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J**T
Lazy, Deeply Flawed "Guide" that will leave you lost. Its "Unofficial" for a Reason.
I'm really confused by the other people who reviewed this book. Were we reading/exploring the same pages?I use LEGO in the classroom almost every day. Schools and school districts hire my company to bring LEGO-based learning and play into their classrooms before, during, and after school. I'm always looking for new things to do, so when I saw this book, I hoped I could find something great in it. I was sorely disappointed.I can summarize this book's projects into a few categories, which, unfortunately, the author didn't even do for us. That's right, my first major complaint about this book is that the author didn't organize the projects in this book at all. "Graphing by Color" is next to "Hidden Memory Game", which is next to "Bug Anatomy" which is next to "Learning Place Value". Why? Wouldn't it have made sense for the author to categorize the book's content, perhaps by grouping math related ideas together, science together, etc? Well, the author didn't do this. You literally need to go through it page by page hoping to find something applicable.Which brings me to my second point, you won't find much. A majority of the books' content merely replaces pencils and paper and/or other manipulatives with LEGO. I'm all for using manipulatives in learning, but the projects in this book are nothing new. Instead of using counting bears or beads, this author is saying "use LEGO instead, be brilliant!" I'm sorry, the only brilliant thing here is that the author repackaged 100 year old projects pioneered by Maria Montessori with LEGO and said "pay me lots of money to buy my book".Given the tight budget educators are on, what also baffles me is how this author recommends doing stuff with LEGO that destroys it. Hence my third huge complaint with this book: the author lazily takes the concept of LEGO as a modeling tool to the extreme by replacing other more appropriate materials with LEGO in projects that will destroy the LEGO. For instance, on the the book's cover she advertises an erupting volcano. Inside the book, she suggests you "build" a volcano and then douse your LEGO in baking soda and vinegar. What she doesn't go on the conclude is that you'll now need to throw away $20 worth of LEGO after a 10 second eruption and that $3 in play dough would've accomplished the same thing. Same goes for projects like "Slime" where you mix clear glue and starch, then throw LEGO pieces in it. (why?) Anyone who loves LEGO knows even to avoid getting it wet (wet LEGO is heaven for mold/mildew growth), which the author suggests in several places, include "Displacement Experiment". Other crazy projects the author suggests: using LEGO bricks to make stamps (by dumping LEGO in paint), baking LEGO parts into bath bombs, giving minifigures a bath in soap and water, rolling minifigure parts into clay, freezing minifures into ice cubes, several projects where you write on bricks with a permanent marker, and more. Just... no. No one in their right mind buys expensive LEGO to destroy it. If you agree with me on that point, you've just made 1/4 of this book useless to you.My fourth major complaint is this book is terribly repetitive. The second of the "100+ projects" is "Writing Your Name with Bricks". Later on you'll find "Build the Alphabet" and in another 30ish pages in you'll find "Build Numbers", while towards the end a project kids build clocks (digital included) to practice telling time, which, you guessed it, uses numbers built of out LEGO. Four of the 100+ projects are basically the same thing. Yes, by now you should be rolling your eyes with me.What is good in this book was already well-known by this LEGO educator. Building things like ZIP-Line vehicles and Balloon Powered cards, etc. But therein lies my next complaint: the author has some projects that are LEGO tried-and-true but does not explain to the teacher how to teach it. In the ZIP line project she says, "Use this LEGO zipline to learn about friction, gravity, planes, and inclines." How? I know the answer, because I'm a seasoned teacher, but there isn't much value in this explanation. You know where there is value? In the hundreds of free lesson plans online or in Pinterest that demonstrate zipline projects and explain the science of the inclined plane and its role as one of the six classical machines.I was so annoyed when I sat down to read this book, but I'm not one to return something very often. So, I had the idea that I'd give it away to one of the classroom teachers I work with, thinking "maybe they'll find value in it." The first teacher I offered it to rejected it. "I bought that book and returned it. Its useless," he said. I agree. So I'm asking Amazon for a refund now too.Look elsewhere for better books. Check out the Klutz press books for more learning and included LEGO. Check out some of the technical books on Mindstorms and LEGO engineering. If you really want what's in this book, still don't buy it. Go on Pinterest, anything good in this book is already on there. I can promise you that.
P**K
Need simple instructions
I was very disappointed in this book, I was hoping for something simpler that my grandchildren could use. We have a collection of LEGO that goes back 45 years and the toy box (wooden) has been passed around the family. Unfortunately a lot of the instructions have gone missing. I am looking for easy step by step instructions like the ones that come with the LEGO kits. I have 7 grandchildren all ranging from 9 months to 8yrs old that love playing with them and will for many years to come.
S**M
Love this!
Using some of these ideas as choice activities for students that are virtually learning in Kindergarten this year.
A**Y
I enjoyed this book
I enjoyed this book, however most activities could be found online for free. It’s nice having everything all together in one place though. Most the activities are for the younger kiddos.
A**B
Nice
Provides ideas to build step by step with children. Helps with attention span.
N**A
Great condition!
My autistic grandson has made huge leaps and bounds since getting his first set of Legos. Now he can learn more with the games in this book.It is awesome.
V**A
Interesting
Now, I need to find generic legos!
C**
Great ideas!
Lots of cute ideas that we actually used! The balancing scale was our favorite! I guess now that we have Pinterest, a book like this is a moot point, but I liked having it all in one place!
C**N
Buen producto
Buen producto
L**E
Four Stars
Some great ideas!
N**S
Terrible printing quality, but an ok book.
We are totally mad about Lego in this house so the idea of the book was amazing! Unfortunately the quality of it isn't. The printing quality is terrible and my home printer would have done a far better job. So if you are after a quality book be warned.The ideas in it range from ok to pretty good. A few are great although they are lacking in deeper thought.It's also quite pricey for what you get but for a Lego lover it's ok if you don't have high expectations. All-in-all I decided to keep the book, simply so I don't have to print the ideas off the internet.
N**E
Praxisnah und gute Ideensammlung
Gute Ideen, sehr praxisorientiert. Manche Anleitungen sind trotz guter Englischkenntnisse etwas schwer ins Deutsche zu übertragen, aber es finden sich für jedes Alter gute Übungen. Leider geht das Buch nicht sehr auf Gruppenübungen ein, sondern es geht mehr um 1:1-Übungen.
B**R
Great for our boys to encourage educational play through Lego ...
Great for our boys to encourage educational play through Lego and has been useful for my eldest at school with his 1:1 as he's on the spectrum and struggles to engage with classroom learning
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 days ago