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How Toons

What it is:  How Toons is like an Instructables site for kids.  Kids learn through cartoons and videos how things work and how to make things.  This is kind of a How It’s Made website for kids.  Topics include science, space, nature, events, and a how to section.  The cartoons illustrate a concept and accompanying videos expand on the concept.  How to integrate How Toons into the classroom:   How Toons is an excellent site to excite your students about science.  Share a How Toons with your students and then explore the science behind it together.  Use a How Toons as inspiration, after viewing How Toons, students can create their own cartoon on any topic being studied in class.  How Toons are great for teaching kids how to follow step by step instructions and would also be useful for teaching them how to create their own instructions.   Tips:  How Toons would be a fun RSS feed to subscribe to as a class!   Leave a comment and tell us how you are using How Toons in your classroom.

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Whiz Kids

Posted by admin | Posted in Character Education, Foreign Language, Fun & Games, Interactive Whiteboard, Language Arts, Primary Elementary, Social Studies, Websites, video | Posted on 08-07-2010

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What it is: Whiz Kids is a new site developed for autistic children.  It was designed to give these kids a fun place to develop life skills.  All of the games and videos have high production values, making them engaging and impressive, they feel as though you have stepped into a Pixar movie.  Through this one portal, you get 16 interactive and therapeutic games.  The games help kids develop essential life skills like empathy, recognizing emotion, making decisions, coping with change, transactions,  non-verbal gestures, grouping, schedules, finding a route, and making eye contact.  Although these games were specifically developed for children with autism, they are wonderful for primary elementary students and ELL students as well.

How to integrate Whiz Kids into the classroom: Whiz Kids has an incredible back story, the site was created by more 80 students 8 lecturers and 10 autism specialists, the project represents more than 16,000 hours of research and development.  The games are tailored to fit the needs of autistic children.  If you teach autistic children, these games will help them develop important life skills that will aid them when interacting with classmates.  The games would be great for classroom computers as a center activity.  Help other students in your classroom understand how they can help the autistic children in the classroom by having them play the Whiz Kids games as well.  This will give your students a shared vocabulary and experience to draw on when they are working and playing together in the classroom.  Because the games focus so much on character development, they are appropriate for any primary classroom.  Help your students learn about complex human interactions like empathy, non-verbal communication, and coping with change through game play.  The games can be played and discussed as a whole class using an interactive whiteboard or projector connected computer, or they can be played independently at a computer center, or a computer lab.  After playing the game, practice the skill taught as a class.  For example, if students play Robbie the Robot and are practicing recognizing emotion and facial expressions, follow up by asking students to work with a partner making faces and naming the emotion.  ELL students can use Whiz Kids to develop character related vocabulary and understanding.

Tips: On the Whiz Kids sister site, Autism Games, teachers can get more information about individual games and how to use them with students.  Each game is categorized based on the life skill that it teaches.  The game descriptions and suggestions are fantastic.

Please leave a comment and share how you are using Whiz Kids in your classroom.

Comments (5)

[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Shelly S Terrell, Milton Ramirez, ktenkely, Angela Lee and others. Angela Lee said: RT @ktenkely: Whiz Kids is outstanding! games #autistic kids, gr8 4 early learners http://bit.ly/bVOg1B #edtech #autismspeaks [...]

It’s a colourful and attractive interface – great site!

Fantastic to have a great resource like this for autistic children. Thanks for sharing.

This post caught my attention when I first saw it. My wife is an Speech and Language Pathologist and she works with students with Autism on a daily basis. I showed the site to her to get her professional opinion and she said it was great. It helps model so much of the social aspects of her therapy. She’s going to try and use it during some of her therapy sessions. Great find! I’ll let you know how it goes.

Thanks Manuel, it is always great to get the opinion of someone who has used the tool with its intended audience. I have used the site with early elementary kiddos and a child with Down Syndrome, he really enjoyed it!

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