In the fourth DATA Set adventure, the DATA Set race to deprogram an army of robots before they take over Newtonberg Elementary School.
One morning, Mrs. Bell, the science teacher, challenges the students to invent their own robots. The class builds their best creations and on presentation day, everything goes well…until all the robots start malfunctioning! Now it’s up to the DATA Set and their new classmate, Olive Thompson, to deprogram these machines before an army of robots take over the entire school!
With easy-to-read language and illustrations on almost every page, The DATA Set chapter books are perfect for emerging readers.
Meredith Rusu is a children’s book author and editor specializing in titles based on television and movies. She has written more than one hundred books from preschool to young adult for licenses such as The LEGO Movie, LEGO Ninjago, Peppa Pig, Disney Princess, American Girl, and Star Wars. She is also the author of The DATA Set chapter book series under the pen name Ada Hopper. Meredith lives in New Jersey with her husband and two young sons who provide much of the inspiration for her writing. When she isn’t working, Meredith enjoys karaoke, spending time with family, and going on the occasional adventure or two.
Another good book in this series. Great imagination and creativity. Fun and fast-paced. For the whole family (or just you). A shorter book that definitely packs a lot of stuff in a small amount of time. Enjoy!
They meet a new friend, Olive, and the DATA set becomes a quartet. They have to build a robot as a class assignment. As expected, something goes awry when Dr. Bunsen gets involved. They corral the AI robots and save the school.
Great book if you are looking to get your 2nd through 6th grade son into reading chapter books! It’s quick, fast paced, has lots of robots, and action. You do not need to have read the other books in the series to under stand it. AR level: 3.6 - Pts. 1.0
Just discovered this series and plan to go back and read #1-3. Seems very appropriate. The print is large and the vocab is easy. Perhaps this could qualify as a hi-lo? Has a lot of tech in the plot. Would be a good choice for a computer-obsessed boy who is a weak reader.