Parents Get Support to Teach More Than ABCs & 123s to Children

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(Newswire.net — January 13, 2015) Las Vegas, NV — Wired.com has just recently published a short article which concentrates on how much more there is to teach kids than simply the ABCs and 123s, and how new applications have taken on the duty of revealing to parents how to get the very best from their children academically. The short article says that in 2012, P.J. Gunsagar and Dylan Arena created Kidaptive and released their very first iPad app, Leo’s Pad. It stars Leo, a young innovator with a tree-house lab, and combines segments of an animated story with a range of mini-games. It’s been downloaded over 800,000 times, with an App Store score floating near the maximum five stars.

 

The article reveals that there is science hiding behind the fun, saying it is a device implementing advanced research in developmental psychology, that closely tracks the cognitive progress of its young users and adjusts the app’s level accordingly, but likewise saying it is a toy, however one that gathers an incredible amount of data on how it’s being used, with Gunsagar and Arena helping to put that information to good use in order to help moms and dads enlighten their youngsters.

 

According to Gunsagar, they have created a new style of academic kids App, being something like putting a truly smart preschool teacher in every moms and dad’s pocket. Gunsagar states that while he was teaching his own young children the ABCs and the 123s, he was beginning to hear about the importance of skills like impulse control and cognitive flexibility. He stated… “I was unexpectedly presented with some completely new measurements of my kids development that I’d formerly been oblivious to.

 

Leo’s Pad was developed to engage all these various kinds of abilities, teaching kids about colors and counting, and having video games specifically designed around the abilities like categorization, symbolic representation, and turn-taking. At the heart of the video game is an “adaptive learning engine” that evaluates a kid’s efficiency in these abilities and adjusts subsequent video games appropriately. If your kid has actually currently mastered counting, for example, the video game might introduce more advanced principles, like grouping and cardinality. The adaptive approach actually does help the application to ask the right questions at the right time.”

 

Neil Speight, co-director of Nevada based accessory company agrees with the need to teach children more than simply the essentials. He included… “The concept of educating my baby twins actually captivates me, and cutting-edge apps like these are the support that moms and dads need to assist young children get off to a good start academically speaking. I still think the traditional foam bath letters are more enjoyable and entertaining to teach the ABCs & 123s to kids at an early age, and quite truthfully an ipad is out of the question at bath time anyway, and the bath letters and numbers are definitely a fantastic way to keep a baby amused in the tub and teach the ABCs & 123s.”

 

For further information about the Freddie and Sebbie’s Bath Letters, Numbers and Bath Toy Organizer, backed by a lifetime no-hassle free replacement guarantee, please visit: http://www.amazon.com/Bath-Letters-Numbers-With-Organizer/dp/B00IMN8SW4/

 

 

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