kelleemoye's review against another edition

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3.0

I love a good nonfiction book that teaches kids about the environment. One thing I will never change is teaching about the environment around Earth Day- it is something that we can have an impact on and I want to make sure my students understand. This book will be a great addition to my classroom because not only is it very informative, it is quite humorous. It makes it so that the reader will not only learn about our climate and environment, but laugh while doing so. AND it doesn't only focus on the basic knowledge about climate- it is about many different climate topics that we all don't realize affected/affects our history from Egyptian canals to dinosaurs.

I learned some truly fascinating things while reading this book too: like how whale poop is helping fight global warming and how war can lead to climate changes.

pwbalto's review against another edition

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4.0

Fuck yeah evolution.

elizabethlk's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars.

50 Climate Questions is a really solid introduction to the concept and history of climate change for kids. We get a solid exploration of how natural climate change has impacted evolution and human history, but also how we are impacting it now and how that is negatively impacting the world. This is one of those books that serves as a great read for any kid who has heard that climate change has always happened so we shouldn't be worried. It isn't a perfect book, but it has a lot to offer.

I would recommend it, particularly as a companion read for kids learning about evolution, world history, or climate change, since it offers a unique perspective of all three.

elizabethlk's review

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4.0

3.5 stars.

50 Climate Questions is a really solid introduction to the concept and history of climate change for kids. We get a solid exploration of how natural climate change has impacted evolution and human history, but also how we are impacting it now and how that is negatively impacting the world. This is one of those books that serves as a great read for any kid who has heard that climate change has always happened so we shouldn't be worried. It isn't a perfect book, but it has a lot to offer.

I would recommend it, particularly as a companion read for kids learning about evolution, world history, or climate change, since it offers a unique perspective of all three.
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