Though everyone has times where they want to do things on their own, teamwork is what helps get big things accomplished. Teams can take shape on soccer fields and in swimming pools, but they can also appear in a classroom or on a playground. Working together utilizes the strengths of everyone in the group in order to reach a common goal. It is not about being the best; rather, it is about helping one another and finding a shared purpose. The books in this list are selected for readers ages 4-7 and showcase both humans and animals helping each other in a variety of situations. Hopefully, these stories will help inspire young readers to become team players in their own lives.
Contributed by: Mary Lanni
Duck is Stuck By: Zoubida Mouhssin Illustrated by: Pascale Moutte-Baur When he falls asleep while on the lake and wakes up stuck in ice, Duck needs the help of other animals to get loose. |
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Duncan the Story Dragon By: Amanda Driscoll Duncan the Dragon loves to read, but he keeps accidentally lighting his book on fire, leading him to try to find a friend to read to him so he can get to the end of his story. |
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The Little Guys By: Vera Brosgol As they head off to find breakfast, the mighty Little Guys conquer all obstacles in their path through teamwork, but when they amass more than they need, their fellow forest creatures worry about what happens if no one can stop the Little Guys. |
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Melia and Jo By: Billy Aronson and Jennifer Oxley Melia is scientific and loves to create things in her backyard laboratory, but something is missing. Her inventions just aren’t quite right. Enter Jo, her new friend with an artistic spirit. When you add the arts to the sciences, something magical happens! |
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Mighty, Mighty Construction Site By: Sherri Duskey Rinker Illustrated by: Tom Lichtenheld Told in rhyming text, Excavator, Bulldozer, Crane Truck, Dump Truck, and Cement Mixer will all need to work together as they tackle their biggest job yet—a massive building. |
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Pedro’s Big Goal By: Fran Manushkin Illustrated by: Tammie Lyon Pedro would love to be the goalie in the team’s first game, but another boy is bigger—so, all his friends come over to help him practice before the tryout. |
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Splashdance By: Liz Starin Ursula, a bear, and Ricardo, a human, are preparing for the water ballet competition. But a new regulation at the community pool—no bears—leaves Ursula cut from the contest. Luckily, she encounters a group of undaunted animal swimmers at a local pond, and Ursula and her new team figure out a way to participate in the competition and make sure everyone is welcome at the pool once and for all. |
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Stone Soup By: Jon J. Muth Three wise monks trick a poor, frightened community into finding happiness by teaching them the magic of generosity. |
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Swimmy By: Leo Lionni When a big tuna attacks his school of fish, Swimmy goes out on his own and discovers the wonders of the sea. While there, he finds a new school, and he helps them find a way to venture out and stand up to the bigger fish. |
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Up the Creek By: Nicholas Oldland When a bear, a moose, and a beaver go on a canoe trip, they have all sorts of disagreements, until they find themselves stranded up the creek and decide that working together is the only way to make it home safely. |
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What a Team! By: Brigitte Luciani and Eve Tharlet Badger brothers Grub and Bristle want to build a boat, but when everyone decides to help, all they’ve built is a big argument. The only way to decide whose idea is best is a race down the river. Will that prove one of them right, or will teamwork win the day? |
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When Pencil Met Eraser By: Karen Kilpatrick and Luis O. Ramos, Jr. Illustrated by: Germán Blanco Pencil loves to draw and isn’t happy when he meets Eraser. Eraser soon convinces Pencil that he’s the one who can fix things when Pencil makes a mistake, and Pencil finally agrees that they make a good team together. |
Human culture is built around communities big and small. Whether a community is made up of people who live near one another or composed of those who share a cultural heritage or background, these groups sustain one another. Sometimes, it is hard to see where one community ends and another begins, and other times it is much more obvious. For the most part, people are involved in more than one community at any given time, and it is through the positive efforts of these groups that society can grow and flourish. This book list is intended for readers aged 8-12 and includes a selection of fiction and nonfiction titles, highlighting a small sampling of communities around the world.
Contributed by: Mary Lanni
Arctic Communities Past and Present By: Cynthia Jenson-Elliott Compares and contrasts the way people lived in the Arctic over the course of centuries. |
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Baseball Saved Us By: Ken Mochizuki Illustrated by: Dom Lee A Japanese American boy learns to play baseball when he and his family are forced to live in an internment camp during World War II, and his ability to play helps him after the war is over. |
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Books and Bricks: How a School Rebuilt a Community By: Sindiwe Magona Illustrated by: Cornelius Van Wright Residents of an impoverished South African town find new hope when they come together at their school and start a brickmaking business. |
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Can We Help? Kids Volunteering to Help their Communities By: George Ancona Describes how children can help their communities in different ways, from tending a community garden and training service dogs to volunteering to help people with disabilities and mentoring younger students. |
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Cold Snap By: Eileen Spinelli Illustrated by: Marjorie Priceman A cold snap has everyone in the town of Toby Mills feeling down until the mayor’s wife thinks of a way to warm things up again. |
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Communities By: Neil Morris What is a community? Who are the leaders in communities? Which languages are most spoken in the world? This series encourages geographical inquiry with an interactive, investigative, and visual approach to a wide range of core curriculum topics. |
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Communities Today and Tomorrow By: Polly Goodman Describes the different types of communities found around the world, from small farming villages to cities, and explains how each community uses energy, finds food and water, and disposes of waste. |
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Coral Reef Communities By: Melissa Gish Explore the regions of the world’s oceans known for their coral reefs and learn about the life forms that dwell there. First-person accounts from scientists answer important questions about reef communities. |
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Life in a Fishing Community By: Hélène Boudreau This title looks at offshore fishing. Around the coast of much of North America, fishing stocks have greatly declined as a result of overfishing, pollution, and global warming. Nova Scotia, in the northeast of Canada, once had a huge fishing industry. In 1753, people from Germany, Switzerland, and France came from Europe to set up a colony at Lunenburg on the coast. They soon set up a fishing and shipbuilding industry. The community grew until about 1980 when the fishing industry largely stopped. Since then, the community has had to reinvent itself. It is still largely based on the old industries, but tourism is as important. |
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My Digital Community and Media By: Ben Hubbard Illustrated by: Diego Vaisberg What do you do online? What digital communities do you belong to? Learn how your digital activity makes you part of a digital community in this timely book and examine what it means to be a part of an online culture and digital society. |
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Pedal Power: How One Community Became the Bicycle Capital of the World By: Allan Drummond Cycling rules the road in Amsterdam today, but that wasn’t always the case. In the 1970s, Amsterdam was so crowded with vehicles that bicyclists could hardly move, but moms and kids relied on their bicycles to get around the city. Pedal Power is the story of the people who led protests against the unsafe streets and took over a vehicles-only tunnel on their bikes, showing what a little pedal power could do! Author and illustrator Allan Drummond returns with the story of the people that paved the way for safe biking around the world. |
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What are Community Resources? By: LeeAnn Blankenship The strength of a community often is determined by the resources available where it is located. This resource discusses both human-made resources (such as dams, bridges, roads, buildings, and industry) as well as renewable and non-renewable natural resources (including soil, water, forests, and energy). The text further explores how such resources affect a community’s health as well as the prosperity and opportunities of its members. Young readers will begin to understand the economics of how resources affect trade and industry. This insightful text also introduces the idea that controversies exist about ways to use resources without environmental damage. |