Monday 5 January 2015

ICT Blog Post








Raz Kids and Bookabi
We live in a part of the world where Internet is available to all learners. It is even written as a right in the Social Services Act in Sweden. Younger pupils are growing up with the technology as a natural part of their lives. The big question is how to use all this technology in our schools and how to find good, successful tools among all the more unnecessary games and apps.

According to the syllabus we are going to teach our pupils to understand spoken language and text and how to communicate and interact. This year I have been working with mainly two different electronic materials which complements each other; “Raz Kids” and “Bookabi”. Both Raz Kids and Bookabi can be used by pupils from third to ninth grade.


Raz Kids A-Z  is a learning site where pupils may practice their reading and writing skills. Raz Kids is quite expensive and costs 90 dollars/10 licenses which can be used on a computer with Internet connection or as an app for iPhone/iPad. Using the app one do not need Internet connection after downloading.

Reading A-Z contains projectable and also printable books in 27 levels. The pupils can listen to a book of their choice, read the book by him/herself and record that reading. The books end with a quiz to let the teachers and the pupils know what they have learned. Every assignment will give the pupils the opportunity to collect stars which can be used to build their own space ship. At the teacher corner the teachers may manage their students and study their achievements and what they need to practice once again. The teachers decide which level the pupils are going to work at, but the readers can choose books by own interest at that level.

In my classroom we often use Raz Kids together, sometimes the whole class and sometimes in groups. The pupils with English speaking parents and the linguistically advanced pupils use the books by themselves and that allows them to make progress in their own speed. 



Bookabi on the other hand is a free app for iPad (of course with in-app purchase). Bookabi is a tool which gives the pupils the opportunity to write illustrated stories in a very easy way. In this app one will find different characters, backgrounds and objects to build their story or comic. The pupils can also draw their own pictures and use the iPad camera to take a photo to insert. Text can be placed anywhere and they can even be written into bubbles. Each book has a cover and the students are able to create as many pages as they (or the teacher) would like.  

Often my pupils get their inspiration to write from what they have read on the Raz Kids. When they are finished writing and drawing, they have the opportunity to record sounds to the story and share it via email with their parents. If the pupils’ don´t know how to write in English they may just record their voice when they are telling a story about the pictures.
No matter if we are working with Raz Kids or Bookabi I find it most important to log on to the smart board and talk about the experience together, about the pictures, the stories, the questions and so on.

Best regards
Martina Petrén

For more information visit

2 comments:

  1. Hi, I have now paid a short visit to the web sites and I liked them as well. What I did like with raz-kids was that it had som many e-books and that you could record your reading. I also liked that you had a tool to help assess the pupils. The bookabi site I find similar to Puppet pals. Very creative and funny. Thank´s for the inspiration. I think you´re right by saying that it´s important to get together at the end of the lessons to talk about the exercises. Otherwise the pupils run a risk getting lost in just fun technology, not knowing what they are learning.

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  2. Hi Martina!
    Oh, these two sites seems great! And how fun that when your students have worked with Raz Kids A-Z they like to work with Bookabi as an additional task about what they just have read and learnd. What an inspiration they seems to get from Raz Kids A-Z. How old are your students? It looks like they do read, write and understand some English if they can work with this by themselves. Do you think Raz-Kids A-Z is worth the money? It´s sounds like a good material to work with when you can choose among many different levels on the books, which is good tho there is a big different at students language skills. Just like you, I think that the most important to do, whether we work with different sites, apps or books, is to experiance it all together. To talk about pictures, things that´s been said or happend and the tasks with the whole group. It´s important that we as teachers challange the students talking and reflecting and to make sure that everyone does understand what we have done or are going to do. Especially when we do have students in lower grades.
    I also do like that Raz Kids A-Z have that starcollection, my experiance is that this kind of attraction do children like, and in this way they will concentrate to the language even more to get as many stars as possible! Great!
    I have never heard about Bookabi before, but even this seems like a good app to use for practicing their language skills. Sounds kind of the same app like puppet palls. Except from a fun and motivating way for them to make stories up, try to write something, I think the best of it all is that they like to record their voices through apps like this, which make them practise their pronuncation and stress in the language.

    Nice to read your blog post!
    Have a nice day!
    /Josefin Ehnebom

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