A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world. ~Oscar Wilde
Showing posts with label ikid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ikid. Show all posts

Thursday, November 1, 2012

ipad favorites

I would be remiss if I said that the only thing we do with our ipad is let our daughter play educational games. Um, no. We let her watch her fair share of Netflix while she colors and plays play dough. And rides in the car. And at bedtime. We have favorite shows, like Barney, Sesame Street, Super Why, and the Wonder Pests Pets. 


She wants to play with the toy, too, though, not just stare mindlessly at it. We usually spend about an hour a day playing apps. One app itself does not usually last very long; she likes to bounce back and forth between several. I'm going to do a quickie review on my favorite three today. &also note that they wouldn't be my favorites if the littles didn't agree.  

My personal favorite is the Itsy Bitsy Spider app by Duck Duck Moose. Um, how could you NOT love an app that is made by such a fun named company?? It is super interactive. Anything you touch reacts. There are different animals jumping through windows, a flower pot that grows a crab, little monsters that slide down a rainbow, a little fly that tells a story and gives factoids. There is a little squirrel on the roof that gathers nuts and counts them. You can make it rain. The graphics are very clear and it entertains the tiny human. &plusalso you can record yourself singing the song and let it be the background music. My husband did the recording on ours and I can only tolerate it a few rounds, but it is still super cute! 

Another favorite is Fish School , also by Duck Duck Moose. Are you seeing a trend here?? This app does letters, numbers, colors, shapes, the alphabet song and a little play session. We have a lot of fun with this. It is easy for her to touch the bubble to switch from one lesson to the next. The fish make the letters, numbers and shapes. When you're doing colors, a school of different shades of fish comes out, then when you select a color fish, a school of that color fish comes out. There's not a whole lot to do and once you go through all the letters, shapes, numbers, etc. you're basically through. You know, you can only do the ABCs so many times. We typically get about ten minutes out of this one. 

Then you have Bugs and Buttons . This app is so much more than just bugs. It has the most educational potential of any of our apps thus far. There is a letter train where you have to pick out the missing letter from several choices at the bottom. There are games, too, where you can sling bees at a target or "pop" ants, roaches, and bees as they scurry across the screen. Those roaches kill me every time. Haha. Honestly, this app has so many different games to play we haven't touched on half of them. I was sold when I read a review saying that it had taught the reviewer's daughter her letters and numbers by the time she was 24 months old or something like that. It's on the app store review if you want the specifics. Anyways, we have sat and played this app for 20+ minutes so it was well worth the money spent. I am hoping the bee flinging game will help prepare her for Angry Birds. She is obsessed with Angry Birds but honestly cannot figure out how to fling them properly. Not that I expect her to at 18 months...it's just, if she wants to play it, can we please learn to play it right?

So, those are our favorite apps of the week this week. And just a quick disclaimer: this post is not sponsored. These are our honest opinions of these apps, and our goal in doing this is simply to help other moms and babies out there find apps they'll love before putting money into them.  

Written by Heather Sullivan. All images and writings copy right 2012.

Dr. Suess Books for ipad

iPhone Screenshot 1

Dr. Suess books for ipad are one of our favorites. I love them because they don't require wi-fi like Netflix and Mobile Mum, so they work anywhere. My daughter's also familiar with them all from having the actual books read to her, so she enjoys watching. You can set them to auto-play, so if you aren't sitting right there, you're still good. When you touch the pictures, the word pops up and it says it as well. For instance, in Green Eggs and Ham, if you touch Sam-I-Am, it shows "Sam-I-Am" and says it. I love that it is helping her learn the words. Of course, you can also choose the "read to me" option, and turn the pages yourself while it reads out loud. And you can turn off the auto-reading altogether with the "Read It Myself" option, and read it just as you would a regular book. The apps cost $3.99 each, but in my opinion they are well worth it. You'd pay more for a book, and since we take the ipad everywhere we go, it is far less cumbersome than toting all the books with us. 


Dr. Suess's ABCs
Dr. Suess's The Cat in the Hat
Dr. Suess's Beginner Book Collection  This one is $12.99...but it's five books.
Green Eggs And Ham 
The Lorax



Wednesday, October 31, 2012

iKid

 We recently invested in an ipad for our daughter. There were several key factors in our decision making process.



1) She is a cronic video viewer. And she prefers her own personal viewing device, which was, prior to the ipad purchase, one of our iphones. Which was fine, mostly. But sometimes I want to text from my phone. Or play a game. And so did my husband.

2)This world revolves around technology. We want her to be up-to-date on these things and the only way to do that is to give her a good solid start.

3) We needed something she could watch in the car. Our iphones worked, but she kept calling people. And every time we got a phone call, it would interupt her viewing pleasure. No bueno.

4) There are oodles of apps that teach shapes and colors and all sorts of other things. It just seemed like this would be the best solution to the car and rainy day boredom with an interactive education bonus.

Since we made this decision, I have been scouring the App Store for good quality apps. I purchased three last night and downloaded a few free ones.

My favorites are the flash card inspired apps. We have an entire series of animals, which is cool because Emi will be an animal expert by the time she turns two. We played with the Peekaboo Barn this morning and she seemed to adore it. The barn starts shaking and making an animal sound. When she taps the barn, the doors open and the animal appears. It zooms in and says the animal's name. Then when she taps it again, the process repeats.
iPhone Screenshot 1
via




Written by Heather Sullivan. All images and writtings copy right 2012.