Riotous Story of Rome | TheBookSeekers

Riotous Story of Rome


Usborne Young Reading

No. of pages 64

Reviews
Great for age 6-10 years
Two new and exciting non-fiction titles in the hugely successful "Usborne Young Reading" series, which aims to encourage independent reading with a variety of engaging and informative subjects. "The Stinking Story of Rubbish" is a vivid and humorous introduction to the history of human waste and "The Story of Rome" explores the myth and reality behind the greatest ancient empire. Each title is vividly illustrated and authored and is clearly laid out with speech bubbles to aid the narrative flow. The Usborne Young Reading programme was developed in conjunction with educational experts at the University of Surrey. These titles form part of series two, which is aimed at young readers who are growing in confidence.

 

This book is part of a book series called Usborne Young Reading .

There are 64 pages in this book. This is a chapter book. Publishers market early chapter books at readers aged 6-10 years. This book was published 2009 by Usborne Publishing Ltd .

This book is in the following series:

Young Reading Series 2

Usborne Young Reading
The Usborne Reading Programme is a collection of over 300 reading books, graded in seven levels and covering a wide range of subjects, both fiction and non-fiction. First Reading covers the first four levels, and Young Reading the next three.Series 1: These titles are for children who have just started reading on their own. They are 48 pages long and typically contain several short stories or one longer story divided into chapters. They use fairly short, simple sentences and everyday vocabulary.Series 2: These titles are for children who are reading more confidently. They are 64 pages long and use varied sentence lengths, more complex sentence structure and more challenging vocabulary.Series 3: These titles are for fully confident readers who still need to gain the stamina needed for standard length books. They use advanced sentence structure and vocabulary and have more complex plots with subplots.

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