Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table)
Greg Roza
Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table)
Age Rating, Reading Level & Content Guide
by Greg Roza
The text is written at a 2nd grade reading level, the subject matter is intended for younger children (ages 5–8), and the content is gentle with no concerning themes.
We may earn a commission from these links. Bookshop.org supports independent bookstores with every purchase.
About This Book
Feel the smooth, cool touch of titanium as it gleams like silver in the sunlight. Imagine where this metal hides in the world and how it's used to make strong airplanes and shiny jewelry. Discover the magic of titanium and why it’s one of the most special elements on the periodic table.
Themes
Quick Assessment
This early reader nonfiction book introduces young children to titanium, explaining its properties, natural sources, and common uses. Written at a Grade 2 reading level, it supports early science learning with clear, age-appropriate language and vivid illustrations. Suitable for ages 5-8, it provides a gentle introduction to chemistry without complex or sensitive content.
Why we rated Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table) 7C
Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table) is written at a Level 2 reading level across 48 pages. Strong independent readers around grade 3.0 can typically handle this book on their own; with parent or teacher support, Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table) works for readers up to grade 4.0.
We rate Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table) as 7C ("Clear") because the content sits in the "Gentle" range — no conflict beyond everyday childhood experiences. Across our four dimensions (emotional, physical, social, thematic) the book reads as evenly gentle; no single dimension stands out as a concern.
No specific content flags were raised by community reviewers, which is consistent with the gentle intensity score.
Thematically, Titanium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table) explores science & nature - chemistry, juvenile nonfiction, and children: grades 4-6 — these threads give the book room to mean different things to different readers.
Good fit for
- ✓ Children in the Ages 5-8 range — the maturity and attention span match the story's pacing.
- ✓ Patient readers who enjoy slower, character-driven stories.
- ✓ Kids drawn to stories about science & nature - chemistry, juvenile nonfiction, children: grades 4-6.
- ✓ Curious kids who prefer real-world topics over made-up stories.
Maybe not for
- ! Reluctant readers who need a fast hook — the pacing here rewards patience.
For Parents
Content Intensity
7C — ClearNo conflict beyond everyday childhood experiences. Safe for sensitive readers.
Was our "Gentle" content intensity rating accurate for this book?
Reading Insights
Hook Factor
1/10A steady, thoughtful read that rewards patient readers.
Discussion Potential
1/10A lighter read — great for independent enjoyment.
Book DNA
Multi-dimensional content fingerprint
Similar Books
Based on content and theme analysis
Tin (Elements)
Leon Gray
Tin (Elements)
Leon Gray
Tungsten (Elements)
Kerry Turrell
Tungsten (Elements)
Kerry Turrell
Titanium
Greg Roza
Titanium
Greg Roza
Beryllium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table: Set 3)
Rick Adair
Beryllium (Understanding the Elements of the Periodic Table: Set 3)
Rick Adair
The Periodic Table (True Books)
Salvatore Tocci
The Periodic Table (True Books)
Salvatore Tocci
Elements
Brian J. Knapp
Elements
Brian J. Knapp
Details
Book Length
- ISBN
- 9781404214125
- Pages
- 48
- Publisher
- The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc
- Published
- January 30, 2008
- Type
- Nonfiction