Search

Best Books About Rain

If you are going to teach outdoors, you’ll need to make your peace with some rainy days. Rather than seeing rainy days as yucky weather to tolerate, why not look at rainy days as an opportunity to explore and play and learn about the water cycle in a hands on way? The books listed here are recommended anchor texts, water cycle books, and a few of my favourite books about rain, to inspire playful, joyful, learning outdoors!

Water Cycle Books about Rain

These books support cross-curricular learning about water cycles. Even if water cycles are not a curricular content area for your learners this year, these books provide insight into water conservation, efforts to preserve and protect watersheds, and show how kids can make a difference in water conservation globally.

Water is Water by Miranda Paul and Jason Chin

Water Dance by Thomas Locker

Sometimes Rain by Meg Fleming and Diana Sudyka

I am the Rain by John Paterson

A Drop Around the World by Barbara Shaw McKinney and Michael S. Maydak

All the Water in the World by George Ella Lyon

One well: The Story of Water on Earth by Rochelle Strauss and Rosemary Woods

Pitter and Patter Martha Sullivan and Cathy Morrison

It’s Raining! by Gail Gibbons

Hey, Water by Antoinette Portis

A Drop of Water: A Book of Science and Wonder by Walter Wick

RELATED POST: WATER CYCLE INQUIRY

Imaginative Play in the Rain Books

These books support normalizing rainy day play as a fun and interesting opportunity for emergent and joyful learning outdoors. RELATED POST: RAINY DAY PLAY IDEAS

Worm Weather by Jean Taft and Matt Hunt

Who likes rain? by Wong Herbert Yee

Float by Daniel Miyares

On a Magical Do Nothing Day by Beatrice Alemagna

Split Splat by Amy Gibson and Steve Bjorkmanwaiting out the storm

What Does The Rain Play? by Nancy White Carlstrom

Books that use rain as a metaphor for other life lessons

The Big Umbrella by Amy June Bates (kindness, inclusion, hospitality)

Look, it’s raining by Mathieu Pierloot and Maria Dek (looking closely, independent exploration) 

Rain by Linda Ashman and Christian Robinson (perspective taking)

The Pink Umbrella by Amelie Callot and Geneviève Godbout (Weather specific depression, friendships)

The Water Princess by Susan Verde (access to clean water, human rights, resiliency)

See you outside!

**Please note that this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase anything I may receive a small commission to keep this blog going. Here’s a link to the affiliate disclosure policy.

Search

Related Posts

Follow Me on Social!

Facebook

Instagram

 

Twitter

Join the seasonal newsletter

don't miss out! subscribe now.

Your information is safe. I will never share it with anyone.