Thomas Edison - Good Easy Readers and Chapter Books

Thomas Edison - A Review of 3 Good Biographies

My Dave (8) just finished a report on Thomas Edison and I thought I'd take advantage of this opportunity to do my own report on the books we used.

I selected three books at the library for his resources and I'm pretty happy with them. They cover the great man's life at different reading levels and at varying depths.


The Books we used are:










  1. Thomas Edison (Lola Schaefer, AR 2.0)
  2. A Picture Book of Thomas Alva Edison (David Adler, AR 4.3)
  3. Thomas Edison : the wizard inventor (Haydn Middleton, AR 4.8)
I'll talk about them in more detail now.




This is the book we began with. I like using these little biographies from "Pebble Books"/Capstone as a starting place because they cover their people with the bare minimum of verbiage and give children a great overview, without overwhelming them with too much detail.

Though only touching on major events, Ms. Schaefer does take the time to try to make Edison kid-friendly. She explains, for example, that Thomas was a curious child, and that he went to work young, selling newspapers and food on trains when he was only 12. To compliment this narrative there are pictures of Edison and his childhood home.

In format, Schaefer's book is like the others in the series. There is always a photo or drawing on the left hand page, text on the right, with a timeline stretching across the bottoms of all pages. Forgive me for the picture (below) being sideways, but it seemed the best approach to show you the layout.




THE SKINNY:::
We read this book first and last. First to provide a broad foundation; last to help Dave to organize his thoughts for his paper.

As you see from the picture (above), the text is large and sparse and kid-friendly.

Contents
Young Thomas

Inventions
Wizard of Menlo Park

Words to Know

Read More

Internet Sites

Index/Word List


Thomas Edison
  • Paperback: 24 pages
  • Publisher: Capstone Press
  • ISBN-10: 0736894144
  • amazon

Technical Stuff
Word Count: 196
Reading Level: 2.0
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 2.0 / points: 0.5 / quiz: 61709




The next book on our list was
A Picture Book of Thomas Alva Edison by David Adler. This book has quite a bit more text than Schaefer's, and it uses colorful artwork in place of photos.

One of the things I like about it is how Adler made sure to include incidents that children could relate to. He describes, for example, how young Thomas received a whipping in the town square when he burnt down his father's barn. And how he squashed some eggs when he tried to hatch them himself.
Good boy-stuff, I can tell you. This was David's favorite fact.


THE SKINNY:::
More detailed account of Edison's life. This book has smaller print and more text. Okay read-aloud.

This book doesn't have a time-line like the first book, but it does have an Important Dates page at the end which serves the same purpose.






A Picture Book of Thomas Alva Edison
  • Paperback: 30 pages
  • Publisher: Holiday House
  • ISBN-10: 0823414140
  • amazon

Technical Stuff

Word Count: 1,370
Reading Level: 4.3
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.3 / points: 0.5 / quiz: 29431
Lexile: AD700L




Haydn Middleton's Edison is the most detailed of the three books we used. Whereas David Adler's book gives a sketchy (though sufficient) account of events in Edison's life, Middleton fills in more details.

For example, in describing how young Edison saved a boy's life in a train yard, Mr. Middleton explains that the boy was the station-master's son. This clarified for us how it was that the boy's grateful father was able to grant Thomas' wish to learn Morse Code and to use a telegraph.





Thomas Edison: the Wizard Inventor
  • Reading Level: 4.8
  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0195214013
  • amazon

Technical Stuff
other than reading level, none available


OTHER RESOURCES:

This article by Caryna St. John reminded me how to explain to an 8 year-old how to organize a paper: "How to write an A+ essay in twenty minutes"


OTHER IDEAS:
One interesting project you might try is a time-line which places Edison's life in the context of national events. This is particularly interesting because he lived a long life and was witness to incredible changes.

When Edison was born, for example, there were still slaves in the United States. And since he lived to see the beginning of the Great Depression, he got to see not only electric lights put into millions of homes, but also the coming of age of the automobile and planes. Juxtaposing his life against these inventions as well as WWI and other events really assists children in understanding this amazing time period in world history.



Pam
Somewhere in the X-burbs

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