• Essential Montessori Numeracy Skills – Kindergarten 2 (Let’s Solve Series)

    Suitable for children between 2 and 6 years.

    Montessori Numeracy Skills (Let’s Solve Series) are workbooks designed to provide your ward with engaging exercises and rich activities to encourage the child to use and apply what he/she knows in numeracy to solve problems.

    These books are designed to assist the child acquire, early mathematical ideas through activities designed to arouse his/her interest and enjoyment.

    Children learn by doing with freedom to experiment through their various activities. It is important that even you children at the nursery level (stage) should also have enjoyment and freedom when, working. We, however, encourage involvement of parents, guardians and teachers to inculcate in their wards the love for numeracy so as to make them geniuses in Mathematics.

  • Ma Yensua Mfantse (Kasa na Amambra) Ahyɛse Buukuu 4

    Age 9-12 years 

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Mfantse teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2019 Standards-Based Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Oral Language (Listening & Speaking), Reading, Writing & Composition and Writing Conventions/Usage.

    Content is age appropriate and language is carefully selected and reviewed by language consultants to ensure it is suitable for pupils in each grade.

  • Essential Montessori Literary Skills – Kindergarten 1 (Let’s Read Series)

    Suitable for children between 2 and 6 years.

    Montessori Literacy Skills (Let’s Read Series) are workbooks designed to provide your ward with engaging exercises and rich activities to encourage the child to use and apply what he/she knows in Literacy to solve problems.

    These books are designed to assist the child acquire early English ideas through activities designed to arouse his/her interest and enjoyment.

    Children learn by doing with freedom to experiment through their various activities. It is important that even younger children at the nursery level (stage) should also have enjoyment and freedom when working. I, however, encourage Parents, Guardians and Teachers involvement to inculcate in their wards the love for Literacy so as to make them geniuses in the English Subject.

  • Kwadwoan Mathematics for Basic 3

    Kwadwoan Mathematics for Basic 3 solidifies the foundation of Mathematics built by the previous books. Through its easy-to-follow and effective learning strategies, mathematical concepts that were otherwise cumbersome and unexciting are treated with so much simplicity to make any learner appreciate the ease of learning Mathematics.

    Each lesson is accompanied with numerous activities, which expand and strengthens understanding of fundamental concepts.

  • Kwadwoan Mathematics Workbook for Basic 2

    This carefully structured workbook has been developed to provide more practice for learners. This is aimed at enriching their understanding of the principles of the subject. Acquiring Mathematics skills and deepening understanding can only be done effectively through practice. This workbook is perfect for that!

  • Kwadwoan Mathematics for Basic 2

    Second in the series, this book reinforces lessons learnt in Basic 1. Each lesson is accompanied with numerous activities, which expand and strengthens understanding of fundamental concepts.

    Written by experienced Maths educators, it is no wonder that the book’s approach meets the requirements of the National Council for Curriculum Assessment (NaCCA).

  • Kwadwoan French Book 4

    Kwadwoan French 4 is an extraordinary resource for learners at Key Phase 3. This brilliantly written book helps learners glide through the higher levels of acquiring the French language. Culturally relevant and practical contexts are used to ensure that learners understand the oral and written aspects of the language. Part of its strength is the accompanying audio to help learners grasp the language when spoken.

  • Bookset: Ladybird Readers Levels 1 – 6 (35 books)

    Age Range: 5 – 8 years

    Ladybird Readers is a graded reading series of traditional tales, popular characters, modern stories, and non-fiction, written for young learners of English as a foreign or second language.

    Beautifully illustrated and carefully written, the series combines the best of Ladybird content with the structured language progression that will help children develop their reading, writing, speaking, listening and critical thinking skills.

    Recommended for children aged 4+, the six levels of Readers and Activity Books follow the CEFR framework (Pre-A1 to A2) and include language activities that help develop key skills and provide preparation for the Cambridge English: Young Learners (YLE) exams.

    1,330.001,400.00
  • Bookset: Ladybird Grammar Workbooks 1 – 6 and Ladybird Dictionary (7 books)

    Age Range: 4 – 11  years

    Ladybird Grammar Workbooks will help young learners aged 4+ to understand and practise the basics of English Grammar. These books are carefully graded and help children prepare for the ‘Cambridge English: Young Readers’ exams.

    The Ladybird Dictionary will help young learners 4 – 11 to find and understand words in English. This engaging dictionary is informed by the Cambridge Young Learners word lists, and features an introduction on how to use the dictionary, an A-Z section, and a picture dictionary at the back.

  • My First English Workbook 1

    Suitable for children between 5 and 8 years.

    This product is an advanced form of our literacy series. Contains three, four and five letter words in progression pivoted around each vowel sound, also has simple comprehension exercises based on these words.

  • Logical Reasoning Book 5

    Age Range: 6 to 12 years

    Logical Reasoning is a series of six books designed to improve logical skills of children. The series is carefully planned to include a variety of questions with colourful charts, maps and diagrams. It will help children to develop rational thinking and adopt a systematic approach towards problem solving. Additional questions in form of practice tests with appropriate problem solving strategy and answers are provided along with each book in the series.

  • Logical Reasoning Book 3

    Age Range: 6 to 12 years

    Logical Reasoning is a series of six books designed to improve logical skills of children. The series is carefully planned to include a variety of questions with colourful charts, maps and diagrams. It will help children to develop rational thinking and adopt a systematic approach towards problem solving. Additional questions in form of practice tests with appropriate problem solving strategy and answers are provided along with each book in the series.

  • Akuapem Kasasua Nwoma Book 4 (Akuapem Twi)

    Suitable for children from 6 years and above, learning the Twi (Akuapim) language. Having books in one’s mother tongue is an essential tool in teaching young children to read.

  • The Essential Writer’s Guide – From the Hilltop

    On March 16, 2026, when I received a couriered copy of Kofi Otutu Adu Labi’s latest book, THE ESSENTIAL WRITER’S GUIDE’, my plate was already full for the month: there were too many to-dos crying for priority.
    My decision, therefore, was to put it on ice for a while, for if I knew Kofi’s books, they were un-put-downable, so gripping that once I start reading, every other activity is put on hold.
    But a name caught my eye. And then another! A book foreworded by the venerable academic, Professor Akosua Adomako Ampofo, and endorsed by Yaw Nsarko, the well credentialed thought leader, was not one that could wait. Without exception, Kofi’s books are packed with wisdom and are well written, and if these two personalities have put their reputation on the line for , that’s more than one reason why all other things should wait.
    And wait, everything else did, till I turned the last of this 119-page masterpiece.
    The pace at which ‘Essential Writer’s Guide’ is written suggests that Kofi is enjoying every minute of retirement. It is serious content (I call it textbook) written at an unhurried pace, albeit deliberately, by a teacher who is determined that each word counts and must sink in. Didactic is the word, and for good reasons.
    The author becomes a student of his own instruction. To get home his message, he instructs the ‘students’ to “use stories”; “keep it simple”, and is at pains to recommend that “a conversational style of writing keeps the reader engaged and immersed”. As every writer – from Shakespeare to Achebe to Soyinka – will stress, “The passion with which you write should infect your reader with a desire to stay with you to the end”.
    Kofi just found himself another job: he will soon be teaching WRITING in a school near him. Does he qualify? What a question! With 17th books under his belt, each of which has become a best-seller in its own right, Kofi eminently qualifies to teach a thing or two to cub writers.
    The proof of the fufu is in the eating; it is here, in ‘Essential Guide’.
    To those guilty of the sin of procrastination, he poses a question: “Why have you not written that book?”. From experience, he proceeds to provide the diagnosis: they have fallen into the writer’s biggest pitfall, namely “producing books in your head”.
    From Chapter 2, the lecture starts in earnest. Briefly tackling genres, he touches on style and some sine qua non of good writing, recommending simplicity, the conversational approach, the imperative of suspense, especially for fiction writing.
    Next is content creation. As a rule of thumb, he recommends “paying attention to your surroundings”. He advises: “Make it a habit to move beyond just looking at things. You will see the story or lesson if you make it a point to see, and not just look”. An essential habit is to take notes, he recommends, insisting that “the shortest pencil is superior to the longest memory.”
    For writing that is arresting, be it fiction or not, the use of imagery is strongly recommended to keep readers glued. From one of his own previous works, the author illustrates how imagery breathes life into content.
    Chapter 5 is essential reading. A take-away from the chapter is the warning: “Don’t pay too much attention to the initial nonsense you write. The important thing is to write something every day. It is a raw draft that can be refined later”.
    On Page 46 is another important essential guide: “That first sentence”! s every writer will confess, the first sentence is “the most difficult part of writing”. Many a budding writer will one day remember this essential tip and go looking for Kofi to give him his “stone”, as we say in Ghana.
    The book does not set out to teach grammar or lexis and structure but if you have a strong desire to write and you possess the right foundation, this book is a must have. It demystifies writing, but most importantly, it deals with the two demons of procrastination and laziness.
    To be successful, he counsels, the writer must be a good reader. To be a good reader, he counsels against radio, mobile phone and television addiction. “If you live with headphones on, always listening to music or a podcast, then you are not ever giving yourself time to just think. And if you cannot think, then you cannot write.”
    Next time you attend a Christian event, look out for Kofi Otutu Adu Labi. If, from where he is seated, you find him scribbling furiously on a note pad, approach him, but do so gently, on tip toe: he is gathering nuggets out of a goldmine of stories!
    ‘Essential Guide’, like all of Kofi’s other books, is written from “the hilltop.” From what I know about the author, his personal life and the rich content of his works, ‘hilltop’ is not necessarily a geographical location.
    It is, as the dictionary says, a “a literal, elevated perspective where one gains a better understanding of life, similar to seeing the ‘big picture’ from a summit, allowing for reflection on life’s journey.”
    Here is this reviewer’s call. To the Hilltop Academy, let all budding writers make a beeline.

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