Elmo’s Preschool

by WorldVillage Software Reviews, published Wednesday, March 9th, 2005 at 4:35 pm

I’m Tickled, Elmo!


A Review of Elmo’s Preschool




Molly Christensen

Elmo, the loveable character from Sesame Street, would love to play

with your preschooler in Elmo’s playground. He tells your preschooler,

“Elmo

knows you are Elmo’s friend. Elmo is your friend too!” Chances are, your

preschooler will agree and would love to play with Elmo.

The user starts out in Elmo’s playground. The user can either click on

several objects that “sparkle” or click on one of five doors. If you click

on an

object that sparkles (other than a door) a fun animation occurs–very

similar to the

type you’d find on Sesame Street. Also, Sesame Street-type music is

sprinkled

throughout the program. The five doors in the playground lead to (1) the

music

room, (2) the letters room, (3) the face treehouse (4) the shapes & colors

tent and

(5) the numbers clubhouse.

Within each room, the user can freeplay with the objects (letters in the

letter room, sound boxes in the music room, etc.) Or, the user can click on

the

moon or star to play a short game with Elmo. For example, in the “face

treehouse,” the user can play “How would you feel?” with Elmo. Elmo asks a

hypothetical question such as “How would you feel if your sister pulled your

hair?

Make a face to show how you’d feel.” After the user makes a face, Elmo

tells the

user how he would feel. If the user made a happy face, Elmo might say,

“That’s

not how Elmo would feel. Elmo would feel mad! This is Elmo’s mad face.”

And

then Elmo would make a mad face. The child isn’t criticized or punished in

any

way if his answer isn’t quite correct, but Elmo makes sure he always shows

the

correct answer. One problem my son had at first in the face treehouse (but

quickly overcame) was that he couldn’t find any noses to select. He just

thought

there were plenty of colorful circles or ovals. Of course, Sesame Street

character’s noses are colorful circles or ovals, but my son was expecting

noses

that looked like noses.

One feature that makes this software unique and fun is how interactive

Elmo is with the user. Elmo doesn’t just give directions on how to play

games.

He “interacts” with your child. If he “notices” the user has been playing

only with

certain objects in the room, he might suggests, “Let’s play a game!” Or he

might

ask for a cupcake in the middle of the user’s freeplay. My 2 and half year

old son

actually thinks he is playing with Elmo. He told me “Ma! Casey & Elmo were

playing ABC’s and we made silly faces!”

The games within each room become more challenging as the user

repeatedly plays them. Unfortunately, the difficulty levels are not

adjustable by

the child or parent and are also not saved when you exit the program. So

each

time the user opens the program, it’s back to square one. A bookmark would

have been a nice addition to this program.

There is also a parent’s guide section of the software. It is mostly

informational, however and probably could’ve just been printed up as a nice

booklet. There is an area where you can print out an achievement

certificate for

your child. The child or parent can select different borders, pictures,

etc. to

accent the certificate.

Probably the most irritating thing about the program is its overcautious

approach to exiting each room. When the user clicks on the exit sign in a

room,

Elmo says “If you really want to leave, click on the exit sign again.” The

voice

takes about five seconds, which is actually a long time when you’re trying

to exit.

The cursor doesn’t return until after the voice stops talking, so you have

to wait

the full five seconds to click again. It makes sense to have an extra “are

you

sure…?” question when the user clicks on the stop sign to exit the whole

program,

but it’s a bit much to have it in each room. Plus, when Elmo asks me if I

really

want to leave, even I feel like Elmo (who is our friend) doesn’t trust me!

It seems

that after the first few uses of the program, there wouldn’t be that many

accidental

clicks on the exit signs to warrant the extra questioning.

Yes, it’s another piece of software for preschoolers, but you can never

have too many education titles, can you? As long as they’re decent programs

and your kids enjoy them, I don’t think so (well, to a certain point!).

Children learn

in so many different ways, you never know what learning method will work

best

with them. (The parent’s information guide was actually somewhat useful–I

learned that tidbit about different learning methods there!) Elmo’s

Preschool is

fun and entertaining, especially if you’re an Elmo fan. My son thoroughly

enjoys it

(and he didn’t even really know who Elmo was!)



School House Scorecard



















Product:

Elmo’s Preschool


Company:

Creative Wonders
P.O. Box 9017
Redwood City, CA 94063-9017


Cost:

$19.95






System Requirements:



IBM or compatible
486, 25 MHZ
4 MB RAM (8MB recommended)
2X CD-ROM Drive

MS DOS 5.0 & Windows 3.1 OR Windows 95
3 MB Hard disk space
SVGA video card with 640 X 480 resolution & 256 colors



Breakdown:



Ease of Use 4
Learning Value 4
Entertainment Value 4
Graphics 4
Sound 4



Overall Score:






0 rating, 0 votes0 rating, 0 votes (* 0 rating, 0 votes)
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