#1,103 in Children books
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Reddit mentions of Baby Loves Quarks! (Baby Loves Science)

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Baby Loves Quarks! (Baby Loves Science). Here are the top ones.

Baby Loves Quarks! (Baby Loves Science)
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    Features:
  • Charlesbridge Publishing
Specs:
ColorMulticolor
Height7.1 Inches
Length7.1 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2016
Weight0.5842249943 Pounds
Width0.8 Inches

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Found 3 comments on Baby Loves Quarks! (Baby Loves Science):

u/dudeplace · 3 pointsr/mildlyinteresting

I have "Baby Loves Quarks!" for my 1 year old. amazon
For her it's mostly fun pictures. It doesn't really matter what the words are for her.
The wording is like, "Everything in the world is made of molecules, even baby" and it has a pictures of random stuff (tree, dog, car, balloon, etc.)
The fun for her is looking at the pictures. The fun for me is thinking about something, even if it is super simplified, more interesting than "The cat drinks milk."

u/Angieflibble · 2 pointsr/chemistry

How formally dressed are your teachers? Are ties still expected wear?
http://www.tiesforteachers.co.uk/science.htm
Or baby loves books. Something he can do with his child?

Beyond that maybe try etsy.

u/TychaBrahe · 0 pointsr/explainlikeimfive

Having worked with five year olds, I can say that a lot of them would have understood this if you walked them through it slowly and made a few more analogies. I probably would have compared grains to stained glass or the outlined area of coloring books, depending on what the kid was familiar with. And I would have started with hardness, because a kid does understand that paper and noodles are bendy and knives and scissors are not. And the bonds between molecules are like kids holding hands in Red Rover, Red Rover. If the kid "coming over" is strong enough to break the hand holding, the line is cut.

But I just bought this book for a friend's toddler for Christmas.

Children's big problem with understanding things like this is connecting it to things they already know so it makes sense. We all get the original Niels Bohr description of an atom as looking like a solar system only because we've seen pictures of a solar system. But children can learn all kinds of things you'd normally allocate to older people.

I have a distinct memory of explaining to my sister that the Earth moved in four ways: it turns on its access and orbits the Sun, the Sun is in a turning galaxy, and the galaxy is moving through space. We were lying in our beds in our shared bedroom, and we each got our own room when I turned five, so I was that age or younger. Obviously I left off precession and Hubble expansion, but also obviously someone had explained that to me and I'd gotten it.