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WEB DESIGN FOR KIDS by John C. Vanden-Heuvel Sr.

WEB DESIGN FOR KIDS

by John C. Vanden-Heuvel Sr. ; illustrated by Cristian Turdera

Pub Date: May 3rd, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-4998-0311-2
Publisher: Little Bee Books

A lift-the-flap board-book introduction to HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

This brightly colored, 12-page board book seeks to introduce young readers to different types of code. Its three sections each consist of two double-page spreads: the first introduces a type of code, and the second gives various informational tidbits. The strongest section is the last one, JavaScript, which offers copious definitions and a code language that in itself is the most self-explanatory. The second section, CSS, features trivia displayed in an amusing way—namely a “Fonts” flap, under which codes for the font selection and style used on the flap are written. The initial section, HTML, the most basic webpage coding, is a bit of a train wreck. Certain parts use insufficient code (for instance, the “<a>” flap is useless without any demonstration of it in action, and the “Attributes” box references quotation marks that don’t appear, which will puzzle readers unfamiliar enough to know to look for them in the CSS section—i.e., all babies). Worst, factually incorrect information is presented—the “<img>” flap claims that an image “must have two attributes: src and alt”; while all images have a source—src—the alternative text, alt, is not necessary for the code to function.

Despite cheery design, too abstract and uncontextualized to make code inviting for any age group, least of all the babies and toddlers for whom board books are typically published.

(Board book. 3-6)