Technology Tip:
Top 5 great apps for your
children
With over half a million apps in the iTunes Store, and close to that
number in the Android marketplace, it is hard to find the best kid apps worth
downloading. Sure, you can see the Top 10 lists in iTunes, but frequently the
real gems for kids never make those lists.
Here is a look at
five apps that are unique and special. Some
are popular, but others you may never have heard of. One of which is even free. But they all are worth downloading.
Painting with
Time
Red Hill Studios, best for ages 5-up, Free, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
Red Hill Studios, best for ages 5-up, Free, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
This fascinating
app lets kids explore how things change over time. Kids choose from tubes of paint that represent
different intervals of time. For a
landscape photo, the tubes are labeled fall, winter, spring, and summer. After selecting a tube of time, kids run
their finger over the photo to magically transform it into the selected
season. For a photo of a man growing a
beard, the tubes represent the starting time, 10 days, 20 days and 30
days. You can also see a woman age, a
glacier retreat and the tide come in. Funded
in part from a grant from the National Science
Foundation, this if the first in a series of apps that lets you learn by
"painting" with time.
Hogworld: Gnarts Adventure
Snow Castle, best for ages 4-8, $4.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, Android, Kindle Fire, Mac App. 4 stars (out of 4)
Snow Castle, best for ages 4-8, $4.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, Android, Kindle Fire, Mac App. 4 stars (out of 4)
Combining an
animated movie-like experience with interactive book app elements, kids listen,
play, and watch as this magical story about a brave little hog-bunny named
Gnart unfolds. Gnart has a tusk-ache,
and he needs to travel quickly across the woods to the dentist so that he can
make it back to his friend's surprise birthday party. The trip across the dark wood seems a little
scary to Gnart, but his friend Bibi the bee goes with him. It turns out to be filled with adventure,
including falling down a well, riding a mine cart and swimming across a bog on
the back of a frog. With stunning 3D
visuals, a varied soundtrack, great voice acting and interactions that are
seamlessly incorporated into the story, kids will be transported into another
world. It is one of the most sophisticated yet accessible book apps published
so far.
Cinderella -
Nosy Crow Animated Picture Book
Nosy Crow, best for ages 4-8, $7.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
Nosy Crow, best for ages 4-8, $7.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
This modern
rendition of the classic fairytale demonstrates just how far children's book
apps have evolved. While this app can
read the story out loud or kids can choose to read it themselves, it is the
playfulness within the story that makes it delightful. Kids help Cinderella clean the kitchen and
dress the stepsisters for the ball, they open the confetti-filled invitation
from the king and assist the fairy godmother in creating the pumpkin
carriage. But it is the special bells
and whistles that set this book app apart, including having your child's image
appear inside all mirrors hanging on the walls (if read on an iPad 2). By
tapping on the characters, they talk to you, move the story along and suggest
other things for you to explore. Reading this fairytale is a charming
experience filled with wonder.
Out-A-Bout
Fred Rogers Center at Saint Vincent College, best for ages 3-5, $1.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad. 3.5 stars (out of 4)
Fred Rogers Center at Saint Vincent College, best for ages 3-5, $1.99, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad. 3.5 stars (out of 4)
This unique app
encourages physical play while also teaching early reading skills. It creates a
fun parent-child interaction because it asks the parent to take photos of the
child doing active things like jumping three times while pointing at the sky or
pretending to be a gorilla swinging from a tree branch. After snapping 14
photos of kids doing silly things, the app places the photos inside a
pre-developed story about your child befriending a monkey. Some of the photos contain superimposed art
images like the one where your child appears to be cradling the cartoony monkey
in his arms. The app also allows kids to
record their name, and uses this recording while reading the story out loud and
highlighting words. You can even e-mail
the photo storybook to yourself, grandparents or friends.
Auryn - Van Gogh and the Sunflowers
Auryn Inc., best for ages 6-11, 99 cents, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
Auryn Inc., best for ages 6-11, 99 cents, iPad. 4 stars (out of 4)
Drawing from
actual events in Van Gogh's life, Laurence Anholt's book weaves a story about
how a little boy named Camille befriends the artist. Camille and his family
appeared in paintings created by Van Gogh.
This interactive story reveals how, although Van Gogh painted vibrant
paintings of the village people and its surroundings, the townspeople of
Camille's village thought the painter was odd and ostracized him. But Camille and his family accepted Van Gogh and
saw the genius of his work. The book
contains 19 puzzles which kids play to bring the characters within the book to
life. By tapping illustrations of
characters, kids can activate a mode that lets them see the gears and
mechanisms that would make the character move.
By tapping again on the character, the mechanisms spring apart so that
kids can connect them once again. When they do, the character will now appear
to animate in the story. Kids can also use simple art tools to repaint the
characters so that they appear on the pages how they would like them to look. With soothing background music and the
ability to be transported to a museum for closer inspection of Van Gogh's work,
this is a great way for kids to learn about this artist and 10 of his famous
paintings.
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