By: Amitha Jagannath Knight/ Illustrated by:Sandhya PrabhatThat's not what it is!When sisters Usha and Aarti look up at the stars, they see different things. Aarti sees the Big Dipper, but little Usha sees the Big DIGGER. And cousin Gloria sees the Big Kit
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By: Amitha Jagannath Knight/ Illustrated by:Sandhya Prabhat
When sisters Usha and Aarti look up at the stars, they see different things. Aarti sees the Big Dipper, but little Usha sees the Big DIGGER. And cousin Gloria sees the Big Kite! Could they all be right?
This installation in the Storytelling Math series is a playful introduction to rotation, geometry, and spatial relationships,featuring Indian American characters and a note about cultures and constellations.
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Amitha Jagannath Knight, author
Amitha Jagannath Knight has lots of experience with sister squabbles, as she grew up with an identical twin. (They are still best friends.) Amitha lives in Massachusetts with her husband, two children, and two cats. This is her debut book.
Read more aboutAmitha.
SandhyaPrabhat, illustrator
Sandhya Prabhat is an independent animator and illustrator from India. She has published nearly a dozen picture books. She also animates videos and designs e-stickers.
Read more aboutSandhya.
Kirkus Reviews
Usha loves two things: trucks and cartwheels (although shes still not quite sure how to do a cartwheel). When her big sister, Aarti, points out the Big Dipper while stargazing, Usha doesnt see a scoop at all; instead, she sees a truck. Usha confidently tells her sister that the constellation (or, more accurately, as Knight notes in the backmatter, the asterism) shes seeing isnt a big dipperits a big digger. Things get even more complicated when the girls cousin Gloria comes over the next night. Gloria doesnt see the constellation as a scoop or a truck; she sees it as a kite! Through all of this, Usha practices her cartwheels. Each of the girls is convinced that the others are seeing the stars in the wrong way, until Usha flops on the ground after a failed cartwheel and realizes that the constellation is, in fact, a scoop, a truck, and a kite, depending on its orientation. This latest edition to the Storytelling Math series features stunning illustrations of dark-skinned South Asian protagonists, with Gloria apparently biracial (Black/South Asian). The book bursts with charming images of endearing kids, and the storys presentation of the girls varying, equally valid perspectives is a valuable tool for promoting empathy. However, its success at demonstrating the principle of orientation via a constellation is imperfect; any of the concrete examples in the backmatter would have worked better. Read for the illustrations and the characters (but not the math).
Download the CoverDownload the Activity Kit (English)Download the Activity Kit (Spanish)
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-62354-202-3
Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-62354-201-6
Spanish Bilingual Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-62354-217-7
Spanish Bilingual Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-62354-218-4
E-book
ISBN: 978-1-63289-953-8 EPUB
Ages: 3-6
Page count: 32
91/2 x 91/2
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