Best children atlases according to redditors

We found 4 Reddit comments discussing the best children atlases. We ranked the 4 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Children's Atlases:

u/KeenlySeen · 3 pointsr/ECEProfessionals

We are not "dead." When someone posts, it might take a day or so to get a few replies, but we get relevant posts and replies pretty darn often for having shy of a thousand subscribers. We have many valued contributors which I have awarded flair so everyone knows who they are (and if anyone ever sees anything super-awesome, just send me a message pointing it out, and I will either put it in the sidebar or award them "active member" flair).

Also: Moms are certainly welcome here, and I like to think that we will have more resources and knowledge about developmentally appropriate activities than the average parent (and that's not to say that parents can't know, just that usually they are going by their own experiences (not based in science) and are biased towards their own ideology).

Anyways, It sounds like you have a really curious three-year-old and in addition to the other good suggestions, I have some ideas.

My First Atlas is a really good book for any child ready for the information, which it sounds like you little one is, already.

There's also a really cool demonstration you can do with him to demonstrate axial tilt.

You could also take him out to some different local landscapes and build them with him using paper mache, and help him name the land-forms. . .

And I also have to say that this is really mature subject matter for a three-year-old. It's a big concept. I personally never let that stop me from trying to explain things (with lots of analogies, visuals, and hands-on activities). He might not get everything exactly but that's OK. Later when he hears the information, he'll have a foundation on which to build it on. :)

Hope this helps, too. And if I think of more, I'll come back and edit.

u/reddit_folklore · 2 pointsr/whatsthatbook

Unfortunately there are probably a lot of similar atlas/flag books that are pretty similar. It doesn't sound like the flag atlas I had growing up, but I can't even tell you the title of that one :/

I searched amazon for "atlas flag" and this is the only one I found that's at least 20 years old.

EDIT: And I'm sorry, I can't find a non-commercial link to that book :(

u/CupOfLightRoastJoe · 1 pointr/whatsthatbook

Thanks for trying!

For some reason I think it was: https://www.amazon.ca/Collins-First-Book-World-Flags/dp/0007521251/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1502468623&sr=8-2&keywords=flag+book
but my memory is telling me the book bigger and not paper. Memory is so unreliable ;(

u/Stellazira · 1 pointr/geography

http://www.amazon.com/Usborne-Geography-Encyclopedia-Complete-World/dp/0794526985

When I was about her age I received one of these as a gift. I was able to use it to help with some school assignments. Assuming the newer editions are like the copy I have it covers a lot and is very informative.