Tag archive: ipad apps for children

Top 15 posts on Timbuktu in 2012

It’s nearly the end of the year, and not any year: 2012 has been the first year of our blog, and an incredible year for Timbuktu! As part of the celebrations, we made a little roundup of our most popular blog post this year. So, whether you are a new friend or you’ve been supporting us from the beginning, here are our  most popular posts of 2012 – let us know which are your favorite, and what you’d like to read more about!

1 - Funniest letters to Santa Claus ever!

This was it! Our selection of 10 really funny letters written by kids to Santa Claus was a holiday success, proving that all the parents and adults reading this blog still remember they were children once, and enjoy a laugh.

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Teach kids programming? There’s an app for that.

It’s never too early to learn programming. And, as we were just saying, what better way to teach it than through a game?

Of course, there is one. For iPad.


Video and images via Cargo-Bot

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Education is not a game. Or is it?

Learn math through game development. Create an app to understand photosynthesis. Figure out thermal energy with gameplaying.

Wouldn’t that be every child’s (and many parent’s) dream? Except it’s not a dream, it’s a true story by GameDesk.

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The Muppets make Band-Aids fun. With an iPad app!

Band-Aids, they are no fun. Or are they?

Well, when combined with the Muppets in an augmented reality iPad app, they can actually be pretty exciting.


Video via Gizmodo

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Which skills are going to make your kids winners in 2020?

The fact that Internet is changing the way our brains work is no news. But Elon University and Pew Internet and American Life Project just published a great report that goes way further. They’ve asked to 1000 gurus – like Danah Boyd, Clay Shirky, David Weinberger, Alexandra Samuel, and Janna Anderson – how the cognitive future of kids is going to look like in 2020 and which life skills will be crucial to be successful.

Multitasking, rapidity in searching, browsing, synthesizing information and assessing its quality are going to be key. The importance of these skills, the experts claim, needs to be recognized and processed by the education system. No reform of education can leave behind these issues, because any kid will have to develop this kind of tech literacy to be successful in the post Internet era.

At Timbuktu we always say that attention has become more important than concentration. Attention is a key skill because it gives us the possibility to be exposed to a huge quantity of information and just catch moment by moment what’s relevant and valuable for us. In a way, we can imagine that this is one of the main skills that you can train while playing video games. Take a look at what Gabe Zichermann, chair of the Gamification Summit and Workshops, says about video games and the way they can help us understand what the future of the education, and of the world itself will look like.


Kids playing with Timbuktu!

One of our smallest fans just woke up in Rome and started to play with Timbuktu! How about you and your kids? We would love to receive your photos with the magazine! The cutest ones will get a special surprise in the next issue!