Sometimes I want to scream when I see my 6-year-old on the iPad. He watches some of these YouTube videos with people who sound like they are just screaming nonsense.
But lately he’s found some educational games we can do together—and they are challenging for both of us. He’s better at some of them than me because he’s been brought up playing computer games. It turns out we play together and make a great team.
Brain Test: Tricky Puzzles (poki.com)
This one is my favorite, because every one of these tricky tests makes you look at things in a new way and they get harder as you advance.
For example, on one of the beginner’s screens it asks you to feed the cat and has some food for it. My logic told me to drag the food over to the image of the cat…but it never worked, no matter how many times I tried. The first grader had better luck: he dragged the food over to the word cat in the question –and voila!—it worked.
Another of the simpler ones asks which month is longer, May, March or February. I was stumped, but the kid wasn’t….February has more letters in it.
Then it gets more advanced: “My widowed granny has three children. They are all married with at least one child. My aunt has three nephews. What is the minimum number of chairs we need for dinner?”
I’ll let you figure that one out.
In short, this is a blast and something we can do together as equals.
The company that makes the game, Poki, is based in Amsterdam and has more than 300 developers and 50 million players a month. It’s free if you bear commercials, or you can pay to play without ads.
Akinator en.akinator.com
Did you ever play 20 questions, the game where someone thinks of a famous person, object or animal, and others have to guess the character using the fewest questions possible?
That’s the game that the French company, Elokence, came up with in 2007 and it’s one kids can play alone or with a parent. It’s a blast watching the program figure out your secret and it’s surprising how quickly it can do it.
Not only does it guess your answer quickly, but it tells you how long ago someone else in the world tried the same mystery.
We really have fun trying to stump it and watching the questions it comes up with to narrow down the choices and solve the puzzle.
“I like how good it is and that he can actually guess your character,” says Parker, 6, who discovered the app on videos of other people playing it. It’s fun in the car or at the kitchen table.
Dhar Mann Videos on YouTube
Seventeen million subscribers have found this series of videos, which each have a moral lesson for kids. Dhar Mann is a serial entrepreneur who has had mixed success and some controversy, but Parker loves these videos and they have good, if simplistic, moral messages, mostly involving kids in elementary school.
His video “Kids Make Fun of Boy with Autism: They Instantly Regret It,” has been seen 56 million times and is a heart-warming lesson. Other videos include one about being adopted.
“I like how the bully reacts,” says Parker.”I like to see how they learn their lesson.”
By Brad and Parker Kava