Enter OSMO, a family of iPad apps screams educational value created by two former Google employees who wanted iPad play to involve more than staring at a screen. Is OSMO worth the $80 price tag? Frankly, are any of these educational apps worth it? Let’s take a look at the concerns associated with kid iPad use and whether OSMO solves the problem. Making the iPad Good for Kids Just a few years ago, kids and computers had a limited partnership. Sure, kids could answer quizzes and play some games with keyboards and accessories, but high-quality online games weren’t always easy to find. Also, slower Internet speeds didn’t always allow for sophisticated gaming. Parents hesitated — rightly so — to turn their kids loose online.Thanks to high-speed Internet, Wi-Fi, and improved processors, kids can take advantage of many different Web games using desktop computers. Many antivirus for Mac tools also come with parental controls to block websites that parents don’t want kids to visit, making Web travels safer. Still, no desktop experience can rival the tactile possibilities offered by iPad. Today, 40 percent of children under two and 75 percent of children under eight use touchscreen devices.Some medical professionals warn that iPad time can hurt brain and fine motor development. The American Academy of Pediatrics now recommends no screen time for kids under age two, and some occupational therapists suggest that screen time keeps kids from developing fine motor skills the way that paper, pencils, crayons, and other manipulatives can. OSMO attempts to address these screen time and fine motor concerns by getting eyes and fingers off of the touchscreen. Its greatest asset is that it brings physical and social interaction back into iPad gaming. What Is OSMO? OSMO utilizes a technology called “reflective artificial intelligence.” When you purchase OSMO, you receive a camera that snaps onto the top of your iPad and a base for keeping your iPad stable. Once it’s attached, the reflective AI lets your iPad “see” objects on the flat surface in front of it. To go with the camera, OSMO has created a family of apps, including:
With this app, kids are given an incomplete word. They slide letter tiles in front of the camera to guess the missing letters Tangram shows kids an image on the iPad screen. Then, kids reproduce the on-screen image by combining Tangram pieces in front of the camera Newton lets kids use drawings and found objects to create virtual Rube Goldberg devices. They see a falling ball on the iPad screen. Then, they arrange their devices and drawings to direct the ball toward a target Kids can learn to draw images from the Web, trace photos that they take, and combine elements to create a new drawing. The iPad translates the image into traceable lines, and kids then trace the drawing and print it
OSMO takes you kids’ fingers off of the screen and encourages them to create something unique. So is it worth the $80 price tag? If it gets parents and kids to play together, yes. Are Educational Apps Like OSMO Worth It? In most cases, handing children an iPad isn’t about improving their educational preparedness or supplementing their learning. It’s about getting them to do something quiet without interrupting their parents.There’s nothing wrong with parents taking a few precious quiet minutes, and there’s nothing wrong with wanting to shop for groceries while a kid plays peacefully with an iPad. However, it’s not good to let electronics take away from interactive time spent playing games, reading, and doing creative projects together. OSMO does help with some of the motor skill concerns by letting kids draw and manipulate objects while using the iPad. More importantly, it encourages interaction by making iPad games something that parents and kids can do together. It’s certainly cheaper to buy a box of tangrams and work on them at the kitchen table, but if it takes OSMO to get parents and children playing together again, the price tag might be worth it. Find more at PlayOSMO.com.