價格:免費
更新日期:2017-05-11
檔案大小:74M
目前版本:1.5
版本需求:Android 5.1 以上版本
官方網站:http://www.talkingfingers.com
Email:kris@talkingfingers.com
聯絡地址:830 Rincon Way San Rafael, CA 94903
THE DANCING PIG is the 3rd of seven TALKING SHAPES apps that teach 36 sounds of English, the letters that represent them, and words that can be built with them. The ongoing storyline is about two sisters (“long, long ago”) who invent letters in order to remember the stories they love. THE DANCING PIG adds to what was learned in TALKING SHAPES1&2 by teaching 6 more letters (I, G, B, D, J, W) and 7 phonemes: (“j”, “g” “b”, “d”, “i”, “w”, “I” as in HI) and 15 KEY WORDS: FIG, IS, HIS, FIT, SIT, HIT, IT, PIT, BIT, BAT, PAT, DID, BAD, PIN, DAD, with an interactive story and games. Talking Shapes 4-7 teach the rest of the 40 sounds of English and words that can be built with their letters.
Letters are shapes that talk. They change the sounds in spoken words into shapes that we can see. Talking Shapes helps 4-6 year olds identify the sounds in the words they say, draw and name the letters that represent them, sound-out and spell 3-letter words, and read short rhymes that use the words they have built. The camera feature of the tablet shows in “selfies” how your child’s mouth moves to say the different sounds in words. Letters are embedded in pictures that call to mind both the sound and the shape of the letter. Children use their fingers to draw the letters on the touch-screen. A catchy Phoneme Song helps them remember the sounds of vowels.
Funded by the National Institute of Child Health & Human Development, the apps were developed by Dr. Jeannine Herron, a research neuropsychologist in consultation with Drs. Linnea Ehri, Carol Connor, and Leslie Grimm, (developer of “Reader Rabbit”). Independent research with pre-school children using Talking Shapes, carried out by Dr. Margie Gillis, affiliate of Haskins Laboratory at Yale University, showed they had gained significant superiority of reading skills compared to controls on entering kindergarten.
These evidence-based apps implement discoveries from recent brain research revealing how the brain develops efficient pathways for skilled reading.