Description: "In this interactive picture book, young readers poke, roll, and slide objects on the page, using their imagination to conduct simple physics experiments. They learn about forces (pushes and pulls), inertia, gravity, acceleration, and friction. Back matter includes a real-world experiment"--
Review Quotes: A primer on pushes and pulls.
As they did in Matter (2023), Schaefer and Santiago continue to explore basic physics concepts. Their latest is an interactive introduction to force, "a push or pull that can change the motion or shape of an object." The author explores gravity (simplistically defined as "a force that pulls objects toward Earth"), friction, inertia, and acceleration. But first, she invites readers into the physics lab, where sharp eyes will find the supplies they'll use in their investigations: whipped cream, sandpaper, a track and marbles, beanbags, a jar of dirt, and even a notebook (a nice touch). As in previous series titles, readers are asked to physically engage with the book. Kids are told to blow on an image of sand, then to touch a button on a lab-vac to clean it up, which leads to an explanation of how a vacuum works. Outside the lab, on a playground, a diverse group of children and adults demonstrate forces at work. (In an online guide for the series, the publisher builds on this idea with a playground-based lesson.) A final, sure-to-please activity asks children to construct a teeter-totter out of a Popsicle stick and a drinking straw, which provides another example of pulls and pushes and gives readers the opportunity to propel a small object into the air. (Be prepared for enthusiastic demonstrations.) The combination of clear, concrete examples, reader interaction, and humor works well.
A child-friendly introduction to a scientific concept.
Former classroom teacher Lola M. Schaefer (Lift, Mix, Fling!) is a fan of kids applying their creative faculties to learn about science. In Hands-On Science: Motion, she introduces early physics concepts including force, gravity, and friction through simple experiments. Readers touch illustrations of whipped cream, blow on piles of sand, and tilt the book to make a marble roll down the page. Unlike classic touch-and-feel books like Pat the Bunny, though, the tactile sensations are imagined. ("Sand flew everywhere! What a mess!") Using a mix of playful words ("Bonk!", "Whoosh!") and clear instructions, Schaefer invites readers to interact with the pages. After giving a blob of whipped cream a "poke" and seeing how the force of the finger changes its shape, readers are encouraged to turn the book upside down and shake it: "Uh-oh!... Gravity pulled the cream off the page and onto the floor. Gravity is a force that pulls objects toward Earth."
Hands-On Science series illustrator Druscilla Santiago's uncluttered digital art uses pastel backdrops and plenty of white space to depict items both at rest and interacting with the different forces. Santiago's crisp lines, paired with Schaefer's uncomplicated descriptions, ensure that readers will see how they "create forces every moment of every day. --Shelf Awareness