National Geographic Readers - Face to Face with Wild Horses: Level 6

Paperback

National Geographic Face to Face Readers is a high-interest series of books for confident, independent readers that have been adapted to a Key Stage 2 audience by education experts. The books pair magnificent National Geographic photographs with lively first-person text and fascinating facts about the natural world.

Gallop off to join nature photographers as they take you on a journey inside the enchanting world of the wild horse. From forests, to mountains, to deserts, to grasslands, these untamed beauties adapt, survive and thrive. Written in an engaging and fun to read format, the captivating photos and fascinating facts are perfect for encouraging the future explorers and researchers of tomorrow!

Level 6 readers are ideal for kids who are very confident in reading independently and ready to challenge themselves with a wide variety of sentence structures and writing styles, a range of new technical vocabulary and the need for more complex inference.

RRP: £5.60 £7.00

ISBN

978-0-00-835813-6

Publication Date

27-09-2019

Format

Paperback

Pages

32 pages

Dimensions

170x210mm

Product Description

National Geographic Face to Face Readers is a high-interest series of books for confident, independent readers that have been adapted to a Key Stage 2 audience by education experts. The books pair magnificent National Geographic photographs with lively first-person text and fascinating facts about the natural world.

Gallop off to join nature photographers as they take you on a journey inside the enchanting world of the wild horse. From forests, to mountains, to deserts, to grasslands, these untamed beauties adapt, survive and thrive. Written in an engaging and fun to read format, the captivating photos and fascinating facts are perfect for encouraging the future explorers and researchers of tomorrow!

Level 6 readers are ideal for kids who are very confident in reading independently and ready to challenge themselves with a wide variety of sentence structures and writing styles, a range of new technical vocabulary and the need for more complex inference.

Author

Yva Momatiuk and John Eastcott