4 tips to seeing if an educational app will actually help your child learn
Image: LWA/Larry Williams/Blend Images/Corbis
Imagine someone telling you that a new technology would be available
in five years that has the potential to revolutionize childhood and
early education. But the downside is that you will have to choose from
among 80,000 possible options. This is the problem currently facing many
parents. Following the invention of the iPad in 2010, by January 2015
there were 80,000 apps marketed as "educational" in the Apple App Store
alone.
We recently published a large-scale review
of more than 200 articles on the question of how we can put the
education back in educational apps. We used several well-worn principles
that parents, educators and app developers can use to determine what is
truly educational and what is simply masquerading as such. Here is what
we found.
1. Apps should be minds-on, not minds-off
Have you ever used a GPS to drive to a new location but realized you
have no actual knowledge of where you are or how to get home even though
you drove there? Instead of actively processing the direction you were
travelling in and the composition of the neighborhood, you passively
followed the instructions. Research tells us that these kinds of
"minds-off" activities are precisely what you want to avoid when it
comes to selecting educational apps for children.
In a study of word learning,
children who actively used a process of elimination to figure out what
object a new label was referring to showed better learning than those
who were explicitly told that same information. Apps should utilize this
kind of deeper processing. Before you download, pay attention to
whether your child will simply be watching the screen or swiping flying
fruit, rather than actively solving problems and thinking deeply.
2. Apps should be engaging, not distracting
Imagine you just opened the refrigerator door and your phone rings.
When you get off the phone, you have absolutely no recollection of why
you were in the refrigerator in the first place. These kinds of
distractions take your attention away from what is happening around you,
yet surprisingly these kinds of "bells and whistles" are precisely what
many app developers include as "enhancements" in many apps.
A study comparing reading of electronic and traditional books
found that when younger children read traditional books with their
parents, parents talk more about the story and are less likely to direct
the behavior of the child, for example by saying "push that button".
Further, those reading the traditional book showed increased
comprehension and were better able to remember the sequences of events
in the story.
This difference is likely because electronic books may distract the
child with "extras" such as sound effects or games and detract from the
story itself. Apps can and should be "fun" but as a parent, you should
look for apps that help your child to stay on task and not become
distracted.
3. Apps should be meaningful
While learning the ABC song is an important building block, if your
child doesn't know that there are letters that relate to those sounds
and that they form our ability to communicate, this knowledge is really
just a song with no deep understanding.
Research from our own labs
has shown that children learn better when their parents help them play
in a way that helps them to build meaning. In other words, seeing
triangles in pieces of pizza is more meaningful than simply seeing them
in perfectly drawn shapes on a screen with the point always at the top.
Apps that teach the letters or numbers are fine but it is crucial for
children to know why this knowledge is actually important. They need to
see the information in use.
4. Apps that involve social interaction support learning
Research repeatedly shows that the best resource for young children
is not a fancy video, DVD, or even an app. Other humans are instead a
child's best resource for deeper learning. We looked at one study of children's ability to learn
the meaning of a new word from different formats. They were taught the
word in a live interaction, a digital interaction (think Skype), or a
straightforward video. The children learned the new information best
when it was presented socially — so that people actually responded to
them either live or on screen.
This is just one of the many studies that suggests that humans are
the best at teaching other humans. While the idea of an app can
sometimes seem inherently unsocial, newer apps hitting the market
encourage children to play alongside their parents or other friends.
Even feeling as if they have a social relationship
with famous characters like Elmo or Mickey Mouse appears to help
children feel connected and has the potential to increase learning and
engagement.
Finally, one last thing to look for is the context in which your child is learning. When adults set up a learning experience where children are given the tools to solve a problem and the freedom to find the solution on their own, they learn much more.
By asking yourself a few simple questions, you can determine which
apps are educational for your child and which might simply be fun.
Source: Mashable