Special Collections

Wit & Wisdom 2025 Grade 2

Description: Wit & Wisdom 2025 Grade 2


Showing 1 through 25 of 25 results
 

Bone Button Borscht

by Dusan Petricic and Aubrey Davis

On a dark winter's night, a ragged beggar dreams of a warm hearth and a delicious meal -- and sets out to find just that. In this retelling of the classic folk tale "Stone Soup," a stranger teaches the poor villagers what can be accomplished with a few buttons and a little cooperation.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

The Buffalo are Back

by Jean Craighead George

The buffalo, an American icon once nearly extinct, has made a comeback. This stirring picture book tells the dramatic story, following bison from the Plains Indians to the cowboys, Teddy Roosevelt to the Dust Bowl, and from the brink of extinction to the majestic herds that now roam our national parks.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

A Color of His Own

by Leo Lionni

A little chameleon is distressed that he doesn't have his own color like other animals.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: A Season of Change

The Digestive System

by Christine Taylor-Butler

An introduction to the digestive system. This book introduces readers (Grades 3-5) to the digestive system, including the digestive process, the organs involved in digestion, and common problems and diseases associated with the digestive system.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

The Digestive System

by Jennifer Prior

Discover the journey that your food takes through the digestive system in this fascinating nonfiction title! Featuring vivid diagrams and photos, fresh and informative text, and stimulating facts, readers will be engaged from cover to cover.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

Good Enough To Eat

by Lizzy Rockwell

Good Enough to Eat is one of a kind: the only guide to kids' nutrition written especially for kids. A practical, hands-on tool for families who want to eat a healthy diet, this book explains nutrition from carrots to cookies.

In this book, you will learn

- all about the nutrient groups--carbohydrates, protein, fat, water, vitamins, and minerals

- each nutrient's function

- which foods contain which nutrients

- how much of each nutrient a kid needs each day

- how the body digests food

- all about calories

Good Enough to Eat includes kid-friendly recipes such as Alphabread and Full o' Beans Soup, and even shows kids how to test their food for fat. Perfect for parents, educators, librarians, and doctors trying to explain healthy eating to kids!

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

How Do You Know It's Fall?

by Lisa M. Herrington

These charming science books, written for the youngest readers, will teach children how to read the cues from nature and be able to differentiate one season to the next. Simple hands-on experiments that introduce young readers to everyday science Fun activities that allow young scientists to make observations about the world around them Fast facts - offering fun, sometimes little known facts about the subject Low, accessible reading level for emergent and struggling readers Glossary with pictures provides a visual review of important vocabulary terms Additional content for further learning on this subject available at www. factsfornow. scholastic. com

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: A Season of Change

I Have a Dream

by Kadir Nelson and Martin Luther King Jr.

On August 28, 1963, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington, Martin Luther King gave one of the most powerful and memorable speeches in our nation's history. His words, paired with Caldecott Honor winner Kadir Nelson's magificent paintings, make for a picture book certain to be treasured by children and adults alike. The themes of equality and freedom for all are not only relevant today, 50 years later, but also provide young readers with an important introduction to our nation's past.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

I Have a Dream: Read & Listen Edition

by Dr. Martin Luther King

On August 28, 1963, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington, Martin Luther King, Jr., gave one of the most powerful and memorable speeches in our nation's history. Now read and listen to his words, narrated with the audio recordings from his speech, paired with Caldecott Honor winner Kadir Nelson's magnificent paintings, in this picture book certain to be treasured by children and adults alike. The themes of equality and freedom for all are not only relevant today, 50 years later, but also provide young readers with an important introduction to our nation's past.This ebook includes Read & Listen audio narration.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

John Henry

by Ezra Jack Keats

The larger-than-life character of John Henry and his incredible strength provide readers with a special introduction to the fantasy element of legend. The rewards of hard physical labor are also described in this exciting adventure of man vs. machine.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

John Henry

by Julius Lester

John Henry is stronger than ten men, and can dig through a mountain faster than a steam drill. Julius Lester's folksy retelling of a popular African-American folk ballad has warmth, tall tale humor, and boundless energy.

Jerry Pinkney illustrates the story with "rich colors borrowed from the rocks and the earth, so beautiful that they summon their own share of smiles and tears" (Booklist).

Caldecott Honors Book

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

Journey of a Pioneer

by Patricia J. Murphy

An epic journey with this historic book about the lives of the pioneers. They'll follow Olivia and her family as they travel along the Oregon Trail. Discover what it was like to live in a wagon and sleep under the stars. Learn what the pioneers ate and how they found food.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

The Legend of the Bluebonnet

by Tomie dePaola

Thick clusters of vivid blue flowers, which resemble old-fashioned sunbonnets, cover the Texas hills in the springtime every year. These lovely wild flowers, known by the name of bluebonnet, are the state flower of Texas.This favorite legend based on Comanche Indian lore, tells the story of how the bluebonnet came to be. Tomie dePaola's powerful retelling and his magnificent full-color paintings perfectly capture the Comanche People, the Texas hills, and the spirit of She-Who-Is-Alone, a little girl who made a sacrifice to save her tribe.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

The Little Yellow Leaf

by Carin Berger

A yellow leaf is not ready to fall from the tree when autumn comes, but finally, after finding another leaf still on the tree, the two let go together.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: A Season of Change

Martin Luther King Jr. and The March on Washington

by Frances E. Ruffin

On August 28, 1963, more than 250,000 people came to the nation's capital. They came by plane, by bus, by car--even on roller-skates--to speak out against segregation and to demand equal rights for everyone. They also came to hear the words of a very special leader, Martin Luther King, Jr. Told with a wonderful immediacy, this book captures the spirit of this landmark day in American history and brings Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech to vivid life for young children.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

Plains Indians

by Andrew Santella

This title teaches readers about the first people to live in the Plains region of North America. It discusses their culture, customs, ways of life, interactions with other settlers, and their lives today.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

Ruby Bridges Goes To School

by Ruby Bridges

The extraordinary true story of Ruby Bridges, the first African-American child to integrate a New Orleans school--now with simple text for young readers!

In 1960, six-year-old Ruby Bridges walked through an angry crowd and into a school where she changed history.

This is the true story of an extraordinary little girl who helped shape our country when she became the first African-American to attend an all-white school in New Orleans. With simple text and historical photographs, this easy reader explores an amazing moment in history and the courage of a young girl who stayed strong in the face of racism.

Lexile Measure: 470L

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

Separate Is Never Equal

by Duncan Tonatiuh

Almost 10 years before Brown vs. Board of Education, Sylvia Mendez and her parents helped end school segregation in California.

An American citizen of Mexican and Puerto Rican heritage who spoke and wrote perfect English, Mendez was denied enrollment to a "Whites only" school.

Her parents took action by organizing the Hispanic community and filing a lawsuit in federal district court.

Their success eventually brought an end to the era of segregated education in California.

2015 Jane Addams Younger Reader Award,

2015 Pura Belpré Illustrator Honor Book

2015 Robert F. Sibert Honor Book

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

Sky Tree

by Thomas Locker

A tree stands on a hill by a river. As the sky changes, so does the tree, its branches filling with clouds, stars, snow, birds, mists, and the golden spring sun. One tree can mean many things. Thomas Locker's lyrical text records the changes in the tree's world just as simply as a child might observe them, and his magnificent paintings crystallize the natural phenomena that embellish the tree on each page. Questions at the bottom of each page lead to a unique discussion in the back of the book, where art and science are intertwined, and further depth is added to the wonder of Sky Tree.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: A Season of Change

Stone Soup

by Marcia Brown

3 soldiers teach a village to share by making soup with various ingredients.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

Stone Soup

by Marcia Brown

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

The Story of Johnny Appleseed

by Aliki

Retells the wandering of John Chapman whose devotion to planting apple trees made him a legendary figure in American history.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: The American West

The Story of Ruby Bridges

by Robert Coles

The inspirational true story of Ruby Bridges.The year is 1960, and six-year-old Ruby Bridges and her family have recently moved from Mississippi to New Orleans in search of a better life. When a judge orders Ruby to attend first grade at William Frantz Elementary, an all-white school, Ruby must face angry mobs of parents who refuse to send their children to school with her. Told with Robert Coles' powerful narrative and dramatically illustrated by George Ford, Ruby's story of courage, faith, and hope continues to resonate more than 60 years later.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Civil Rights Heroes

The Vegetables We Eat

by Gail Gibbons

Glossy red peppers, lush leafy greens, plump orange pumpkins, and delectable little peas: vegetables come in many shapes, sizes, and colors. Leaf. . .root. . .stem. . . . These are three of the eight groups of vegetables. From how they are planted to how they get to stores, here is a wealth of information about them, including how to plant and tend your own vegetable garden.

This book does not contain images, only image descriptions.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: Good Eating

Why Do Leaves Change Color?

by Betsy Maestro

Explains how leaves change their colors in autumn and then separate from the tree as the tree prepares for winter.

Date Added: 07/17/2025


Category: A Season of Change


Showing 1 through 25 of 25 results