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Here is Jane Andrews' most sought-after classical tail for children: The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on a Round Ball That Floats in the Air, the most popular of the Massachusetts schoolteacher's books for children, which teach geography, history, and natural history through stories, depicting the earth and its multicultural aspect of its inhabitants in not only an educational, but also a captivating way. The book appeals to the young reader's wonder and curiosity. As a result, it educates, entertains, develops and increases the reading interest in children.

Produktbeschreibung
Here is Jane Andrews' most sought-after classical tail for children: The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on a Round Ball That Floats in the Air, the most popular of the Massachusetts schoolteacher's books for children, which teach geography, history, and natural history through stories, depicting the earth and its multicultural aspect of its inhabitants in not only an educational, but also a captivating way. The book appeals to the young reader's wonder and curiosity. As a result, it educates, entertains, develops and increases the reading interest in children.
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Autorenporträt
Jane Andrews was an American writer and educator who lived from December 1, 1833, until July 15, 1887. She was able to establish a small elementary school in her home in 1860, where she taught J. Lewis Howe, Alice Stone Blackwell, and Ethel Parton. Her teaching, which was influenced by Mann's theories, was innovative for its time since it placed a strong emphasis on student experimentation, observation, and participation in the learning process as well as societal responsibility. Her health eventually forced her to close the school in 1885 after 25 years. A number of well-known children's novels were born from her lessons. Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball That Floats in the Air (1861), her debut book, is a compilation of tales about seven young sisters who reside in various strange locations. The book was so well-liked that it was translated into Chinese, German, and Japanese and sold close to 500,000 copies over the following century. A sequel, Each and All: Seven Little Sisters Prove Their Sisterhood (1877), and a novel comparable to it, Ten Boys Who Lived on the Road From Long Ago to Now, about boys living in various historical eras, were published after it (1886).