One Watermelon Seed
Grades (pre-K)and K-1
Non-fiction Math
Karen Patkau’s illustrations have a realistic, but cartoon like quality. The colors are bold and vivid with illustrations spanning over two pages. The first illustration introduces the reader to Max and Josephine, who planted a garden, and as the book progresses we see more detail given to the various plants in the garden. Starting from soil and seeds, the small beginnings of little green shrubs explode with color into a full garden. The text is minimal at the bottom of each page building up a counting process starting with “one watermelon seed” to “10 corn seeds.” The illustrations grow larger with the increase in number and the growth of the garden. Once the garden is full, Max and Josephine realize they have plenty to pick. Counting in 10s leading to 100, they start with “10 watermelons big and green” to “100 ears of corn,” which Max and Josephine save to make “100s and 1000s of big white crunchy puffs of popcorn.”
The text not only teaches counting from 1-10, but counting in 10s leading to 100. It teaches children where fruits and vegetables come from, but also teaches them color and size by building vocabulary in providing short descriptions of various colors and textures used to describe fruits and vegetables. “Thirty eggplants, dark and purple, and forty peppers, shiny yellow” accompany bright colorful illustrations and the numbers at the bottom of page also match the color of the fruit or vegetable to reinforce colors and numbers. Patkau also includes two pages in the end of the book illustrating the various colorful fruits and vegetables that were planted such as watermelons, pumpkins, eggplants and strawberries. The final page titled “Can you find any of these creatures in the garden?” illustrates various insects and birds seen throughout the book such the bee, ladybug, Robin and hummingbird. Children will enjoy this book because it's easy to read format and bright colorful illustrations will make learning to count fun.
Grades K-1
Math/Science
This is a great book to include in math and science lessons for children in pre-k to 1st grade. It teaches counting 1-10 and counting in 10s. There is a lot of material in this book that can be used to introduce science lessons on plant growth, insects and birds.