A taxpayer-funded “educational tour” very last 7 days for hundreds of workers at the Key Minister’s Workplace was light-weight on schooling and significant on entertainment, according to a report Sunday.
A copy of the itinerary published by the Ynet news web site showed most of the two-working day party was put in at the Dan Accadia Hotel in Herzliya, with the exception of breakfast the 1st morning and a take a look at to the Planetanya space museum.
Besides meals, the other functions mentioned on the schedule incorporated a efficiency at the lodge by local singer Rotem Cohen, a “dance occasion into the night” and “escape room” games.
The news internet site said the tour was counted as common perform times for staff members of the Prime Minister’s Business and that some workers have been reimbursed travel fees.
Finance Ministry resources quoted in the report stated the tour had no academic message and was seemingly scheduled to use unspent budgetary cash prior to the year’s end. They also said it was unclear why Yair Pines, the director-common of Key Minister Naftali Bennett’s business office, approved the vacation.
Get The Occasions of Israel’s Every day Version by e-mail and under no circumstances pass up our prime stories
By signing up, you agree to the conditions
“All workforce of government ministries are entitled to participate in an educational tour when a year… as are staff of the Prime Minister’s Business,” Bennett’s business office said in reaction.
Along with the stop by to the place museum, the Key Minister’s Business stated the tour included functions on the legacy of Israel’s initial premier, David Ben-Gurion.
“The price range for the excursion was limited in progress and not totally used,” it extra.

You’re severe. We respect that!

 We’re definitely happy that you have read X Instances of Israel posts in the previous thirty day period.
That’s why we come to function every single day – to present discerning audience like you with should-read protection of Israel and the Jewish world.
So now we have a ask for. Unlike other news shops, we haven’t set up a paywall. But as the journalism we do is costly, we invite viewers for whom The Instances of Israel has grow to be crucial to aid aid our perform by becoming a member of The Periods of Israel Local community.
For as little as $6 a thirty day period you can enable aid our quality journalism even though savoring The Moments of Israel Ad-Free of charge, as well as accessing distinctive content obtainable only to Occasions of Israel Group customers.
Second-grader Liam Johnson was at school all day, but that didn’t stop him from returning that evening. Alongside of him, were Trak Johnson and Natalie Brun.
Together, they helped him adhere colored square stickers onto a black sheet of paper. It looked like a building with colorful windows, and even more so like one, when it was posted alongside other second-graders’ papers. Yet, Liam counted, by twos, the number of windows he created on his building and recorded the number of each color window he had.
It was Alta View Elementary’s fourth annual math night, designed and prepared for second-graders to have time with their parents or guardians, as a chance to learn math activities that will help their skills, said second-grade teacher Tami Malan, who added each student received a bag with a set of cars, two dice and directions for 40 different math games they could play at home.
“The whole idea was to give the families things to go home and practice with math so that the kids can make growth and can feel successful in doing something that they’re learning and practicing math facts,” she said, about the idea she came up with years ago after having a frustrating week at school. “I came back to school Monday and told my team, ‘how about a math night?’ I had everything planned out. It’s such a fun thing, because it is just the kids and they’re excited because it was just mom and dad and no other siblings; it was just them.”
While the COVID-19 pandemic may have had an impact on all students’ learning, Malan said this night wasn’t aimed at catching up from that year, but rather it “is an emphasis we are trying, to bring our math scores up schoolwide.”
However, it wasn’t like sitting in desks, adding up sums. Alta View’s math night was in the school’s gym, which was set up with activities that go along with the second-grade curriculum. About 60{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the second-graders came to have an opportunity to estimate the number of candies in a jar; or adding numbers from five cards drawn from a deck to a roller coaster dice multiplication game where students would roll dice and multiply the two numbers. There also was a mental math strategy game where the object was to roll dice and try to get as close to 101 without exceeding it.
“It was just really fun to watch the families doing them and then, they took them home so now they have activities to do for math practice every night if they desire,” she said about the games they researched and collected over their teaching years.
Malan said one game, Roll the Dice, would challenge students against their parents, determining who could add up the six dice rolled fastest.
“It was just fun to watch and the parents were amazed how well the kids were doing and how quickly they were able to get it. The kids were excited and we had really good comments from the parents about how much fun it was for them to sit down and spend time with their kids.”
Brun, who played many of the games before with her daughter after attending a previous math night, said they plan to play them with Liam this year.
“Having the games at home or having a math box is something that we can pull out and play and have fun, yet know he is learning at the same time,” she said.
Liam’s father, Trak, said that he likes the simplicity of the games and the variety, instead of just reviewing flashcards that “may get kind of mundane.”
“Hearing that you’re playing math games sounds intimidating, but there’s actually simplicity in all these games,” Johnson said. “They’re all very unique and it just shows how just doing simple things like this really works with them to cognitively do the steps that are involved in mathematics without realizing that they’re doing it. They’re just playing a game as far as they’re concerned. And they’re (the games) very nice, simple, quick and easy. I like being able to have these as a way to take a break and play again. Then, it becomes a whole lot less intimidating that way.”
Liam remembers an Ancient Egypt game like “tic, tac, toe” that he played at math night where he moved his yellow game pieces along the nine dots, without skipping any spots, to create a row of yellow and to win.
“I like math sometimes, like easy math, but sometimes I don’t because it’s hard to do,” Liam said. “Then, I do it more, like these games, and I get better at it, and it becomes easy and it’s just fun.”
APTOS, Calif., Dec. 15, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Academics’ Choice today congratulates all winners of the Fall 2021 Academics’ Choice Awards, a prestigious seal of educational quality, reserved only for the best mind-building media and toys. The winners include teacher-approved, brain-boosting products from Scholastic, VTech, Educational Insights, SAM corporation, Ningbo Mideer Toys Co., DMAI Animal Island Learning Adventure (AILA), FoxMind Toys & Games, SimplyFun, Vijua, Ashe Books, Think Tank Scholar, Make-A-Fort, Plus Up, LLC, FlowLab, BYJU’S FutureSchool, Project Learning Tree, Help Me 2 Learn Company, KneeBouncers LLC, hand2mind, Learning Resources, LeapFrog, and more! The full list of winners is posted online at http://www.academicschoice.com/2021.
The Academics’ Choice Advisory Board consists of leading thinkers and graduates from Princeton, Harvard, George Washington University, and other reputable educational institutions. Product-appropriate volunteer reviewers, combined with the brainpower of the Board, determine the coveted winners. Entries are judged by category (i.e. mobile app, toy, book, website, magazine, etc.), subject area, and grade level, and evaluated based on standardized criteria rooted in constructivist learning theory.
“Super Star by Help Me 2 Learn is honored to have been awarded the Academics’ Choice Award for ‘Numbers – Counting’. We appreciate that Academics’ Choice recognizes outstanding educational products that are so important to the development of education for kids. Thank you Academics’ Choice for all your support and thank you for the kind words from your reviewers – we look forward to continuing our mission to make education fun and engaging! We appreciate Academics’ Choice for helping us spread the word about ‘Numbers – Counting’ and how ‘Kids will Love Learning with Super Star'” – Dan Sheffield, Director, Help Me 2 Learn Company
“As a family-owned start-up business, the Academics’ Choice Award brings credibility to our positive parenting device and gives parents the confidence that Goodtimer works as advertised and that not only will parents, caregivers and teachers love it, so will kids! We appreciated the quotes you shared from your testers, which made us feel like you really put Goodtimer through its paces and that it excelled for you! It’s very clear your testers opened the samples we sent, read everything we included and appreciated the details we baked into our product. Thanks for doing such a thorough evaluation job for us!” – Adam Ashley, Founder and CEO, Plus Up, LLC | Goodtimer
Many of the products that are evaluated by the Academics’ Choice Awards team are donated to a variety of worthy charities including the Kids In Need Foundation and the Toys for Tots Foundation.
About Academics’ Choice:
Academics’ Choice helps consumers find exceptional brain-boosting material. Academics’ Choice is the only international awards program designed to bring increased recognition to publishers, manufacturers, independent authors and developers that aim to stimulate cognitive development. A volunteer panel of product-appropriate judges, including parents, educators, scientists, artists, doctors, nurses, librarians, students and children, evaluate submissions based on educational benefits such as higher-order thinking skills, character building, creative play, durability and originality. Only the genuine “mind-builders” are recognized with the coveted Academics’ Choice Awards.
This story was originally published by Chalkbeat, a nonprofit news organization covering public education. Sign up for their newsletters here: ckbe.at/newsletters.
Originally published Nov 19, 2021, 6:00am EST
There was no warning, just a knock on the door of Melissa Keaton’s Flatbush, Brooklyn, apartment. She opened it to find a caseworker with the Administration for Children’s Services, or ACS, the New York City agency tasked with investigating suspected child neglect and abuse.
Still shaken by the sudden death of her father to COVID-19, Keaton hadn’t sent her 9-year-old daughter to school since classes started mid-September. It was now the end of October, and the caseworker explained to Keaton, a former PTA president at her daughter’s school, that someone had reported the family for educational neglect.
When New York City opened its schools this fall for in-person learning, with no option for virtual instruction, families across the five boroughs opted to keep their children home. They worried about the health of their children and vulnerable loved ones, and remained unconvinced it was safe to return to full buildings.
“The only time ACS will intervene is if there is a clear intent to keep a child from being educated, period,” schools Chancellor Meisha Porter said at a press conference shortly before the new school year began. “We want to work with our families because we recognize what families have been through.”
Now, more than two months into the school year, some parents say they have been reported for neglect. The impact of child welfare investigations on already traumatized families can be severe: charges may stay on records for decades, future job prospects can be affected, and, most alarmingly, parents could be separated from children.
Education department staff made 207 reports of educational neglect through Oct. 31, according to ACS data. The numbers tripled in the last two weeks of October, compared to the total reported during the first month of school.
Still, the overall number of reports dropped from last year, when there were 346 cases in the same time period. But some parents and advocates say this year’s numbers are cause for concern since some of the parents getting wrapped up in the child welfare system are making efforts to educate their children as they hold out for a remote option.
Options for wary families, who are disproportionately families of color, are limited. Parents can apply for medically necessary instruction, which offers few teaching hours at home or virtually — but only for children who meet certain medical conditions. They can home-school, but that removes the student from their public school and puts the onus on families to educate their children at home, without help. In New York, homeschooling also involves completing and filing a plan and quarterly reports.
Experts have stressed that children learn best in school. The American Academy of Pediatrics has warned about the dire consequences of keeping students home.
“Remote learning — which exacerbated existing educational inequities — was detrimental to the educational attainment of students of all ages and worsened the growing mental health crisis among children and adolescents,” the academy wrote.
City leaders have worked to reassure families that steps are being taken to make buildings safe. Staff must be vaccinated, masks are required for everyone, and officials said they’ve upgraded ventilation across the city’s 1,600 schools. Weekly on-campus COVID testing for unvaccinated students (the only group who is swabbed) has revealed a positivity rate of .39{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} over a seven-day average, according to city data through Nov. 17.
“Our priority is the safety of our students, and the first two months of this school year showed that our schools are the safest place for them to be during this pandemic,” said education department spokesperson Nathaniel Styer.
For Keaton, whose father died alone at a hospital soon after developing a cough in April 2020, that isn’t enough. After attending virtual town halls and talking to school and district leaders, she remained unconvinced that it was safe to send her daughter back to a school building.
“Families who are grieving and traumatized should not have to go through this,” she said.
‘Caught in the crosshairs’
It’s unclear how many families are refusing to send their children to school buildings this year. But attendance has lagged in some places, and last month the chancellor recorded a round of robocalls to families urging them to send their children to class.
Tajh Sutton is a mom in Brooklyn who, through the advocacy group PRESS, Parents for Responsive Equitable Safe Schools, has been providing resources and support to families boycotting classrooms because of health concerns.
The group has been advocating for a remote option as well as legislation that would require parents to be informed of their rights if they’re ever reported to ACS. Group members have also asked for an attendance code to track families who are staying home because of safety concerns.
After receiving roughly 20 calls from parents who recently received visits from ACS caseworkers, PRESS members created toolkits to help families understand their rights when it comes to child welfare and is partnering with the advocacy group JMacForFamilies and others on a Nov. 26 workshop on the topic.
The education department last week sent new guidance to principals with specific suggestions for how to engage with families who aren’t sending their children to school because of health concerns.
The guidance calls for offering families a virtual tour of the school to see the safety measures in place, making adjustments to respond to parents’ concerns, and offering application information for the city’s medically necessary instruction program. It also notes that schools should not report families for educational neglect if there is a pending application for medically necessary instruction or homeschooling.
“A report of suspected educational neglect is not a remedy for excessive absences, and is an option of last resort,” the guidance says.
Styer, the education department spokesman, said that educators “exhaust all options to support families in making sure every student attends school safely every day,” but also that, “our staff take their responsibility as mandated reporters for child welfare very seriously.”
“One of the striking things to me about placing teachers in the role of mandated reporters is just the extreme damage and lack of trust that creates in the relationship between parents and teachers,” said Anna Arons, an acting assistant professor at New York University.”
Despite the detailed guidance, many schools appear to be responding in their own ways, according to Amy Leipziger, a senior staff attorney who deals with education issues for Queens Legal Services. The move to call ACS on families, who are “trying to do the best they can,” ends up feeling very “retaliatory” by their schools, she said.
Now you’ve got parents — and more importantly, you’ve got kids — getting caught in the crosshairs,” she said.
A spokesperson for ACS, Nicholas Aguilar, said that the agency’s top priority is the safety and well-being of the city’s children. “Our work is focused on ensuring families have the services and supports that they need for their children to thrive, including educational services,” he said.
Educators are considered “mandated reporters,” which means they’re obligated to report suspected abuse or neglect. Prior to COVID, educators made about a quarter of ACS reports, said Anna Arons, an acting assistant professor at the New York University law school who has studied the city’s child welfare agency.
Arons pointed out research nationwide shows reports from educators are the least likely to be substantiated.
“One of the striking things to me about placing teachers in the role of mandated reporters is just the extreme damage and lack of trust that creates in the relationship between parents and teachers,” she said.
In terms of who is being reported, Black and Latino children tend to be overrepresented. While about 60{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the city’s children are Black and Latino, they are 90{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of those involved in investigations or placed in foster care, Arons said.
In response to the harshness of how long ACS charges stay on one’s record, a new state rule will take effect in January reducing the number of years to eight. Until then, any ACS charges could remain on someone’s record until the child turns 28.
‘Concerned for our children’s safety’
After spending last year fully remote, Viviana Echavarria’s two teenagers were excited to return to Riverdale Kingsbridge Academy and even went back-to-school shopping. But then the Bronx mom and her husband decided to keep their two high schoolers home until their 11-year-old could get vaccinated.
Still, Echavarria was stunned when her husband called late last month while she was at work, as a director of operations for a nursing home, letting her know that an ACS caseworker was at their door. He hasn’t returned to work yet to stay home with their three school-aged children and 6-month-old baby. The caseworker was investigating allegations of educational neglect and checked the children for bruises on their bodies. Because the family includes an infant, the caseworker said she would be visiting weekly, Echavarria said.
Before the school year started, Echavarria had contacted the school to let them know her children would be home and asked for support. The principal told her that the only option was to sign up to home-school her children. The principal, in a Sept. 8 email, wrote that the education department was not providing curriculum, materials, or support.
The full-time working mom of four didn’t feel equipped to home-school and asked the city’s home-school office for help, but got no response. Though she’s been taking her children to the library on occasion, they’ve had no formal schooling yet this year.
“They’re putting you in a position where you have to choose between your kids’ health and their education,” Echavarria said. “If they think they’re helping the children, they’re making it worse. Now they’re adding fear.”
Her two older children’s geometry teachers had reached out to find out why they were missing class, and ended up giving them access to assignments in Google classroom. But when the children asked the other teachers if they could do the same, the principal clamped down, Echavarria said.
In a Sept. 24 email the principal said: “The children must come to school. We have programs and are expecting them.”
The principal declined to comment, referring questions to the education department, which didn’t address specific cases.
After getting her 11-year-old son vaccinated this week, Echavarria now plans to send all three children back to school on Thursday, hoping that will put an end to the ACS investigation. The agency, however, would not tell her whether that would close the case, she said.
“We feel like we can’t wait for the second dose. We feel like we don’t have a choice,” she said. “It still leaves us: Where do we go from here? We’re sending them to school, but we’re still being investigated.”
Home schooling wasn’t an option for Keaton either. She felt she could manage online learning after having done so for more than a year. She wasn’t prepared, however, to be her daughter’s teacher. Like Echavarria, Keaton also sent emails to school leaders asking them to provide virtual work for her daughter to complete.
“I was told no, there wasn’t any work. That was only for students who are quarantining, and there is no remote option,” she said.
With the help of the nonprofit organization Brooklyn Defenders, Keaton is now navigating the application for medically necessary home-based instruction while the ACS case looms. She has found support through a local group called Parents Supporting Parents NY. She has worried about whether the investigation will affect her ability to work in schools, as she has in the past, and wondered how long it would take to get her daughter back if they were ever separated.
“It’s rough to fathom the thought that I could end up in front of a judge who could remove my child because I want to maintain her safety and our health,” Keaton said. “I can provide a safe environment for her at home. There is no exposure.”
‘It’s policing’
Another member of PRESS, Paullette Healy has been keeping both of her children home because of health concerns while providing resources and support to families who are also boycotting schools because of health concerns. Healy knew that getting a visit from ACS was a real threat — she had been working on the toolkits for parents in that situation.
Still, the Brooklyn mom was shocked when she received a knock on her door from an ACS caseworker while in the middle of an online training session last week for her role on her local Community Education Council, which is essentially a school board for her district.
She was shaken by the visit, especially since both of her children’s schools unofficially supported her choice by allowing them access to work on Google classroom.
Healy refused to let the caseworker inside, nor did she provide the requested pictures of her children’s asthma medications, her husband’s medications, and their smoke alarms.
Healy had applied on Sept. 1 for medically necessary instruction for her children, citing asthma and anxiety as reasons to keep them home. She never heard back, and just last week learned from one of her children’s schools that school officials could not find her application.
“They’re putting you in a position where you have to choose between your kids’ health and their education,” Echavarria said. “If they think they’re helping the children, they’re making it worse. Now they’re adding fear.”
Some parents and legal advocates told Chalkbeat that applications for medically necessary instruction are taking about four weeks to process. Roughly 500 children are enrolled in medically necessary instruction, with about 750 having submitted applications this year so far, according to education department data as of Nov. 9.
Healy worries she’ll likely have to spend the next year working to get the ACS investigation off her record for background checks.
Even though Healy understands how to navigate the system, the visit has her family on edge.
“It’s harassment. It’s surveillance. It’s policing… It’s so stressful,” said Healy. “My child has been having trouble sleeping since the ACS visit: nightmares about being taken away from her home.
Arons, the NYU researcher, said that during the shutdown and its aftermath in New York City, sharp drops in the number of reports made, cases heard, and families separated has not led to increased risk to children as measured in a variety of ways, from youth fatalities to emergency room usage. Her findings are detailed in a forth-coming paper.
She hopes the fallout from these neglect complaints can be an open conversation about the role of agencies like ACS moving forward.
“I think there’s much more appetite and willingness to engage around the idea of do we need this level of surveillance? And do we need teachers to be in this role,” she said.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.
The fifth edition of the annual Pacey Educational Games (PEG) for Lagos and Ogun states’ schools got underway Wednesday at Lagos African Church Grammar School, Ifako-Ijaiye, Lagos State.
According to the organisers, the competition, which will feature over 50 secondary schools in Lagos and Ogun states with about 1,500 athletes, is aimed at fostering all round development of students in secondary schools, through fun and interactive games.
Speaking at a media parley to unveil the competition at the weekend, spokesman for the organisers, Mr. Apo Olugbenga, said the games will help Nigeria to discover its next set of champion athletes, adding, “Since 2016, PEG has set out on a journey to discover and harness the hidden greatness in each and every one of them, because of the belief that every child is unique in his or her own way and they find expressions through different means.”
He disclosed that the students will fight for honours in such interactive games as chess, monopoly, scrabble, Rubik’s cube, and many other games that challenge their reasoning and help them unlock their brain power.
“The past events were greeted with wonderful experiences by students from Babcock University Secondary School, White Hall Schools, Wellspring College, and Lagos African Church Grammar School to mention but a few.
“This year’s event promises to be bigger and better, as it will attract many other schools. It has been carefully packaged to help the students develop their team spirit through exciting and competitive games,” he said.
Olugbenga disclosed that Honeyland College Breakthrough Academy, Whitehall Schools, Babcock University Secondary School, Lagos African Church Grammar school, and many other schools in Lagos and Ogun states will feature in the exciting games.
Olugbenga, who announced the games’ partnership with Sports360nja, said “the partnership is borne out of our aim to reach 40 per cent of the population of students of primary and secondary schools in Nigeria in the next five years.”
Also speaking during the media parley, Sports360nja Online Editor, Mr. Ugochim Uzoije, said: “This partnership is borne out of our aim to reach 40 per cent of the population of students of Primary and Secondary schools in Nigeria in the next five years.”
Earlier, PEG’s Founding Partner, Mr. Adeyemi Anifowose, disclosed that the organisation will launch Hackathon (coding challenge) for secondary schools, which is tagged “unveiling the power of technology.”
Anifowose said the importance of the challenge is to enable secondary schools’ students to crave more interest and develop trending relevant skills in IT, “which is needed or required to navigate their career as the world is continuously revolving around IT.”
Android games are for more than just driving, shooting, hacking, and slashing, as they can be used for educational purposes as well, and we’ve rounded up some of the best apps for that. There are tons of games out there that are targeted at grades k-12 to help them learn.
But which ones are the best out there? It can be tough finding the apps that will actually have a positive impact on your child’s education. Here’s a list of 10 of the best educational apps on the Google Play Store.
Game
Download Cost
In-app cost (per item)
PBS Games
Free
Free
Khan Academy Kids
Free
Free
Sago Mini School Kids 2-5
Free
$7.99 – $59.99
Lingo Kids
Free
$.99 – $139.99
Kidzooly Preschool Games
Free
$2.49
Kiddopia
Free
$.99 – $99.99
ABC Mouse
Free
$9.95 – $79.99
Adventure Academy
Free
$9.99 – $79.99
Montessori Preschool
Free
$.99 – $59.99
Animal Preschool
Free
$.99 – $3.99
PBS Games
Everyone should be familiar with PBS Kids and its collection of popular educational shows. The company developed its own app, and it comes with a slew of educational and kid-safe games to keep your toddler entertained.
It has an easy-to-navigate interface with large pictures representing your kids’ favorite shows. Right now, there are 29 shows that your kids can choose from, each with its own selection of games. Each show has a thumbnail of the show’s lead character, so kids can navigate them easily.
As an added treat, everything in the app is free of charge. There are no subscriptions, in-app purchases, or ads. There’s a “grownup; section where you can donate money to PBS if you please.
Khan Academy Kids
Khan Academy has been around since 2008, and it’s become a popular nonprofit educational organization. Khan Academy Kids brings this same mentality, only in app form. This app contains a plethora of different educational activities that kids are sure to enjoy.
This app is definitely for younger kids; most of the activities are really basic. They are meant to focus on developmental skills like motor skills, color identification, and basic phonics. There are also some fun interactive music videos, and the kids are led around the app by a cast of fun animated animals.
Since Khan Academy is a nonprofit organization, you won’t have to pay for any of the activities or features. It’s free to download and there are no in-app purchases.
Sago Mini School takes a different approach to its educational material. Instead of subjects, kids navigate themes like trash and recycling, plant life, snow, birds, firefighters, bicycles, and a bunch more. Each theme has several different educational activities for kids to play.
There’s enough music, animated characters, and voice acting to keep children entertained for a long time. Like most educational games, the UI is divided into large and easily identifiable pictures and icons.
Sago Mini School is free to download, but if you want the full experience, it’ll cost you $7.99/month with the option to pay $59.99/year. If you have Google Play Pass, you will automatically have a yearly subscription.
Lingokids is one of the more advanced apps on this list as it’s an entire suite of games, activities, music videos, and animations. As your kid progresses through the content, they’ll unlock more content.
Linogkids stands out among most educational apps with its use of fully animated videos and live-action videos as well. Not only that, but the company has its own cast of recognizable characters that populate all of the activities and videos.
In order to get the full experience, parents will have to pay $14.99/month. The amount of content you get is definitely worth the high price tag. If you want a yearly subscription, you can pay $139.99/year.
Kidzooley Preschool games is relatively simple compared to the other apps, but it’s still really useful. This is definitely for those in early education, and it shows. There are activities like simple puzzles, letter tracing, simple spelling games, and more.
As with all of the educational apps, the UI is really easy to navigate with large and colorful buttons. They’re all animated GIFs that give you some idea of what the activity is. There’s also some cheery music playing in the background. What’s neat is that you can play these games offline.
The only downside to this game is that there are ads. When you complete some activities, you’ll get a short video ad. Fortunately, if you want to unlock all of the activities and remove the ads, it’s only a one-time payment of $2.49
Kiddopia, like most other educational apps, hits you hard with playful music and colorful visuals. The interface is divided into 16 different subjects, and each subject has a plethora of different types of activities. Plainly put, there’s a ton of content with this app.
There’s a cast of animal characters that your child can interact with, and these animals are part of every activity. Along with games, there are animated music videos that also teach your kids.
If you want access to all of the content, you will need to pay $7.99/month with a one-week free trial. That’s more than decent of a price for all of the content you’re getting
ABCmouse has been a popular brand in education for some years now. The app brings a similar learning experience to the website with a wide range of educational activities. The interface isn’t as straightforward and easy to read as most educational apps out there, so younger kids may need their parents to navigate for them.
You have the typical array of games, activities, and animated shows that you can choose from. Your child has the option to pick and choose what they want to do at random or they can try the “Learning Path” with activities presented in order.
In order to access the educational content, you’ll be paying $12.99/month. That’s a decent price for such a complete suite of content. There’s also the option to pay $59.99/year.
Adventure Academy is an app that’s in the same vein as ACBmouse. It’s from the same company, and it has much of the same approach to learning. There is an ocean of educational content to keep your child busy; this includes videos, games, cartoons, and activities.
What makes this different from ABCmouse and other educational apps is the 3D rendered interface. You play as an avatar, and you roam the halls of this huge educational academy. There, you meet a bunch of different professors that you interact with and complete tasks for. Along with the professors, there are kiosks that you can go to if you want to access all of the content.
If you’re interested in Adventure Academy, it will cost you $12.99/month to access everything. If you want to pay yearly, it will cost you $59.99/year.
Montessori Preschool is, unsurprisingly, for preschoolers. It’s chock-full of fun and simple activities to help develop young minds. It’s pretty simple in its nature; no music or flashy animations. It does, however, have a good selection of games to choose from.
You get the typical array of subjects like math, colors, code and logic, literacy, music, and plenty more. The interface is pretty straightforward with all of the subjects represented as tiles on the bottom of the screen.
You get a pretty limited amount of content for free, but to unlock everything, it will cost you $9.99/month. There’s also the option to pay $59.99/year.
Animal Preschool is about as straightforward as an educational app can get. The interface centers around large and bubbly cartoon animals. You scroll through the animal icons to select which subject you want to play. Navigating this way should make it easy for a child to find their favorite subject.
This game is a bit different from the other games in that each activity you choose gives you a succession of activities rather than letting you choose which one to play. You see the animal on one side of the screen, and they’re trying to make it to the other side. Each question you answer correctly gets the animal a step closer to its goal.
Animal Preschool is one of the more inexpensive apps on this list. You get a pretty good amount of content for free, but you can pay $3.99 to unlock the rest of the animals.