level 1 | mathematics | explorers | recognition-and-discrimination

Description

The fairy tales included in this resource are meant to be read to young children. As expected, they are short (at most ~1,000 words) and mixed with pictures.

They are also intended to be quite interactive. After reading a short section, there will usually be a picture and the child has the chance to recognize/pick out the element that does or doesn’t match.

For example, The Twin Tigers is about finding a magical tiger toy that’s identical to another (to lift a curse). The pictures show people who try to trick you by showing a toy that almost looks the same … but something is different.

This book contains a lot of high-resolution images. That’s why it’s a large file to download, especially considering books are usually tiny downloads. We also supply these images on their own (instead of baked into the book) to make sure you can use them however you want.

REMARK! Some of the illustrations were made using AI. In the future we hope to do a refresh with manually drawn images, once resources allow, though that will likely mean a price increase.

Details

  • ✔️ Pay once, use forever, however.
  • ✔️ No hidden costs or data tracking.
  • ✔️ No sign-up required.
  • ✔️ No difficult licenses or restrictions.
  • ✔️ Instantly arrives in your inbox. (Check spam folder!)
  • ✔️ Fun and effective!

Product Contents

  • Four stories (with illustrations): The Twin Tigers, The Mischievous Mothers, The Treasure Painter and The Watchers of Face
  • The stories are included as a .pdf file (most suitable for printing) and .epub file (most suitable for ereaders).
  • The PDF has pages in “Half Letter” format (near A5; typical for books), but any computer system should allow printing 2 pages at once on a single A4/Letter page.
  • The raw images and chapter texts in case you want to edit/use/study those.

Fine Details

DetailValue
Categoriesmatching, recognition, discrimination
Languageen
Level1
Subjectmathematics

Subject: Mathematics

The curriculum is split into six main subjects that align with your typical school subjects.

This resource is part of the Mathematics subject. Below is a summary:

This subject teaches Mathematics from first principles to calculus. Level 1 explores the basic skills needed before you do any counting or see any numbers (such as grouping and comparing objects). Level 2(+) can then introduce numbers, counting, addition, multiplication, and more.

Faction icon for explorers

Faction: Explorers

This resource is part of the Explorers Faction.

But that's just one way to teach and explore its topic(s)!

You can always move to a different Faction to find a more effective way to teach the same topic.

Played a quiz? Try a game! Played a game? Try an escape room! And so on.

For example,

Charm: Novella Interactiva

This product is part of the Novella Interactiva charm.

Visit its main page to learn more about what that means. Below is a summary:

These are interactive stories! You’re not just reading or enjoying the story, you can actually make decisions or engage with it. This is ideal for keeping the interest of the youngest listeners and readers, and also allows stories and experiences that no regular book can offer.

Spell: Recognition & Discrimination

This resource is part of the Recognition & Discrimination topic (or "spell").

A crucial first step to Mathematics and Logic is the ability to recognize things are the same or not. To discriminate between alike things.

Use the buttons below to navigate to the previous or next topic in the curriculum.

My First Colors »

Ready for the next step?

The Spell (or "educational topic") of this product is Recognition & Discrimination.

Use the buttons to navigate to the next or previous Spell. It selects a product of the same type if possible. Otherwise it brings you to the overview page.

Or visit the Full Curriculum overview.

Try another approach?

The Faction (or "product type") of this product is Explorers.

This approach might work for some Apprentices but not for others! That's why we recommend exploring each topic in a variety of ways.

Maybe a (different) game works better? Or a quiz, story, or escape room? Below are some random suggestions.