Best children government books according to redditors

We found 37 Reddit comments discussing the best children government books. We ranked the 16 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Children's Government Books:

u/djquigglewiggle · 26 pointsr/FULLCOMMUNISM
u/crispychoc · 22 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

> Melany's Marvelous Measels

Try the "My Parents open carry"

I's nearly as good!

u/CitizenKang · 12 pointsr/communism

Go read the Amazon reviews.

Hilarious. So many people pretending to have read it and pontificating against something they don't understand.

u/tigrrbaby · 10 pointsr/suggestmeabook

Board books :

  • Bright Baby series by Roger Priddy is the best set of "first books" / "learn words" books. Animals (yellow book), colors (pink) are two of the best.
  • Leslie Patricelli: Baby Happy Baby Sad No No Yes Yes and yummy yucky, huggy kissy are also good. (note, do not just read the words, use them for discussion of the pictures)
  • guess how much I love you
  • [Barnyard Dance!] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1563054426/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_sUXKzbXMP2DV2) and others by Sandra Boynton
  • Goodnight Moon by Margaret wise brown

    Picture books:

  • Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site (also, the train book is lame, skip it)
  • mommy do you love me by Jeanne Willis
  • The Maggie b by Irene haas
  • [tough chicks] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003V4B4TI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_eyXKzbV4CF825) by cece meng
  • sweet briar goes to school (and goes to camp) by karma wilson
  • [Move It!: Motion, Forces and You] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1553377591/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_6IXKzbJ00G260)

    Early readers:

  • Elephant and Piggie series by Mo Willems (bird on your head, broke my trunk, play the trumpet are faves)
  • Mr Putter and Tabby series by Ryland (faves are paint the porch, feed the fish, run the race)
  • Harry the Dirty Dog
  • Ready-Set-Grow series by Joy Wilt Berry (eg Mine and Yours: A Children's Book About Rights and Responsibilities ) are the most impactful series of books I have ever encountered. They cover emotional and social issues and life skills in a simple, clear way with silly illustrations, and were the major contributors to my emotional maturity.

    Chapter books to read together in early elementary:

  • The first three little house books: little house in the big woods, little house on the prairie, farmer boy. Should be read together to discuss issues like racial prejudice/native American displacement, and discipline in the 1800s, but they are super valuable books to understanding how pioneers and farmers lived. The later books are for more mature kids, due to the hardships the family goes through.
  • EB White books : Charlotte's web, trumpet of the swan

    Chapter books for later elementary or middle school:

  • in general, Newbury award books
  • Island of the blue dolphins
  • The slave dancer
  • my side of the mountain (high reading level due to archaic style)
  • The False Prince Jennifer Nielsen
  • The Shamer's Daughter series by Lene Kaaberbol is a great series to use for thinking about compassion and responsibility for those we care about, how guilt and shame require the guilty person to agree with an assessment that their actions were wrong; truth, lies, and stories; assumptions and false accusations; and other ways in which right and wrong may be determined.... But it is a very exciting and compelling story. It does have some cursing (damn, hell) and abusive behavior (brother beating and calling his tween sister a whore, evil ruler locking people up and feeding to a dragon), so check for maturity. But it is an absolutely amazing series that I can not recommend enough.

    Am posting on phone so will be submitting and editing. This will be a long post.
u/masslime · 7 pointsr/LateStageCapitalism

There is, but it's probably better for like teenagers: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0262533359/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_t1_QW60Ab7P8G9KT

u/Chive · 6 pointsr/ShitAmericansSay

That one's funny as fuck. It did the rounds on /r/GunsAreCool a while back.

The Amazon reviews are rather good too.

u/SwsMiss · 3 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

SwsMiss & The 3rd Graders here!

Gift One I'm dreaming big!!! :) I would love the [iPad](http://www.amazon.com/Apple-MC769LL-Tablet-Black-Generation/dp/B0013FRNKG/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pd_S_nC?ie=UTF8&colid=3DEASBZ4NAXJV&coliid=I2FVZNBUC6BHD5 from my classroom wishlist). I'm passionate about technology and there are MANY things I can use it for in my classroom for both my students and myself. You can read about just a FEW of the ways I can use it with students here. I can use it to keep my running records, assess students, and a million other things that would make my life a LOT easier.

Gift Two
This book is called "I Have the Right to Be a Child" and I would love it for my classroom. I teach in a therapeutic environment and many of my students do not believe they have rights. :) "C'mon...gimme."

Thank you for the chance! Be blessed, friends!! Also, is your dad a baker? Cause you both have hot buns! ;)

u/Elodrian · 3 pointsr/The_Donald

More media lies...

Followup question: Could you describe your subjective experience of a ground crew dispersing silver nitrate particulate within you?

u/voompanatos · 3 pointsr/politics

Not as vivid as the visuals you described, but there's a children's book about RBG.

"I Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark" by Debbie Levy

u/abruptdismissal · 3 pointsr/ABoringDystopia

>Come join 13-year-old Brenna Strong along with her mom, Bea, and her dad, Richard, as they spend a typical Saturday running errands and having fun together.

https://www.amazon.com/Parents-Open-Carry-Brian-Jeffs/dp/1618081012

u/SteelerSuperFan · 2 pointsr/funny

This book will help you understand what is happening here

https://www.amazon.com/Parents-Open-Carry-Brian-Jeffs/dp/1618081012

u/seonadancing1 · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I would love this coloring book and because /u/8bitesq also just finished taking the bar exam (and needs something to do while waiting for the results), I think they would love it too!

Life is about using the whole box of crayons

Thanks for the cool contest!

u/ColinsEgo · 2 pointsr/conspiracy

Thank you for the warning. I understand and wholeheartedly agree. "The path that leads to salvation is riddled with lies and deception"

The ego is very sly, comes from the mind. Your heart knows the True direction.

https://www.amazon.com/Spirit-Whirled-Phoenicians-Dylan-Saccoccio-ebook/dp/B06XF84YR5/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1494038057&sr=8-1&keywords=spirit+whirled+the+deaf+phoenicians#customerReviews

I feel like you would love this read. Peace bro

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/AskHistorians

I was obsessed with the presidents when I was a kid, so I learnt them in order! Let me see if I can help.

I had one of these books as a kid, one for the presidents, one for the first ladies. They're actually really helpful, even if they are for kids. Lots of glossy pictures, side-bars, etc. Really, it's not so much about knowing their years/etc, but knowing where they fit in your 'mental timeline,' as it were. Seeing them laid out in book form helped me a lot.

Flashcards are amazing. I took AP US History in high school and I never remember being told to learn the presidents in order, but I used them for a lot of other stuff. The trick is to actually spend time writing the flashcards, and to make the cards informative - the more time you put into the making of the cards, the better you'll do with them.

u/Cameron94 · 2 pointsr/ukpolitics

This book is a great starter, and yes, I know it's for school use but it's a brilliant book: http://www.amazon.co.uk/books/dp/0748798218

u/archamedeznutz · 2 pointsr/CringeAnarchy
u/baldylox · 1 pointr/humor

There's an Obama coloring book, too - just to be fair to both sides.

http://www.amazon.com/Barack-Obama-Presidential-Coloring-Book/dp/0635070502/

In fact, there are several. Perfect for indoctrinating your toddler.

u/97227ist · 1 pointr/Seattle

> Bringing it up does nothing at all

He's the president. He can't write spending bills. He can only ask Congress to write bills that he will then approve. This might help you.

u/sharer_too · 1 pointr/suggestmeabook

You might check out [The Big Book of Peace] (https://www.amazon.com/Big-Book-Peace-Ann-Durell/dp/0525446052) - it's a collection, so you can pick and choose.

u/grrrrreat · 1 pointr/4chan4trump

138585609| > Unknown Anonymous

>>138585509
https://www.amazon.com/Communism-Kids-Bini-Adamczak/dp/0262533359

u/CaptainCrackbaby · 1 pointr/TumblrInAction

Could be worse this is what MIT is putting out.

https://www.amazon.com/Communism-Kids-Press-Bini-Adamczak/dp/0262533359

u/DNZ_not_DMZ · 0 pointsr/IAmA

Wow, Amazon links. You totally converted me. So did this here:

http://www.amazon.com/Parents-Open-Carry-Brian-Jeffs/dp/1618081012

Err, no. This is moronic. But hey, each to their own - kind regards from New Zealand (1.45 gun-related deaths per 100,000 population per year) to the US (10.3 gun-related deaths per 100,000 population per year).

u/JHTSeattle · -3 pointsr/philosophy

There are some great books for young kids about Rosa Parks, Harriet Tubman, and MLK by Brad Metzer in a very Bill Watterson-style (Calvin and Hobbes) that resonated with my girls. Another great one is about Ruth Bader Ginsberg that is titled "I Dissent!".

All have good examples of civil (and legal) dissension with examples that kids can apply to their own lives.

u/remludar · -14 pointsr/videos

Well I won't resort to name calling, but here's the quickest example of US universities being okay with teaching communism as superior to capitalism.

The book, Communism For Kids has been published by a major U.S. university publisher, MIT Press, and is now available in paperback or Kindle on Amazon.

From the description: "Once upon a time, people yearned to be free of the misery of capitalism. How could their dreams come true? This little book proposes a different kind of communism, one that is true to its ideals and free from authoritarianism."

There's also video of students in various universities in the US protesting debates held by people like Jordan Peterson, Ben Shapiro, and others where students flew the hammer and sickle, screamed in megaphone, and even attempted to bash in the windows of the hall... all with zero repercussions from the campus.

Perhaps your information isn't complete.

Edit: Here's video of Berkley enjoying a celebration of Communism