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UNBEATABLE
BEAKS
Book Description:
Have you ever wondered why birds have different shaped
beaks? Many beaks are long and pointy while others
are round and smooth. Some beaks have ridges; there
are even beaks shaped like spoons. Birds can do the
most amazing things with their beaks, from cracking
open a shell to turning an egg. It’s all in
a day’s work.
Stephen Swinburne’s lyrical, chant-along text
and Joan Paley’s stunning paper collage illustrations
introduce young children to a variety of wonderfully
distinctive bird beaks of all shapes, sizes and colors.
How I was inspired:
This book has taught me to keep my “ears and
eyes open” since you never know when you will
get an idea for a book. One day a few years ago, I
was coming out of my house when I heard “tap,
tap, tap, tap, tap!” I looked up at the old
apple tree out back and saw a woodpecker pecking away
at the bark trying to uncover some bugs. While watching
this woodpecker work away for its breakfast, I started
thinking that how much its beak was like a hammer
or chisel. I then thought how beaks are really like
tools and that they are pretty unbeatable. That’s
when I went upstairs and began my poem, UNBEATABLE
BEAKS.
Book Features:
- Cut-paper illustrations
- Author’s note
- Rhyming poetry
- Match bird with its beak game at end of book
- Glossary
Classroom Connections:
- Identify animal adaptations.
- Create your own animal “rap”.
- Perform the book as if it were a poem written
for two voices.
- Make a list of tasks that are performed by different
beaks.
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