Daily Life = La vida diaria
Daily Life = La vida diaria
A day at work
Around the world, people do all kinds of jobs. Every day people go to work in offices, stores, factories, and hospitals.
FRANCE
Many people work producing and selling food. French people are known for making delicious cheeses!
LIBYA
Libya has many hospitals, mainly in the big cities. Workers include nurses, doctors, and cleaners. Surgeons are doctors who repair parts of the body.
There are six books in the “Comparing Countries” series: Daily Life, Festivals and Celebrations, Games and Entertainment, Houses and Homes, School Life and Towns and Villages. “Comparing Countries” is a dual-language English/Spanish series. Although Wikipedia ranks Spanish as the second most spoken language in the world, these books would be much more useful in Canadian school libraries if the books were in English/French. Schools that include a Spanish-speaking community may find this series useful in a dual language section of their library. Due to my lack of Spanish fluency, I cannot confirm the accuracy of the Spanish translation.
Each book begins with an invitation to “go around the world” to compare different aspects of life that students will be able to relate to easily. In “Daily Life, students will compare families, weather, clothes, transportation, school, work, shopping, food, chores, vacations, and home life.
Each double-page spread includes two columns of colour-coded text comparing two countries. For example, “Food for the table” compares growing crops and raising animals in Great Britain and Tanzania. A simple map identifies the location of the two countries.
The books all contain a bilingual table of contents, index, and glossary. Information in these books is stated in manageable and organized sections with examples from a wide range of locations, both rural and urban. The text size is large and reader-friendly, and the information is enhanced by many colourful photos. The page layout is very attractive.
These books are worth considering for your young researchers learning about communities at home and around the world, especially if you have an immigrant or local Spanish-speaking school community. If you don’t have a need for dual-language English/Spanish books, you may want to save your library shelf space for some English/French books, if you can find them.
Dr. Suzanne Pierson is a former teacher-librarian and instructor at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario.