Książka Kit Builds Something Chris Kuczynski

Kit Builds Something

Hands Tape and Cardboard

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Twarda
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 30. 06. 2026
94.44
Book 6 of Kit's Little Sparks. By Chris Kuczynski.Kit drew an idea. Now Kit builds it. Tape, cardboa...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Twarda
Data wydania
2026
strony
28
EAN
9781968470449
ISBN
1968470441
Enbook ID
53022618
Waga
270
Wymiary
203 x 203 x 6

Pełny opis

Book 6 of Kit's Little Sparks. By Chris Kuczynski.

Kit drew an idea. Now Kit builds it. Tape, cardboard, a paper towel tube, two buttons, and a lot

of patience. Kit's hands are busy. Sparks orbits the work, lending light wherever Kit needs to

see. The first thing Kit builds does not look like the drawing. The second thing does. The third

thing is even better.

This is the moment children discover that ideas can become real. The vocabulary inventors use

is "prototyping." The vocabulary toddlers use is "I made it!" The skill is identical: take an idea

from imagination to physical form, then look at it, then try again.

Book 6 celebrates the in-between objects. Not the finished product, but the half-finished

cardboard creations that fill every preschool classroom and every inventor's first lab.

Children learn that the first version is supposed to be wonky, that tape is a legitimate tool,

and that a paper towel tube can be a rocket, a telescope, or a snake, depending on the story.

Illustrated in watercolor with collage-style details. Sturdy board pages. Free read-along

audio. Free educator guide with a "build something from these five materials" exercise.

For parents who have lost their tape and don't know why. For preschool teachers running a

maker space. For caregivers who want their child to build something with their hands before

they build it on a screen.

Written by Chris Kuczynski, an engineer for the first twelve years of his career, then a

registered patent attorney, and a co-founder of a preschool. He wrote the Kit's Little Sparks

series to give two to four year-olds the language of invention long before kindergarten.

Build something together this weekend. Use a cardboard box, tape, and whatever you can

find around the house. Let your child lead. The result will not look like what you imagined.

That is the point. Book 7 is what happens when the first build doesn't quite work.