The wacky robots from the award-winning apps, videos, and Netflix show, Ask the Storybots, now star in their own early readers. This one is about everyone’s favorite dinosaur!Fans of the StoryBots will recognize the colorful art from the hugely popular dinosaur video “Tyrannosaurus Rex” on YouTube. A gigantic body and super-sharp teeth make the Tyrannosaurus rex the most fearsome of the dinosaurs. Just don’t make fun of those tiny arms! This rhyming Step 1 Science Reader will entertain while imparting simple facts about the most popular carnivorous dinosaur of all.
Step 1 Readers feature big type and easy words for children who know the alphabet and are eager to begin reading. Rhyme and rhythmic text paired with picture clues help children decode the story.
Accolades for the StoryBots digital media:
Appy Award for Best Book App
Teacher's Choice Award
Editor’s Choice—Children’s Technology Review
Family Choice Award
Parents’ Choice Award
Cynopsis Kids !magination Award for best educational mobile app
On sale: September 5, 2017
Age: 4-6 years
Grade: Preschool - 1
Page count: 32 Pages
ISBN: 9781524718664
Reading level: Lexile: 350L | Fountas/Pinnell: G
GREGG and EVAN SPIRIDELLIS are brothers and the founders of StoryBots and JibJab Bros. Studios. Their digital media company is dedicated to making award-winning online entertainment and educational content, which has been seen by hundreds of millions of viewers. You can find all the StoryBots videos, apps, games, and activities at StoryBots.com and on YouTube, and you can watch
Ask the StoryBots on Netflix. JibJab Bros. Studios is based in Venice, California.
“The Step into Reading books hold the interest of even our most primary students. The books are perfect for our second-language learners, who need high-interest books with controlled lower-level vocabulary that look like ‘real books,’ not ‘baby books.’ ” —Susan Banning, Assistant Principal
“The Step into Reading series makes integrating reading into the curriculum so much easier. The nonfiction titles are perfect for teaching reading and language arts skills, while covering science and social studies content simultaneously!” —Lisa Laake, second-grade language arts teacher