Saturday, February 28, 2015

Take the Dog Out Numbers by Lynne Dempsey

Rating: WORTHY!

From an advance review copy for which I thank the publisher.

Sweetly illustrated by Mandy Newham-Cobb.

I reviewed the original Take the Dog Out (don't you just love that title?!) earlier this month, and now, once again we’re with the TTDO gang and this time we’re counting. All the way to ten. And back again. Are we going to get there? If we do will we safely make it back? Only your child can tell!

This was a fun and energetic romp through the park, starting with a squirrel. I adore squirrels. Even the name is hilarious. Unfortunately, the squirrel is being chased by a cat, which of course is in turn being chased by that boisterous dog. As more and more people become involved, the numbers climb higher and higher so your child can see that by adding one more, we climb to the next number – and conversely, as people (and animals) become distracted, we start discounting from 10 all the way back to zero. No doubt the bird reported all this on twitter….

Once again there are hidden bones – this time not just to be found. You didn’t think it was going to be that easy did you? Nope, this time they need to be counted. Full disclosure: I skipped this portion of the enterprise, not having a young child by my side with whom to count. You might say I just did a bare bones reading….

Once again comes to the aid of our textual understanding with some sharp, fun, and colorful illustrations (the squirrel was a blast) and the multicultural crowd sported huge smiles. Even the butterfly somehow seems to be laughing (or maybe she’s just winging it…).

I thought this was a great idea and well-executed. The numbers are shown as numbers and also as aggregations of people and animals, reinforcing the lesson all the way through. The turn-around is a little more speedy, rather like the down-slope of a roller-coaster with the declining numbers (that squirrel finally found a tree, and you know a wind-blow hat demands to be chased!), taking their toll on the crowd one-by-one until it’s just the cat – and you know they don’t hang around long when there’s nothing going on!

I recommend this if you’re looking for a counting aid for your child. Make it fun and they’ll learn fast and develop a life-long love of the magic that math can do for us. American children always seem to compare so poorly in math and science with children from other nations, that anything we can do to raise the standard is to be welcomed, and this is certainly a good start.