Archive for the ‘Elementary School’ Category

Discovery Channel Store: Bamboo Collection Games - Family Fun, Naturally

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Browse the game aisle at any big-box toy store, and you’ll find plenty of options, even for the youngest players. But most of those games are based on licensed characters, include plastic or flimsy cardboard parts, and they bore grown-ups to tears.

The Bamboo Collection games from the Discovery Channel Store - Rapido and Rapelli - are a refreshing change of pace in all three regards. Made from bamboo, without a character to be found, these games are truly fun for the whole family.

First up, Rapido. This blogger gave a great description of how the game works: “The game itself is pretty simple. Everyone picks a colored cylinder and takes a tile with the colored dots on it. You put the rope on the floor or table in a circle (I recommend the floor); place all of the colored marbles inside the big wooden cylinder; lift the cylinder so the marbles go everywhere; and then see who can fill their cylinder with the marbles the fastest. The only trick is that you have to pick them up in the order they are on the tiles with the colored dots.” Another mother added: “It can easily be modified for younger players, by removing the time constraint element, or the element of competition, and there are enough marbles for everyone playing to each finish their patterns without squabbling over a particular color marble.

Rapido is geared toward kids age four and older, but in practice the range differs. One mother lamented: “My youngest daughter looooves a good race so a game where you have to race to win is alright by her. Except when she can’t win…I think it was because each time she picked up a marble she would end up losing it out the top because she was tipping the tube and they were rolling out.” But since she herself was so pleased with the game, she added, “I’ll definitely be giving this game another chance in like a year when my daughter is closer to 6.

On the other hand, this mother played the game with her not-yet-four year old son - with great educational results: “I admit that I wanted to review this game for the educational potential. [My son] has struggled with his colors. His pre-school teacher has noticed it and we’ve noticed it for quite some time…This game has helped. I have him tell me the color names as he picks up the marbles. Granted, it makes it much slower and less of a game, but it works. He’s definitely shown improvement in his color recognition and his teacher agrees.

One blogger noted that “the enclosed rope is too stiff, making it difficult to really keep the marbles in the enclosed area. Since the marbles are so light, they tend to hop over or roll over the rope.” Other than that, the bloggers had no complaints about the construction or function of the game.

In fact, one mother reported that her kids “spent at least 40 minutes exploring the mechanics of the game, fascinated by how all the parts work, without the use of batteries, springs and plastic.” She went on to comment: “The game is beautiful for not only its natural materials, but also with its elegant simplicity…It’s the kind of gift I’m proud to give to another family as a birthday present.

As big a hit as Rapido was, Rapelli might have been even more well-received. This blogger summarized the game perfectly: “The rules of the game are very simple: each person picks a color and puts their corresponding caterpillars into the tube. You then take turns rolling the dice which will give you a color and a direction to move with the number of moves. This directs you to move that colored caterpillar either in or out of the tube the number of segments show on the die. The winner is that last caterpillar in the tube.” Another blogger added: “If having players choose colors and sharing colors becomes confusing for some children, you can instead play with the goal of collecting the most caterpillars regardless of color.

Not only was Rapelli fun for parents and older kids, the little ones enjoyed it too. One mother reported: “What we didn’t expect from Rapelli is how much my toddler son would love it! Too young to play with the dice, we put those away and let him have fun putting the caterpillars in the tree and taking them out (works his pincer grasp).” Another blogger agreed that the appeal of the caterpillars: “The caterpillars have elastic holding the segments together so they will wiggle when you shake them and look really cute. Even before playing the game the kids had fun playing with all the pieces…the only complaint we have is that the game will sometimes devolve into a caterpillar puppet show because the pieces are so cute and wiggly.

The bloggers also lauded the use of bamboo in both games, as opposed to plastic or wood: “What I love about Rapelli most is the fact that it’s made from bamboo, a sustainably harvested material.” This blogger added, “Bamboo grows and matures quickly, making it easy to harvest and then plant another crop, unlike slow-growing trees.

Check out Rapido and Rapelli at the Discovery Channel Store!

Discovery Channel Store: Critter Habitat Toys - Here’s What They’re Saying So Far

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Not surprisingly, based on the feedback thus far, the Bug Net Launcher and Venus Fly Trap from the Discovery Channel Store have been phenomenal hits with our bloggers’ kids.

In part, these toys are cool simply because they’re from the Discovery Channel Store: “I adore the Discovery Store folks. I mean, they have the coolest stuff for kids, so whenever Parent Bloggers Network sends out one of their emails with something new to try out, I jump at the chance. Who doesn’t love a good toy that also helps you learn?

But they’re also big winners for appealing to some of kids’ (and - let’s admit it - adults’) baser natures. As one mother put it: “One might think that having two little girls bugs might not be a popular topic at my house. How wrong you would be, my girls dig bugs. Most everything else makes them whine or shriek, but not bugs, worms or caterpillars.” Another added: “We are unreasonably excited about seeing what else we’ll catch when there are more flying bugs about. Bigger, meatier ones.

The Bug Net Launcher is a “galactic-looking device [that] resembles a tricked-out water pistol, except instead of shooting streams of water at a target, it launches four blunt-tipped safety darts attached to a large (18″ x 18″) square net into the air.” This same blogger went on to describe it as a “reincarnation of the good old-fashioned butterfly net.

One family is practicing on easy targets for now: “We are unfortunately being overrun by tent caterpillars this year - they move very slooooooowwwwwwwly and make good targets” but another mother noted: “The launcher shoots the darts/net so fast, the critter won’t have time to react.” A third agreed, commenting: “If I were a Monarch butterfly or a Daddy Long Legs and I saw this dart-net bomb heading my way, I might just die of a heart attack right there on the spot. [Note to insects everywhere: An encounter with a Bug Net Launcher may well be the equivalent of donating your body to science.]

This blogger cautioned: “If you’re hosting a playdate of more than one child, beware. Three boys + one bug launcher = drama. (Hey, quit hogging the gun! Its MY turn!)” and both she and another mother advised that “the key part here is just keeping the aforementioned boys from shooting siblings or animals.” But hey, “let’s admit it, how cool is it to shoot some big old bugs?

The Venus Fly Trap doesn’t incite the same level of rambunctiousness as the Bug Net Launcher, but it still piqued the interest of the kids and the adults. As one blogger explained: “I always thought it would be very cool to have a carnivorous plant…It’s a plant, it’s entertainment, it keeps down the insect population in your home. Triple winnah. But apparently, the Venus fly trap requires more care than your average houseplant.” She went on to add, “That’s why the pretend Venus Fly Trap from Discovery Channel Store is a good idea. It looks and acts like the real thing, but it’s battery-operated and made of durable plastic.” Another mother agreed: “The Venus Fly Trap comes already assembled (thank you, Discovery Store) and all you have to do is feed it a couple of batteries and then bait the trap.

What did the kids catch in the Venus Fly Trap?

“It caught a bug…it caught a bug and…EWWWW…it was a big ugg-wee one, too!”

I carefully lifted the trap and, with one eye closed, peered into the chamber and saw that…nope…there was no bug.

“Where did it go?”

[shrugs]

“I didn’t wook-wike it could buh-weave, so I wet it go.”

Apparently it’s not easy to catch the Venus Fly Trap in the act: “Despite careful observation, it didn’t perform on command for us, which was a bummer.” Even so, “it was still a thrill to return to our pet and see its leaves snapped shut and something flitting about its chamber.

Perhaps most impressive of all was the poem inspired by the Venus Fly Trap:

“Oh, thing of nature, natural now no more!
The Carolinian bog you disavow;
the tannic waters gone, the smell of salt
now only beads of sweat upon my brow
as I struggle to release you
from this g*d-damned
clamshell packaging.

Oh travesty! Oh horticulture’s sin!
Your synthetic sprayed-red claws cannot aspire
to real-life crimson lobes like velvet lips,
twin labium carnivorous with desire
for bug flesh

and perhaps
that’s a good thing;
there’s only so much Georgia O’Keefe
I can explain in one afternoon.”

(Read the rest here.)

Wow. I never expected a review campaign to inspire poetry!

Check back for the rest of the reviews, as well as the final Round-Up Review!

Today! - Chaos Theory
Thurs 5/22 - The Not Quite Crunchy Parent
Fri 5/23 - Laura Williams’ Musings
Mon 5/26 - Sarah’s Dandelions
Tues 5/27 - Lather Rinse Repeat
Wed 5/28 - Karianna
Thurs 5/29 - Lipstick to Crayons
Mon 6/2 - Round-Up Review on PBN

Discovery Channel Store: Alternative Energies Toys - Campaign Launch

Monday, May 19th, 2008

With the price of gas topping $4 per gallon, our kids are getting an earful about the cost of energy. They might know about hybrid cars and solar-powered calculators. But how much do they really know about alternative energy sources?

Two new toys from the Discovery Channel Store provide older kids with a hands-on opportunity to learn about other sources of energy beyond fossil fuels. The Solar Science Lab includes more than 30 activities that harness the power of the sun, and the Hydro Greenhouse introduces kids to the science of hydroponics by growing plants without soil.

Fifteen of our parent bloggers with older kids (age 8 and up) checked out these toys, and they’ll be posting their reviews over the next few weeks. See what they had to say - these toys might be a great summer vacation activity to keep your kids’ minds active (and your mind off the price of gas).

Tues 5/20 - Radioactive Girl
Wed 5/21 - Ruth Dynamite
Thurs 5/22 - PunditMom
Mon 5/26 - Halushki
Tues 5/27 - A Gaggle of Girls
Wed 5/28 - Mom to the Screaming Masses and Mid-Campaign Post on PBN
Thurs 5/29 - Mom Reviews
Fri 5/30 - Crazy Momcat
Mon 6/2 - Just Not Martha
Tues 6/3 - The Silent I Speaks
Wed 6/4 - Melting Mama
Thurs 6/5 - Three Kid Circus
Fri 6/6 - Sweatpants Mom
Mon 6/9 - Lipstick to Crayons
Wed 6/11 - Round-Up Review on PBN