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One Hundred Hungry Ants
One Hundred Hungry Ants

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Authors: Elinor J Pinczes, Elinor Pinczes
Creator: Bonnie Mackain
Brand: HOUGHTON MIFFLIN
Category: Book

List Price: $6.95
Buy New: $3.04
You Save: $3.91 (56%)



New (36) Used (16) from $2.74

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
Sales Rank: 20354

Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 32
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 7.7 x 0.2

MPN: HO395971233
ISBN: 0395971233
UPC: 046442971232
EAN: 9780395971239
ASIN: 0395971233

Publication Date: September 1999
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - One Hundred Hungry Ants
  • Paperback - One Hundred Hungry Ants
  • School & Library Binding - One Hundred Hungry Ants
  • Turtleback - One Hundred Hungry Ants

Similar Items:

  • Greedy Triangle (Scholastic Bookshelf)
  • A Remainder of One
  • How Big Is a Foot?
  • Anno's Mysterious Multiplying Jar
  • Spaghetti And Meatballs For All! (Scholastic Bookshelf: Math Skills)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Hi dee ho! It's off to a picnic we go! One hundred very hungry ants hurry to sample the delights of a picnic, but marching in single file seems too slow for 100 empty tummies. The smallest ant of all suggests they travel in 2 rows of 50, four rows of 25 .


Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars My second grade class loved this book!   October 27, 2008
We are learning different ways to skip count and find patterns in ways to get to 100. I read this to the students in class. They loved the book, the processing, and pictures. They were able to process and discuss the different patterns of the lines the 100 ants formed. Then they were able to relate this to coins in a dollar. They book is ideal for guided reading and discussion. It has rhythm, which is important for young children to recall concepts. It also it is a lot of fun. They enjoyed me reading to them, and then they wanted to hold the book and read it again to themselves. I highly recommend this book, for learning and just for fun reading.


5 out of 5 stars Awesome!   July 24, 2008
This is a fun book and an entertaining story. It's also a good way to teach multiple ways to add to a number and multiple ways to represent a number (2 groups of 25 are equal to 5 groups of 20, both represent 100.) Really awesome book for elementary math teachers.


5 out of 5 stars Awesome and clever mathematics book!!   March 4, 2008
I'm a college student working towards my Elementary Education degree, and a mom of two young children. I purchased this book while taking a mathematics course, so I could introduce some more advanced mathematics concepts to my four year old. He loves this book! It has a silly cute repetitive song, and teaches about division and multiplication. There is a list of other suggested reading material at the end of the book, and I'm going to get each one of them!


4 out of 5 stars math through litiracy   February 13, 2008
This book not only teaches math (division and multiplication) it is really fun to read.
from the catchy rhyming song, to the illustrations showing how even the turtles were already taking food by the time the ants arranged and re-arranged themselves.
points to discuss with your child or students: why were the ants so late for the picnic? the answer can be a practical one - they wasted too much time rearranging themselves - or a mathematical one - one long line of 100 ants would get there faster than 10 lines of 10.
why were the ants so angry at the littelest ant?
also it's a good time to explain the characteristic of ants: they go in a single file and share everything.
the other book "a remainder of one" was better, because it was a solution to a problem rather than a creation of a problem



1 out of 5 stars Falls short, and a negative message about math   December 13, 2007
 12 out of 13 found this review helpful

I bought this book after reading all of the positive reviews. I hate to be a grouch, but I am disappointed and will return the book for the following reasons: First, children need repetition to learn. Instead of merely showing the ants running around to rearrange themselves with each division and then going on to the next, the book should reiterate the new number of rows and how many are in each. More importantly, the message of the story is negative. It shows that the divisions were a waste of time, and the smart little ant who knew how to divide is scorned by all his ant-friends in the end. That is certainly not something I will read to my already math-apprehensive niece. Adults may be able to extract business lessons out of the story, as one reviewer wrote, but if the intent is to teach math concepts to young children, the message should be that math is useful, valuable, and fun. On a less important note, another reason I am disappointed in the book is that the rhyming meter is quite poor.

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