Leapfrog learning devices keep kids engaged

  • By David Rising Associated Press
  • Friday, August 22, 2008 7:27pm
  • Business

Your kids can learn math, how to tell time and other skills needed for school — and you don’t have to pry them away from video games.

That was the appeal of two new handheld devices my three boys recently tested: the $70 Leapster2 and the $90 Didj, made by LeapFrog Enterprises Inc. and designed to put learning games into a format likely to be coveted by children.

The Leapster has been around before, but the second version adds new game titles, such as “Star Wars Clone Wars: Jedi Math.” Designed for children ages 4 to 8, it connects to a computer with an included USB cable, allowing kids to earn rewards and certificates online and letting parents monitor their progress.

The Didj, geared for 6- to 10-year-olds, takes the connection one step further, allowing parents to customize games to, for example, help children study multiplication tables or learn specific spelling words for a classroom test. Players can also use the connection to customize a Didj, including designing their own online game characters known as avatars.

For today’s kids, veterans of many a gaming system, there’s not much of a learning curve to the Didj. They just pick it up and play.

The built-in “Jetpack Heroes” game takes a spaceman through a maze, picking up treasures for a couple of minutes as he goes along blasting foes.

Then comes the first math problem: 4 + 1, which wasn’t exactly rocket science for my 8-year-old son.

But it gets tougher as it goes along, with the system getting into more complicated times-tables with multiple choice answers.

For my 10-year-old son — at the top end of the targeted age — the times-tables remained a little easy, though the game was still enjoyable.

On the other hand, my 4-year-old son — below the target age but always up to a challenge — was able to get some of the simpler addition. The game interface is enough like others he’s tried that he could clumsily forge through, though he had to rely on his older brothers to yell out answers for harder problems.

Similar in feel to the Didj, though a little heftier, the Leapster2 has a pen with a touch screen to select games to play, and a voice that coaches you through your choices.

The built-in game helps teach numbers and letters to children piloting a dragon through clouds. They start out having the dragon breathe fire at nasty storms, while swooping into numbers or letters to select the right answers, before it becomes more difficult.

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