Vamonos! Next Stop: Mexico by Ginger McDonnell
Bienvenido a Mexico! Welcome to Mexico! Everywhere you go, there is something new to see.
And there are many familiar things to see as well. Like the United States, Canada on our northern border, and Mexico, on our southern border, all three countries are part of the continent of North America. All three nations share many things in common: a tall range of mountains which we call the Rockies, extend down their middle, forming the "backbone" of all the three countries. All have long, rocky and sandy coastlines on the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, all three three have tall forests and dry central plains between their coasts, and many familiar wild animals--coyotes, black bears, pumas (mountain lions) live and roam and back and forth over all three countries. But being further south, the climate is warmer in Mexico
Some plants and animals are different.
There are even pyramids there!
Yes, unlike the Native Americans of Canada and the United States, those of Mexico left vast cities built from stone, with wide avenues, houses, temples, palaces, lakes, canals, and tall pyramids--tombs for their rulers like those of Egypt, all sights that attract millions of tourists to visit Mexico.
In one of a first introduction to the countries of North America, Ginger McDonnell's Teacher Created Materials - TIME For Kids Informational Text: Next Stop: Mexico - Grade 2 - Guided Reading Level J (Teacher-Created Materials/Time for Kids) provides primary-level text and many color photos of the sights of Mexico, from tall saguaro cactuses to the skyscrapers of the capital, Mexico City, of the country which calls itself Los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, the United Mexican States. As an introductory book for nonfiction readers in the primary grades, McDonnell includes a photo glossary of terms and a chart of Facts about Mexico, handy for simple research projects for the early grades.
Pair this one with its companion book, Next Stop: Canada (TIME FOR KIDSĀ® Nonfiction Readers).
Labels: (Grades 1-5), Geography--Study and Teaching, Mexico
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