make the windows safe. Then, for the winter, they build a little shelter and put out a heated birdbath. By springtime, all kinds of birds are visiting their yard. Is there more they can do to make a difference?
A Garden to Save the Birds
Age Level: 6-9 years old

A Whiff of Pine, a Hint of Skunk: A Forest of Poems
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Beneath the Sun
Age Level: 6-9 years old

As a young boy in medieval Italy, Leonardo Fibonacci thought about numbers day and night. He was such a daydreamer that people called him a blockhead. He realized that many things in nature, from the number of petals on a flower to the spiral of a nautilus shell, seem to follow a certain pattern.
Blockhead: The Life of Fibonacci
Age Level: 6-9 years old

In this story of community conservation, a girl finds a home in a new place and a way to help other small travelers — beautiful monarch butterflies.. This book is about the real change children can make in conservation and advocacy.
Butterflies Belong Here: A Story of One Idea, Thirty Kids, and a World of Butterflies
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Chavela loves chomping chicle — chewing gum and blowing bubbles. One day, while out with her abuelita, she finds a mysterious kind of gum she has never seen before. She pops it in her mouth and blows a giant bubble that lifts her up into the air and carries her on a magical journey. Candy-colored paintings illustrate this fantastical story with an ecological twist. An afterword provides information on natural chewing gum, the rainforest, and sustainable farming, as well as music to a traditional Latin American folksong.
Chavela and the Magic Bubble
Age Level: 6-9 years old

There is a garbage-filled, vacant lot on the street where Marcy lives. Instead of growing flowers in coffee cans like they usually do each spring, she and her friend Miss Rosa decide to plant a garden there. Their enthusiasm and energy spread and everyone in the neighborhood joins together to create an urban oasis. (From School Library Journal)
City Green
Age Level: 6-9 years old

When Old MacDonald tires of cutting his large suburban lawn, he gets a goat and then a very smart little red hen. When compost and manure are added — and in spite of neighbors' concerns — MacDonald has a thriving farm to everyone's delight! This lively, rhyming tale with its exaggerated illustrations just may inspire suburban and perhaps urban gardening.
E-I-E-I-O: How Old MacDonald Got His Farm
Age Level: 6-9 years old

It's windy on the Danish island of Samsø. Meet the environmentally friendly people who now proudly call their home Energy Island. This inspiring true story proves that with a little hard work and a big idea, anyone can make a huge step toward energy conservation.
Energy Island: How One Community Harnessed the Wind and Changed their World
Age Level: 6-9 years old

As an Indian storyteller guides a boat of children down the sea of grass, he reveals the story of the landscape's formation of what was to become a subtropical national park home to many unique animals. This carefully crafted and handsomely illustrated cautionary tale urges conservation, as the future of the Everglades depends on it.
Everglades
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Eyewitness Plant
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Martin shares the remarkable life story of former professional basketball player Will Allen, urban farmer and food educator. Straightforward prose and colorful illustrations done in muscular ink lines express the energy and confidence of the book’s subject as he works alongside smiling grownups and kids. Abundant back matter includes information about Allen’s work. [School Library Journal]
Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table
Age Level: 6-9 years old

White House gardens started with John Adams in 1800 and continue with Michelle Obama. History and recipes for healthy food are presented in this attractive volume.
First Garden and How It Grew
Age Level: 6-9 years old

To help baby loggerhead turtles find their way back to the sea, a group of children involve the entire town as they launch their Lights Out for Loggerheads campaign. By showing the multiple channels that the students work through to raise awareness (posters, fliers, bake sales, a town meeting, the local newspaper, and the Internet), kids can learn about accessible, affordable ways to raise issue awareness in communities.
Follow the Moon Home: A Tale of One Idea, Twenty Kids, and a Hundred Sea Turtles
Age Level: 6-9 years old

As the weather warms farmers’ markets begin to open. Celebrate the start of the season through lively illustrations and short poems that allow communities from large cities to small towns to “… teem with farmers and their goods — /tasty transformations.”
Fresh Picked Poetry: A Day at the Farmers’ Market
Age Level: 6-9 years old

As a Galápagueña, Valentina spends her days observing the natural world around her. This bilingual story was inspired by the childhood of Valentina Cruz, whose family was one of the first permanent inhabitants of the Galápagos. Valentina is now a biologist and naturalist guide who has dedicated her life to the conservation of the islands.
Galápagos Girl / Galapagueña
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Get Outside: The Kids Guide to Fun in the Great Outdoors
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Follows a year in the life of a willow ptarmigan, giving young children a delightful introduction to the animal inhabitants of the far northern wilderness of Alaska and the Arctic.
Gone Again Ptarmigan
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This picture book retells the story of Nobel Peace Prize nominee Greta Thunberg—the Swedish teenager who has led a global movement to raise awareness about the world’s climate crisis—using allegory to make this important topic accessible to young children.
Greta and the Giants
Age Level: 6-9 years old

How Does My Garden Grow?
Age Level: 6-9 years old

In the pages of this book, you’ll find a workshop filled with everything you need, including a head, a thorax, an abdomen, and much more. Written by an entomologist and accompanied by delightfully detailed illustrations, this wonderfully original take on insect anatomy will spark curiosity and engage even those who didn't think they liked creepy, crawly things!
How to Build an Insect
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This guide to making the world a better place is packed with inspiring ideas and tips for kids who want to know how to make a difference. Full of positive encouragement to find something you're passionate about and how to get started on making a big difference through small actions, thifact book for kids is a treasure trove of information and great advice.
How to Make a Better World: For Every Kid Who Wants to Make a Difference
Age Level: 6-9 years old

A rhyming text and detailed illustrations combine to reveal bees’ activity, culminating in a large gatefold to reveal a lush garden. Backmatter provides information about types of bees and their role in pollinationA rhyming text and detailed illustrations combine to reveal bees’ activity, culminating in a large gatefold to reveal a lush garden. Backmatter provides information about types of bees and their role in pollination.
It Starts with a Bee
Age Level: 6-9 years old

In this cumulative tale, Jack plants, tends and harvests his garden. Not only will readers follow Jack's activities, they'll learn about gardens and gardening in this informative and animated book through text and highly detailed and well-labeled illustrations. (The author's background as a science teacher is pleasantly evident.)
Jack's Garden
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Crisp, clear, full-color photographs are carefully placed with text to present an overview of life in an Amazon rainforest. The book provides a map of the South American rainforest, and concludes with doable actions to preserve it.
Life in the Amazon Rainforest
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Did you know dandelions thrive on all seven continents? The cheery blooms are among the most resilient and adaptable in the world. In this lyrical book, learn how the crafty plant travels on the wind and hitches rides in all manner of ways in order to spread far and wide. Includes a map and backmatter on dandelions.
Little Dandelion Seeds the World
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Mexican-American Mario Molina is a modern-day hero who helped solve the ozone crisis of the 1980s. Growing up in Mexico City, Mario was a curious boy who studied hidden worlds through a microscope. Today Mario is a Nobel laureate and a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. His inspiring story gives hope in the fight against global warming.
Mario and the Hole in the Sky: How a Chemist Saved Our Planet
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Get an introduction to the concept of wetlands (swamps have trees, and marshes do not) and learn the differences between between the fresh-and saltwater varieties of each. Find out about the amazing array of plants and animals found in these ecosystems and how these areas store freshwater, prevent flooding and erosion, and serve as a refuge for migratory animals. A map of swamps and marshes in North American and a fact sheet on wetlands are included.
Marshes and Swamps
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The 20,000 acres of wetlands in New Jersey now known as the Meadowlands were once home to hundreds of species of plants and animals. But in the 400 years since European explorers first arrived in the Meadowlands, people have dammed up, drained, built over, and polluted this formerly vibrant ecosystem―and all but destroyed it. Still, signs of life remain―under bridges, on the edges of parking lots, and beside train tracks. Slowly but surely, with help from activist groups, government organizations, and ordinary people, the resilient creatures of the Meadowlands are making a comeback, and...
Meadowlands: A Wetlands Survival Story
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Miss Rumphius leaves the world more beautiful with an unusual legacy. This gentle story can relate to not only the language arts, but to dreams, legacies, and the environment.
Miss Rumphius
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This illustrated introduction to ants, honeybees, dragonflies, and more covers the basic body parts of different kinds of bugs, their life cycles, their range of unique habitats and even how to tell them apart from common “insect impostors” like spiders. It takes readers on a year through the lives of bugs, explaining which bugs can be found in each of the four seasons, and where. An interactive beginner’s bug-watching guide provides a series of questions to lead readers through the steps of identifying bugs, and lists the tools every bug-watcher needs.
Nature All Around: Bugs
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Nature Log Kids: A Kid's Journal to Record Their Birding Experiences
Age Level: 6-9 years old

No Monkeys, No Chocolate
Age Level: 6-9 years old

One 11 year-old girl can make a difference, as young ornithologist and artist Olivia Bouler has proven, raising more than $175,000 for the Gulf Coast oil spill recovery. Oliviacreated more than 500 bird paintings to raise money, many of which are captured in this lavish picture book that recaps her valiant campaign to save birds affected by the spill. Written in her own words, this unique introduction to backyard and endangered birds features Olivia's hand-drawn illustrations, bird facts, and full-color photos celebrating Olivia's campaign.
Olivia's Birds: Saving the Gulf
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The garden at Michael’s new school is full of fresh sensations. Thirteen poems describe holding a handful of compost, eating a leaf, watching a bug, and more. Richly textured mixed-media illustrations in earthy tones follow a diverse class as they plan, plant, harvest, and enjoy the fruits of their labor. Notes and resources expand on the text. [School Library Journal]
Our School Garden!
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Discover the plants and animals that make up the rich, interconnected ecosystem of a mountain pond. Over the pond, the water is a mirror, reflecting the sky. But under the pond is a hidden world of minnows darting, beavers diving, tadpoles growing.
Over and Under the Pond
Age Level: 6-9 years old

How one person helped make one community into the bicycle capital of the world is told in animated illustrations and easy text. It began in the 1970s when Maartje Rutten and her friends strived to change one city. The impact of that movement is still evident in Amsterdam today where bicycles remain more prevalent than automobiles.
Pedal Power: How One Community Became the Bicycle Capital of the World
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Wangari Maathai's native Kenya was a changed land, literally blowing away because its trees and growth had been destroyed. Rather than complain, she started a reforestation effort for which she was the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Handsome illustrations combine with crisp text to tell the story of one person's impact.
Planting the Trees of Kenya: The Story of Wangara Maathai
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The snow has melted, the buttercups are blooming, and Sylvia celebrates winter's end by writing a poem. She ties her poem to a birch tree, hoping that it doesn't count as littering if it makes the world more beautiful. But when she returns, a new poem is waiting for her. Could the tree really be writing back? Sylvia decides to test her theory, and so begins a heartwarming poetic correspondence...as well as an unexpected new friendship.
Poetree
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Rachel Carson was a shy child, always drawn to nature. She grew up to become a professional biologist and enter a field with few women and write a book that changed the way people looked at the environment. Soft, cartoon-like illustrations and straightforward narrative present an overview of Carson's life; sources are included at the end.
Rachel Carson and Her Book That Changed the World
Age Level: 6-9 years old

John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, changed his world "seed by seed, deed by deed" as this handsome book encourages readers to do. Children are encouraged to celebrate Johnny Appleseed's anniversary every autumn by planting seeds literally and figuratively.
Seed by Seed: The Legend and Legacy of John "Appleseed" Chapman
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Celebrate young climate change activists in this charming story about an empowered girl who shows up, listens up, and ultimately, speaks up to inspire her community to take action against climate change. After attending a climate march, a young activist is motivated to make an effort and do her part to help the planet... by organizing volunteers to work to make green changes in their community, from cleaning a lake, to planting trees, to making composting bins, to hosting a clothing swap and more!
Stand Up! Speak Up!: A Story Inspired by the Climate Change Revolution
Age Level: 6-9 years old

What can I do to help save endangered animals? How can I eat healthy? What do I do if I'm being bullied? With information on problems both large and small, the author breaks down the concepts of health, hunger, climate change, endangered species and bullying, so that readers can understand the world around them, and how they can make a difference in their own lives, as well as in their communities and the world at largeIncludes photographs of real kids who are making a difference today and lists of ways to get involve.
Start Now! You Can Make a Difference
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Examine each double page spread in this oversized book. See the realistically pictured animals and where they live. Make up or find a story about them. If you’re curious, you can look in the back for the names of the real animals. Handsome scenes from different natural environments make this a book to examine again and again.
Story Worlds Nature
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Strong lines and evocative language call on readers to observe the natural world around them in this handsome look at the spiral shape in nature.
Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This love letter to Earth is an exploration of the beauty and complexity of the world around us. Remarkable photographs and a rich, layered text introduce concepts of science, nature, geography, biology, poetry, and community.
Thank You, Earth: A Love Letter to Our Planet
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The story opens with 18-year-old French naturalist John James Audubon roaming Pennsylvania countryside in search of birds. He observes them as they grow through the summer, leave for the winter, and return the following year. Audubon was the first person in North America to band a bird and became the greatest painter of birds of all time.
The Boy Who Drew Birds: A Story of John James Audubon
Age Level: 6-9 years old

When a fog rolls into Icyland, it prevents Warble, a small yellow warbler, from enjoying his favorite pastime: human watching. No one else he talks with seems concerned about the growing fog until he meets the Red-hooded Spectacled Female, a young girl who has also noticed the growing fog. Warble and the girl take this weather seriously and team up to draw attention to the situation, taking the first and important step of raising awareness with others. Sharing this touching, funny title is sure to lead discussion about observing changes in our climate and the environment.
The Fog
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Have you wondered why frogs croak on the edge of streams? It all started long ago with two disobedient frog brothers who decided to obey their long-suffering mother only after her death. Humor and grimness combine for a memorable Korean pourquoi tale.
The Green Frogs: A Korean Folktale
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This rhyming read-aloud celebrates how we’re all connected under the sun. As readers are introduced to people and places all over the world and throughout history, the refrain, “The sun shines everywhere,” reminds us that the sun is something that we all need and that we all share.
The Sun Shines Everywhere
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The true story of green-thumbed pioneer and activist Kate Sessions, who helped San Diego grow from a dry desert town into a lush, leafy city known for its beautiful parks and gardens.
The Tree Lady
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Ernest Everett Just was not like other scientists of his time. His keen observations of sea creatures revealed new insights about egg cells and the origins of life. He persisted in his research despite the discrimination and limitations imposed on him as an African American.
The Vast Wonder of the World: Biologist Ernest Everett Just
Age Level: 6-9 years old

The Year Comes Round: Haiku through the Seasons
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This look at one local farm presents a look at work on a farm raising food and animals while protecting the environment. Handsome photographs show the uniqueness of the seasons.
Up We Grow! A Year in the Life of a Small, Local Farm
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Growing fruits and vegetables doesn't take a lot of space; they can even grow in crowded cities! From beekeeping to chickens, small areas can support food which leads to sharing, eating, and caring for others and the environment. Once the concept of urban agriculture is introduced, who knows what may blossom?!
Watch Me Grow! A Down-to-Earth Look at Growing Food in the City
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Grassland ecosystems can be found on nearly every continent. Countless animals and plants live in them. So what difference could the loss of one animal species make? Follow the chain reaction, and discover how important honey bees are.as pollinators of wildflowers and crops and sources of food for creatures higher up in the food chain.
What If There Were No Bees?
Age Level: 6-9 years old

Short poems and gentle illustrations present seasons almost as a journal. Each entry captures natural beauty and emotions that often accompany them. For example the March 13 entry: “politely/but tired of mittens/I asked winter to please tell the snow/thank you very much, but no”.
When Green Becomes Tomatoes: Poems for All Seasons
Age Level: 6-9 years old

This book is a good introduction to the effects people can have on the environment. The simple text introduces the plants and animals that once thrived in a wooded area before their habitat was changed to build a housing development. The book features Fleming's distinctive lush collage illustrations.
Where Once There Was a Wood
Age Level: 6-9 years old

What do you and a tuna have in common? You are both part of a food chain that begins with green things and ends with you! Other important questions answered in this book include: Can you get energy from sunlight? Why is every link in a food chain important? Read and find out about the food chain in this colorfully illustrated nonfiction picture book.
Who Eats What? Food Chains and Food Webs
Age Level: 6-9 years old

A conversational tone and flaps to lift on each double page look at different biomes are sure to inspire further examination. Freshwater, desert, rainforest, and other ecological communities of plants and animals are handsomely illustrated and presented on sturdy pages.
Wilderness: An Interactive Atlas of Animals
Age Level: 6-9 years old
Age Level: 9-12 years old


How did Central Park become a vibrant gem in the heart of New York City? Follow the visionaries behind the plan as it springs to green life. Their design included parkland, ponds, a lake, walking paths, play areas, fountains, pagodas, entertainment venues, a Children’s District (with a petting zoo), and other features.
A Green Place to Be: The Creation of Central Park
Age Level: 9-12 years old

There’s a lot more to gardens than meets the eye! In this collection of poems filled with fun facts, young nature enthusiasts and budding gardeners are called on to help solve a mystery by the compost bin, join a Wild West-style standoff between some good bugs and a few bad ones, interview the sun to find out what happens when it drinks a glass of water, and learn the fancy names of plants to spice up dinner conversation.
Behold Our Magical Garden: Poems Fresh from a School Garden
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Anyone can get involved in gathering data for ongoing, actual scientific studies such as the Audubon Bird Count and FrogWatch USA. Just get out into a field, urban park, or your own backyard. This book, full of engaging photos and useful tips, will show you how.
Citizen Scientists: Be a Part of Scientific Discovery from Your Own Backyard
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Scientists are working to save the endangered California Condor. In rich narrative, the author provides information on the condor as well as the history and efforts of scientists to bring them back from the brink. Accompanying photographs add drama and personality for both feathered and human subjects.
Condor Comeback
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Sophisticated haiku and illustrations done with colored pencil explore the Earth inside and out. The limited colors used in impressionistic illustrations complement the poetry’s brevity. The intriguing collection concludes with factual narrative and further resources.
Earth Verse: Haiku from the Ground Up
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Take a poetic tour through the duff and get the dirt on the tiny, fascinating critters that live there. For all the kids who can't resist turning over a rock, the author presents 19 lively ecological poems in a variety of verse forms about the "brown food web" and the creatures that live there — from bacteria and rove beetles to mushrooms and millipedes, and all of the other busy recyclers in between.
Leaf Litter Critters
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Short poems (haiku) were written in response to but also evoke creatures shown in crisp close-up photographs of small animals and insects in their natural surroundings. This collection and others by Yolen/Stemple introduce information about nature, and could be used as part of the science curriculum.
Least Things: Poems about Small Natures
Age Level: 9-12 years old

With a heat wave and a drought threatening the city's water supply, Luz and her friends dive into the fight to save the swimming pond and Friendship Park. This graphic novel includes a guide on how to make a water-wise garden.
Luz Makes a Splash
Age Level: 9-12 years old

A lively introduction to voting, democracy, and activism for kids. Should an ancient monkey puzzle tree be cut down to make room for exciting new classrooms? In this spirited picture book, students must work together to come to an agreement—but it’s not as easy as it seems! The message of this book, which focuses on a student body’s divided opinion about an issue vital to its future, is that disagreements can lead to fruitful discussion, better understanding and great ideas.
Small History of a Disagreement
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Eleven-year old Fern lives near an old-growth forest which her family relies on to forage for food. The forest, however, is threatened by a company that wants to use hydraulic fracturing that will require a wastewater pond. How Fern finds friendship, family, and a resolution within a splintered town is plausible and heartwarming.
The End of the Wild
Age Level: 9-12 years old

The Great Auk was a northern penguin that lived and thrived in the cold waters of the Atlantic. Learn how the extinction of the Great Auk led to the birth of the conservation movement. Laws were eventually passed to prevent the killing of birds during the nesting season, and similar laws were later extended to other wildlife species.
The Tragic Tale of the Great Auk
Age Level: 9-12 years old

A friendly water droplet character guides children through topics ranging from melting and freezing to the ways in which water literally shapes the Earth. Tales by storytellers from around the world are sprinkled through the book, highlighting the variety of ways in which global cultures value water. The engaging format includes gatefolds and booklets with hands-on activity ideas for learning about and protecting water.
Water: A Deep Dive of Discovery
Age Level: 9-12 years old

Red is an oak tree who is many rings old. Red is the neighborhood "wishtree"―people write their wishes on pieces of cloth and tie them to Red's branches. Along with a crow named Bongo and other animals who seek refuge in Red's hollows, this wishtree watches over the neighborhood. When a new family moves in, not everyone is welcoming, and Red's experience as a wishtree is more important than ever.
Wishtree
Age Level: 9-12 years old
Hands-on Activities
Build on what you’re learning together through books with these family-friendly activities, experiments, and crafts.
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Wild Tales of ...
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National Wildlife Federation
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National Environmental Education Foundation
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Kid World Citizen
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No Time for Flash Cards
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National Wildlife Federation
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Thought Co
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Start with a Book
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National Wildlife Federation
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National Museum of Natural History
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Start with a Book
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Start with a Book
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American Society of Landscape Architects
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Start with a Book
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National Wildlife Federation
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PBS Parents
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PBS KIDS SciGirls
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Start with a Book
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Start with a Book
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National Museum of Natural History
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NASA Climate Kids
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My Small Potatoes
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The Magic Onions
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Woodland Trust
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Lawrence Hall of Science
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Project Learning Tree
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American Society of Landscape Architects
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Woodland Trust
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Start with a Book
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Start with a Book
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PBS Parents
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Little Pine Learners
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The Imagination Tree
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National Wildlife Federation
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Great Stems
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PBS Parents
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Woodland Trust
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Woodland Trust
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National Wildlife Federation
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San Diego Zoo
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Start with a Book
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Woodland Trust
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Let’s Lasso the Moon
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National Wildlife Federation
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National Wildlife Federation
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Start with a Book
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The Imagination Tree
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NASA Climate Kids
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National Wildlife Federation
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Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
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Discover the Forest
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Woodland Trust
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NASA Climate Kids
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National Wildlife Federation
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Project Learning Tree
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Start with a Book
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Start with a Book
Summer Writing
Give kids a chance to flex their writing muscles all summer long. Try one of these prompts, selected from our writing contest archives and other literacy organizations.
Great Websites for Kids
Dive deeper into topics of interest with these media-rich and interactive sites.
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A Walk in the Woods
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Amazing Bees
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Aphid Eater
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Brain Pop: Earth Systems
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Brain Pop: Our Fragile Environment
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Bumblebee Conservation Trust
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Buzz About Bees
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California Academy of Sciences: Live Webcams
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Children and Nature Network
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Discover the Forest: Find Forests and Parks Near You
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Earth Rangers
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EcoKids
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Gizmos: Ecosystems
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Gizmos: Plants
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Great Sunflower Project: Citizen Pollinator Count
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Journey North
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Kids Gardening
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Kids Recycling Guide
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Maggie's Earth Adventures
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My First Garden
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National Geographic Kids
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Native Buzz: Citizen Bee Mapping Project
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Nature Find: Find Parks, Trails, and Other Nature Sites Near You
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Nature Sound Map
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NOVA: Nature
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Ocean Adventures: Shark Protector
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Ocean Adventures: Whale Watcher
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Oil Spill
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PBS Kids: Plum Landing
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Project Noah
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Sortify: Natural Resources Game
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The Nature Conservancy: Nature Lab
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Think Garden
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Trees with Don Leopold
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WebRangers
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Where Do Plants Grow?
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Why do leaves change color?
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YardMap: Citizen Bird Mapping Project
Great Podcasts for Kids
Listen and learn with these podcasts especially for kids. These podcasts are free and easy to listen to from any device via Apple Podcasts or Stitcher — or from Listen Notes, a podcast search engine.
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A Sunbrella for the Planet
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Earth Rangers
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Fun Kids Science Weekly
Fun Kids
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How do monarch butterflies travel so far?
Brains On!
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Operation Earth: How to Be Cool to a Planet That's Hot
Wow in the World (NPR)
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The Big Melt
Earth Rangers / Gen-Z Media
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Tumble Science Podcast
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Wow in the World
NPR
Educational Apps
Educational apps recommended by Common Sense Media and other trusted reviewers.
More Themed Resources
Growing Readers Tip Sheets

Simple activities for parents and kids to do together to build reading, writing, and critical thinking skills. Read online or print the PDF.
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Meet the Author
Jo MacDonald Had a Garden. Writer and poet Mary Quattlebaum's dad inspired this picture book about the yearly cycle of a garden. His concern about environmental issues and interest in gardens that produce food and sustain wildlife are at the center of this story.

Our Summer Blog
Washington DC for Kids
