On the brink of the lazy days of
summer, what’s a parent to do? Here are nine apps and sites that will keep your
kids sharp -- and entertained -- during the summer.
It goes
by many names, but the syndrome is the same. Whether it’s dubbed “summer learning
loss,” “summer vacation slide,” or good-old-fashioned “summer brain drain,” studies show that students usually have to relearn four to six weeks of classwork at
the beginning of every school year. On the brink of the lazy days of
summer, what’s a parent to do? Here are nine ways to use your Mac and iOS
devices to keep your kids sharp during the summer. Add your own advice to the
comments at the end of this article.
1. Learn at
Your Own Pace
If you
check out only one resource for your elementary- or high-school-aged kid this
summer, make sure it’s online learning sensation Khan Academy, also
available as an iPad app. This
non-profit educational resource backed by the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, originally started as a collection of tutorial videos Salman Khan
made to help his cousin with her math homework. After he became a YouTube
sensation, Khan quit his job as a hedge fund analyst and turned Khan Academy
into a immense free resource with more than 3100 instructional videos covering
K-12 math, science, and humanities topics.
Videos run no more than ten
minutes long. Math topics and are supported with interactive challenges and
assessments. Kids can earn badges and points in a variety of ways. Parents can
also check in using a “coach” account to see extremely detailed reports about
how the child is faring. This is the best resource yet for self-paced learning.
2. Build Legos
with the Astronauts
Lego fans always have loads to do
during the summer. While away the afternoon with new Lego Mindstorms projects or a Lego ideas book like The Lego Mindstorms NXT 2.0
Discovery Book: A Beginner’s Guide to Building and Programming Robots.
Or, for a
new twist, try out some Legos in space. Last year, the space shuttle Endeavour took a set of kits up to the astronauts on
the International Space Station. Now you can follow along with their
work on Lego and NASA’s joint site, Legospace.com.
The site is geared to classrooms and filled with activities. Kids will get a
kick out of the many videos of astronauts assembling models and explaining
simple machines while floating around in jumpsuits.
3. Try This at Home
While parents-in-the-know
everywhere ready their Mentos Geyser
Tubes at the first
hint of long summer afternoons, many of us need some ideas for hands-on science
projects to share with our kids. The venerable Steve Spangler
Science site is filled
with kits, ideas, and videos. For instance, don’t miss the Geyser Rocket Car or Instant Snow Powder.
For the
very, very ambitious, Make Magazine also includes a section of project for kids and
their parents. Some are reasonably easy, like the Marshmallow Shooter, others will require soldering
electronics, like the Gigantic Bubble Generator.
Don’t fail to check out more
home-grown sites too, like Kitchen Pantry
Science, that show you how to do science experiments with
ingredients you most likely have tucked in a cupboard. These projects are
simple and easy to set up, from how to create
your own Angry-Birds-style slingshot game to making invisible
ink.
4. Forget Flash Cards
Free
Rice adds a different
twist to learning things by rote: the more questions you answer correctly, the
more you help others. This nonprofit website is run by the United Nations World
Food Programme. Sponsors donate 10 grains of rice to hungry people across the world for each question you answer
correctly. Categories include world flags, countries, capitals, multiplication
tables, chemistry symbols, famous paintings, vocabulary from four foreign
languages, anatomy, SAT prep, and more. Keep track of your scores and even
create a team so classmates or friends can work together. With every right
answer, rice piles up in your virtual bowl. What better motivation to memorize?
5. Get Ready for the APs
ONBoard online courses from McGraw-Hill help high school students prepare for
next year’s Advanced Placement classes. Schools can purchase this review for
their students or students can subscribe on their own for $50 per class with
12-month access.
The courses go over skills and concepts for classes including AP
Biology, Economics, Environmental Science, Psychology, US Government &
Politics, U.S. History, and World History. For example, the AP U.S. History
class covers how to analyze primary and secondary sources as well as how to
gather and organize information.
Students complete interactive exercises and quizzes, and at the
end of each class, receive a final assessment so they know what they need to
work on next.
6. Train Your Brain
One of
the hottest areas of online learning is “brain training,” games designed to
help improve overall mental qualities like memory, attention, speed and problem
solving. Lumosity boasts more than 20 million
subscribers and a long list of academic
endorsements. You’ll find games targeted to school-age children in
its student section, Lumosity Scholar as well as some designed to help with
specific learning differences like ADHD.
Games include Word Bubbles, Face Memory Workout, Memory Matrix, Speed Match,
and more. The site tracks your progress over time.
A one-year gift subscription
costs $80; a one-year family membership, with up to five accounts, costs $130.
The Lumosity.com games require Flash and can’t be played on your iPhone or
iPad. However, the company does offer a small subset through six iOS apps.
7. Become a Coding Ninja
Does your kid long to code? This
strangely named site, Codecademy == look again, it’s not actually “Code Academy” -- offers free
programming instruction in a fun, accessible way. Build your knowledge through
manageable exercises on programming basics, CSS, HTML, Javascript, and more.
Each module is followed up with a project -- from creating a recipe card to
making a fully-working blackjack game -- that brings together the skills you’ve
learned.
8. Goose Your Gray Matter on the Go
Wake up a sleepy head with the Mensa Brain Test from American Mensa. This $2 iPhone app helps boost your logic, mathematics, language, and visual skills through training exercises. Tests and exercises take anywhere from five to 60 minutes a pop, so it’s easy to fit in a mental workout while waiting in line for the wave pool or killing time in the backseat during the family roadtrip. Younger kids might appreciate iPhone and iPad games in the TeachMe series, including the $1 TeachMe: Kindergarten, TeachMe 1st Grade, and so on. Kids practice skills like addition and sight words and use the app’s handwriting recognition to write their answers on-screen. Best of all (according to my daughter), correct answers earn coins to decorate an interactive aquarium or to collect onscreen stickers and Silly-Bandz-style bands.
9. Don’t
Forget to Play Outside
Sure, it’s easy to worry about kids
forgetting all they’ve learned during the summer, but consider this: letting
them run free during the break -- emphasis on the word run -- may be the best thing you can do for their brains. Focusing on
fitness can be especially important if your kid’s school has cut back P.E. or
recess.
Many cities offer online access to
park maps or let you search for
facilities like
swimming pools and baseball fields. The National Park Service’s web site lets
you browse for
details about nearby national parks. Make a family plan to visit a
new park every week. You may want to load up some apps like KidzOut so you
can locate a playground in a pinch, but don't forget that Yelp includes
playground reviews too. Prefer to have some company? Start a Meet up group to find families to join you.
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