By Lisa Guernsey and Michael Levine published on Slate.com, December 13, 2012
Educational Apps Alone Won't Teach Your Kid to Read
This is a fantastic article that clearly reports on the current state of educational apps related to reading. The following is a brief summary of the article.
There exist thousands of apps on the marketplace,
many claiming to teach children how to read.
Guernsey and Levine found that most apps teach the most basic reading
skills of letter identification and letter/sound relationships. Presently, neither app nor ebook has
harnessed the affordances of iPads and tablets to teach higher level skills of
vocabulary and comprehension, which are critical components of reading for
purpose.
·
Most top-selling reading apps teach the basics: alphabet identification and phonics
·
Most apps don’t
address higher-level skills like vocabulary and comprehension – critical
components for becoming a fluent reader
·
Many ebooks are currently designed to be watched, rather than read
·
Ebooks could leverage the interactivity of the
tablet, but for the most part developers
aren’t designing stories to address comprehension and vocabulary
·
The authors imagine a good ebook as one that
asks questions that leads to interaction
with the screen – combined with interaction with the parent or teacher
·
80% of top-selling paid education apps are
marketed for children, many claiming to
help children learn to read
·
Apps often do
not provide information about how and if they accomplish their stated goals
“At its best, the technology complements the work of
trained teachers and parents. It doesn’t
replace it.”
-Guernsey and Levine
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