Articulation Games is the newest release from the Virtual Speech Center. The app is developed by a SLP with emphasis on articulation of sounds. The app includes real life picture cards for 40 phonemes (p,b,m,w,f,v,voiced and voiceless th, t,d,s,z,n,l,sh,ch,j,y,r, air, ar, ear, or, er, ire, k,g,h, blends: gl, kl, pl, br, dr, fr, gr, kr, pr, tr, sk, sl, sm, sn, sp, st.) The app features 4 activities: flashcards, memory matching, sweet spinner, and the articulation wheel.
Start by adding a student. After you add your students you
will be prompted to select phonemes for each student.
These phonemes will be saved for the next game you play where you can either keep the same phonemes or select new ones.
These phonemes will be saved for the next game you play where you can either keep the same phonemes or select new ones.
When using the flashcards portion of the app you can add
multiple members to session. The flashcard will be displayed in the center of
the screen. The SLP can select the level and position of the targets on the
left hand side of the screen. In the example above notice initial position of words is selected. Data collection is located on the right hand side of the
screen. I chose to turn off the sound effects (settings are listed in the top
right of screen). If you want the game
to verbalize the prompt, press the blue play button in the bottom right hand of
the screen. To record a student attempt, press the red record button in the top
right of the screen. Simply swipe left
and right to move between pictures. When you are ready to move to the next
student, select the drop down box located top center. There is a counter
located above the data collection buttons. This only indicates the picture
prompt that you are on (ie: you’re on picture 13/20) and does not indicate %
correct.
When you are finished with the session, select the ‘Finish’ button in the top left hand corner. A report will be generated indicated date, phoneme targets, percentages, etc. From this screen you have the option to email the report or return to the home page.
When you are finished with the session, select the ‘Finish’ button in the top left hand corner. A report will be generated indicated date, phoneme targets, percentages, etc. From this screen you have the option to email the report or return to the home page.
The Memory Game is slightly different from other artic apps
currently on the market. What I like about it is that the app brings up a new
screen with the target word and data collection page each time you select a card.
This forces the student to slow down and work on the articulation of the target word, rather than skipping right to find the next match. The data collection and target selection is the same in this game. The name at the top of the screen indicates which student is playing. Since you have two children playing with different phonemes you have two different matching games being completed. Selecting different students, changes the game board back and forth.
This forces the student to slow down and work on the articulation of the target word, rather than skipping right to find the next match. The data collection and target selection is the same in this game. The name at the top of the screen indicates which student is playing. Since you have two children playing with different phonemes you have two different matching games being completed. Selecting different students, changes the game board back and forth.
The Artic Wheel is just what it sounds like. Spin the wheel
to earn a phoneme target. Landing on stars
or plain spaces gives the student a target word. If they land on the
wheel marked PET, they are treated to a dancing animal across their screen
(check out that rooster/fox combo running across the picture above!) As in the other games with in the app, data is collected
and the SLP has the choice of placement and level of difficulty. You can record
student productions and have the iPad read a verbal prompt. To switch between
students, you will need to select the drop down box at the top of the screen.
The Sweet Spinner is a chance to play the slots with your
articulation sounds. First select your student, their phoneme, the placement
and difficulty of that phoneme. Touch the handle of the spinner and wait for
your new picture. Sweets will spin around before a new target word is shown on
the screen. Students try to earn sweets (cakes, candies) that fall from the pipe on
the left. I wish these cakes stayed on the page so that I could make them earn
a certain number of cakes to be finished with that sound. Instead I made my
kiddo work until they earned 5 and we tallied them on my data sheet.
Report's are generated at the completion of each game but can also be viewed from the home page. Select a
student. Then select to gather data by goal (phoneme) or by date. The report
will include all data for that sound or goal. By the way... I always use Garrett as my other name on demo's because that's my brother! Don't want to use student names on here!
Here's a video from the developer giving you a closer look at the app.
The Virtual Speech Center is always really great about taking suggestions from SLP's and making quick changes to their apps. My wish list for Articulation Games includes the following thoughts. I wish I could print one total report for each student. At the end of the quarter I'd love to be able to print out one document that includes all data. From my use of the app, there isn't a way to edit the students or delete students. You might notice that the iPad autocorrected Garrett's name and added a possessive s. I couldn't find a way to fix that! Lastly some of the sentences were hard for my students. For example I had a 6 year old working on /sh/. Some of sentences were too complex in language so I modified the sentence for him.
The app is currently listed for $34.99 in the iTunes store. What do you think? Are you excited to see articulation apps start to add extra activities to engage students?
*** Edit: I heard from the developers and you can delete a student. Here's how:
You need to go to “Reports” section, tap on the blue pencil icon and you’ll see red icon to mark the
The Virtual Speech Center is always really great about taking suggestions from SLP's and making quick changes to their apps. My wish list for Articulation Games includes the following thoughts. I wish I could print one total report for each student. At the end of the quarter I'd love to be able to print out one document that includes all data. From my use of the app, there isn't a way to edit the students or delete students. You might notice that the iPad autocorrected Garrett's name and added a possessive s. I couldn't find a way to fix that! Lastly some of the sentences were hard for my students. For example I had a 6 year old working on /sh/. Some of sentences were too complex in language so I modified the sentence for him.
The app is currently listed for $34.99 in the iTunes store. What do you think? Are you excited to see articulation apps start to add extra activities to engage students?
*** Edit: I heard from the developers and you can delete a student. Here's how:
You need to go to “Reports” section, tap on the blue pencil icon and you’ll see red icon to mark the
student for deletion. Just tap “Delete” button to delete it.




I love this! Thanks for doing this review.
ReplyDeleteI love that the matching game makes the kids pause and say the words. I was just playing the Articulation Station matching game with my preschoolers today, and they hated when I made them pause and say the words! I think this would be better because the game (not me) is making them pause and say the word. :)
I know right?! I was SO excited about that. When I used it with one of my littles (who is used to the A.S. version) he gave me a big grin. He is so used to me swiping the iPad off the table to make him say the words!
DeleteMy kids ALWAYS rush through the matching game in Articulation Station without saying their target words. I love that it makes them stop and say the word. It also sounds like you are getting more activities for a cheaper price than A.S.
DeleteI love using apps in conjunction with traditional therapy. I wasn't too keen on it at first but now there are some really great ones!
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you for reviewing them!
DeleteOhh! Adding 3 element clusters would be my only suggestion as a target!
ReplyDeleteI love this!! I think it would be amazing for younger students and older students who are bored with traditional therapy. Add a little spunk to speech therapy!!
ReplyDeleteThis app seems great!! Thank you for the review! As a bilingual SLP servicing primarily Spanish-speaking students, I'd die for something this great with Spanish target words. One of the 2 apps I've found for Spanish-speakers doesn't have consonant clusters or multisyllabic words.
ReplyDelete