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Unofficial Minecraft STEM Lab for Kids: Family-Friendly Projects for Exploring Concepts in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math: 16 Flexibound – Illustrated, 24 April 2018
by
John Miller
(Author),
Chris Fornell Scott
(Author)
John Miller
(Author)
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Product details
- Publisher : Quarry Books; Illustrated edition (24 April 2018)
- Language : English
- Flexibound : 144 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1631594834
- ISBN-13 : 978-1631594830
- Reading age : 7 - 10 years
- Dimensions : 22.23 x 1.27 x 22.23 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 15,803 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Product description
Review
If you have multiple Minecraft lovers in your household, it should be able to withstand several read-throughs. - Christ Centered Gamer
One of the main things that I like about this book is that each of the six chapters begins with an activity that is completed without the use of a digital device. Next come related activities in the creative mode of Minecraft. [...] Recommended. - School Library Connection
Perfect for memorable family nights or sensational classroom fun, guided quests and labs encourage creative thinking and collaborative communication with dozens of activities designed to engage children, teens, and adults, both on- and offline. - Foreword Reviews, starred review
The book is simply amazing, and teachers will find a chart in the back of the book with how each project relates to Classroom Standards. But parents and camp instructors (like me) are going to find this book an invaluable resource for using Minecraft to teach (or sneak in) some real-world projects and hands-on activities. - GeekDad
This book is amazing on so many levels. It really knows how to draw the kids into it and capture their interest. The book walks the reader through fascinating labs that you can do in Minecraft, thereby utilizing the computerized world as an educational platform. But, then it also has really cool labs to do in the real world. - KellysThoughtsOnThings.com
This is a great book for encouraging Minecraft-obsessed kids to try something different in the game and getting them involved in STEM in the real-world too. - GeekMom
This is so cool! This [book has] hands on activities (not touching the screen) to make science connections to Minecraft. - Teacher Tech with Alice Keeler
One of the main things that I like about this book is that each of the six chapters begins with an activity that is completed without the use of a digital device. Next come related activities in the creative mode of Minecraft. [...] Recommended. - School Library Connection
Perfect for memorable family nights or sensational classroom fun, guided quests and labs encourage creative thinking and collaborative communication with dozens of activities designed to engage children, teens, and adults, both on- and offline. - Foreword Reviews, starred review
The book is simply amazing, and teachers will find a chart in the back of the book with how each project relates to Classroom Standards. But parents and camp instructors (like me) are going to find this book an invaluable resource for using Minecraft to teach (or sneak in) some real-world projects and hands-on activities. - GeekDad
This book is amazing on so many levels. It really knows how to draw the kids into it and capture their interest. The book walks the reader through fascinating labs that you can do in Minecraft, thereby utilizing the computerized world as an educational platform. But, then it also has really cool labs to do in the real world. - KellysThoughtsOnThings.com
This is a great book for encouraging Minecraft-obsessed kids to try something different in the game and getting them involved in STEM in the real-world too. - GeekMom
This is so cool! This [book has] hands on activities (not touching the screen) to make science connections to Minecraft. - Teacher Tech with Alice Keeler
About the Author
John Miller holds multiple and single subject credentials in history and science. He has been a middle school teacher for over 20 years and has taught every subject in grades 6-8. He also holds a Masters degree from San Diego State University in Educational Technology and Instructional Design and is a Google Certified Teacher, San Luis Obispo County CUE (Computer Using Educators) Board President, and a CUE Lead Learner. John is a featured presenter at conferences and workshops around the country. He loves teaching 21st-century skills to his students, and his passions include student blogging, e-learning, Minecraft in the classroom, photography, Apple, and Google. John is a contributor to Minecraft in the Classroom (Peachpit Press, 10/14). He lives in Paso Robles, California.Chris Fornell Scott works to design the classroom culture and environment. He is an authorized Google Education Trainer, Google Certified Teacher, President of Santa Barbara CUE, CUE Lead Learner and a CK-12 Champion. He loves using Design Thinking, Agile project management process in the class, and seeing his students enter the flow of learning. He loves to help others in their educational journey. Youll find Chris at conferences around the world presenting on classroom culture, technology, and design. He lives in Santa Maria, California.
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Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
164 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews from other countries

KH
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great book for minecraft lovers
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 June 2019Verified Purchase
My two Minecraft lovers really enjoy this book and keep coming back to it!

Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great product
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 31 December 2019Verified Purchase
Great product

Brenda J. Mcquade
3.0 out of 5 stars
We thought this was a lab set, not a book
Reviewed in Canada on 19 December 2019Verified Purchase
We bought this for our 11 year old grandson. It wasn't clear on the description that it was only a book. The title was confusing as it made us think there were projects and pieces for the projects included in a kit.

Dale Trepanier
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good book
Reviewed in Canada on 15 May 2020Verified Purchase
Bought for my grandson...he loves them

ankashai
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not for beginners
Reviewed in the United States on 27 August 2020Verified Purchase
This wasn't quite what I was hoping for. I had been hoping for something I could use to help create activities for my students to complete using Minecraft, but the instructions were rather lacking. I realize that we want to encourage creativity and exploration, but none of the activities gave me any 'instruction' -- just ideas for what I could do, like ' make a light that turns on and off with the sun! '.
It doesn't explain any version of how to do that for most of the book, and where it does the pictures aren't particularly clear.
If your kid is already a Minecraft expert and you're looking at challenges for them, this may be good, but if you're buying it to learn how to do things in Minecraft, look elsewhere.
It doesn't explain any version of how to do that for most of the book, and where it does the pictures aren't particularly clear.
If your kid is already a Minecraft expert and you're looking at challenges for them, this may be good, but if you're buying it to learn how to do things in Minecraft, look elsewhere.
6 people found this helpful
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