Vtech - Winnie The Pooh - Pooh's Picture Computer Review
My 5 and 2 year old grandaughters fought over the computer. It was given to the 2 year old who guarded it tightly. The 5 year old would get it while the 2 year old was napping. A winner.
Vtech - Winnie The Pooh - Pooh's Picture Computer Feature
- 15 double-sided activity cards
- Alphabet keyboard teaches letter order
- 4 learning activities
- 4 light-up character buttons
- Recommended for children ages 3 and above
Vtech - Winnie The Pooh - Pooh's Picture Computer Overview
Pooh's Picture Computer is a panorama of learning with 15 double-sided activity cards that cue up play for eager learners. This thinking machine teaches letters, words, counting, logic games and more!
Available at Amazon Check Price Now!
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Customer Reviews
Too advanced for early learners. - Paul -
First, this computer challenges children with their alphabet, spelling, numbers, shapes (circle, square, triangle, and star), colors (blue, red, yellow, and green) and sense of direction (right, left, above, and below).
We bought this computer when my daughter was three. She loves Pooh, but she quickly lost interest. After using it for a few minutes, I realized most of the questions were too advanced for her. It has been rarely used since. My daughter is now four and she finally decided to use the computer as an educational tool. After about two minutes, she became very frustrated and began to pound on the keys. I took the computer and tried to help her. After about five minutes, I figured out why she was still frustrated, even though she is more advanced.
Problem #1: When Pooh gives your child a question to answer, your child has about 15-20 seconds to press a key (it goes by faster than you think). If your child does not respond or she answers the question wrong, it will ask the question again. The computer gives your child three tries and then it moves on. For example, my daughter was in the middle of spelling a word and she got stuck on a letter. When the time limit was up, the answer was wrong and she had to start over again. Uhh! Not exactly "beginner learning friendly".
Problem #2: The keys on the computer only have upper case letters, but the words written on the cards use lower case letters after the first letter. My daughter is still learning her alphabet, so it was difficult for her to identify the letters on the cards with the letters on the keys. Unless your child has mastered the difference between upper and lower case letters, there is no way he/she will be able to spell without your help. By the way, even with my help, we were getting the answers wrong because of the short time limit.
Problem #3: While I found the spelling to be too difficult, I also found the shapes and colors to be too easy. Some questions are meant for 2 to 3 year olds and others are meant for 5 to 6 year olds.
This computer would be perfect if it got rid of the time limit, added lower case letters to the keys, and included learning levels. While I like that they designed the keys in alphabetical order, I would perfer a qwerty designed keyboard.
Not really great... - YHWH4ever - Palmdale, CA
I don't really care for this toy. I bought it for my daughter for her 3rd birthday. Our friends had one and she liked it so I got one for her. First of all, there should be different levels of play because the variety of "games" is very easy to very difficult. It goes from what color an object is all the way to how to spell a word. Being someone who has experience working in the teaching field, this is too much of a span for what a child is learing at a particular age. Colors at age 2 to spelling at age 6 or so. Also, another bad thing is that the words on the cards are capitalized with the rest of the letters being lower case, but the keyboard is all upper case. My daughter is only recognizing upper case letters right now (being 4). It's too difficult for her right now, but on the other hand, she does get the color, number, above & below, right & left, and beginning sounds correct. Anyway, I just think there's too much of a easy to hard ratio with this toy. The least they could have done is make different levels of play. In any case, my daughter does enjoy playing with this, but I do detect a bit of discouragement on her part with the spelling.
A Big Hit - Joine - Oregon coast
This was a Christmas gift for my 3 year old granddaughter.
Her mother tells me it has been her favorite gift and she takes HER computer with her everywhere.
*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Oct 15, 2010 01:22:05
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