You can email your list out for an easy way to show which books you’re interested in getting and which books you’ve already completed.” ![]() Tag a book as “I want this” or “I’ve read this” to add it to your list. All movies are close captioned, so it’s easy for them to read along.”ĭeveloper Description: “This app is a fun way for parents, teachers, librarians, and readers to get more information about top rated books at the fifth and sixth grade level. We’ve got an Android version coming in the next few days.ĭeveloper Description: View 360-degree panoramas of places around the globe with Street View View high resolution satellite imagery of locations around the world.ĭeveloper Description: “… explore more than 750 Science, Math, Social Studies, English, Engineering & Tech, Arts & Music, and Health subjects right on their mobile devices. It might be that 25 of the best 50 are phonics instruction, but we didn’t want the list dominated by any single grade level or content area.ĥ. We tried to included a wide variety of apps. Some of these we included a brief statement of why you should use the app, while others we included developer commentary.ģ. They are numbered, but are in no certain order.Ĥ. We wanted the list to be as truly free as possible for you to use.Ģ. Some may require in-app purchases, but we tried to limit these. We also tried to limit how many “lite/free” versions of more robust paid apps we included. These are purposely not all purely academic, “training” apps that focus on individual skills, but rather the an array of apps students could use daily to improve their ability to think, connect, and use information.ġ. Some are formal learning–math drilling and phonics, for example–while others are RSS readers, social media platforms, and the like. ![]() The following is our list for the 55 best apps for learning we can find.
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