The Telegram (St. John's)

Japan preschools using tablets to prep tots for digital age

- BY YURI KAGEYAMA

It’s drawing time at this suburban nursery school in Japan, but instead of crayons, tiny fingers are tapping on colours on ipad screens and taking selfies. Digital schooling has arrived in this nation long known for its zealous commitment to “three R’s” education.

Coby Preschool, in a small town northeast of Tokyo, is among nearly 400 kindergart­ens and nursery schools in Japan that are using smartphone software applicatio­ns designed especially for preschoole­rs called Kits.

That’s only about one per cent of this nation’s kindergart­ens and nursery schools. But it’s a start. Coby is helping lead a national initiative in “digital play.”

Parents everywhere worry their children might fall behind, and Japan is no exception.

The government has recently made strengthen­ing technology education national policy even as it struggles to meet its goal of supplying one digital device — computer or tablet — for every three children.

DIGITAL PLAY

With Kits, developed by Tokyo-based startup Smarteduca­tion, children colour birds and flowers that appear to come alive as three-dimensiona­l computer graphics. Children also draw various creatures that, when captured as computer images, swim or float around in virtual landscapes.

In a recent session, children got a triangle image on their ipads and were asked to draw on it with digital colours, store that image, and draw another one to create a two-screen story.

The usually shy children burst into an uproar, brainstorm­ing happily about what the triangle might represent: a sandwich, a rice ball, a dolphin, a roof, a mountain.

The children were then encouraged to come to the front of the class and explain what they had drawn as the images were shown on a large screen.

“There is no right or wrong answer,” said Akihito Minabe, the preschool principal leading the session.

The point is to nurture creativity, focus and leadership skills.

“They think on their own, they learn it’s OK to think freely, and it’s fun to come up with ideas,” said Minabe.

In the U.S., 98 per cent of children age eight and under have a mobile device in their homes, while 43 per cent have their own tablet, according to The Genius of Play, a U.S. program that researches education and play.

That’s similar to Japan, where each adult has an average of more than one smartphone and about half of preschoole­rs have access to a mobile device, according to Japanese government data.

In many U.S., Asian and European preschools and elementary schools, teachers use technology to present stories, music and other informatio­n. Educators are also studying children’s social developmen­t through how they learn to share digital devices.

GETTING SMARTER?

Much of what’s driving the adoption of tablets in U.S. preschools is a belief, founded or not, that an early start will make kids smarter at technology, said Patricia Cantor, a professor of early childhood education at Plymouth State University in New Hampshire. However, early research into how tablets and apps affect learning for kids ages two to five is inconclusi­ve.

“Touchscree­n stuff is pretty intuitive. They don’t need training,” Cantor said.

Some studies show positive outcomes among young children using mobile devices to improve their literacy, science or math skills, but there’s little research comparing tablet-assisted learning to more convention­al teaching approaches, according to a review of 19 studies by Christothe­a Herodotou, a lecturer at The Open University in the United Kingdom. Herodotou said it’s unclear which features might help or hinder learning. Devices and apps can also be misused — for instance, to keep children occupied so teachers can do other things.

“Even if it’s designed to encourage learning or exploratio­n or curiosity, it may not be used in that way,” said Cantor. “There’s so much junk out there.”

Still, the target age for “digital play” is getting ever younger.

Experts have known for years that playing is how children learn, says Ken Seiter, executive vice-president at The Toy Associatio­n, a non-profit, which represents businesses that design, produce, license and deliver youth-entertainm­ent products.

Toys can teach toddlers simple programmin­g or use augmented reality to bring story characters digitally alive, said Seiter, whose organizati­on spearheads The Genius of Play, a U.s.-based program that researches education and play.

JAPAN’S TAKE

Japan’s classrooms tend to be more structured than in the West, with students often acting in unison as they line up, bow and chant together. Children tend to be passive, and the emphasis is on the group rather than individual­s. Youngsters, even some preschoole­rs, attend extracurri­cular cram schools.

Kits’ designers have sought to make activities fun. One aim appears to be nurturing outspokenn­ess.

Yuhei Yamauchi, a professor of informatio­n studies at the University of Tokyo and Kits adviser, sees practical benefits.

By the time today’s five-yearolds start work, most jobs will require computer skills. Given Japan’s shrinking population, people may work into their 80s, shifting jobs several times. Digital skills are more critical than ever, he said.

Digital tools deliver the equivalent­s of libraries and museums at a child’s fingertips, said Ron Shumsky, a child psychologi­st who works in Japan. That can be addictive, he cautions, and students must be taught safe and responsibl­e “Digital citizenshi­p,” he said.

It’s so compelling it pulls you in,“he said. ”It keeps you wanting more.“

Experts warn that staring for too long at screens can damage eyesight and deter creative thinking. It’s a complex problem, since children may see their parents immersed in devices themselves.

Kits limits each session on the ipad to 15 minutes. Classes are held just 30 times a year.

FAMILY DIALOGUE

At the preschool in Yoshikawa, a sleepy Tokyo bed town ringed by lush rice paddies, the children have mastered timelapse photograph­y using their ipads.

Japanese preschools like Coby are subsidized by local government­s. Fees, including meals, are on a sliding scale based on income with the poorest families paying nothing.

Each preschool pays Smarteduca­tion an initial 500,000 yen ($4,400 USD), not including the cost of the ipads, and 30,000 yen ($265 USD) more a month for maintenanc­e. The cost for training teachers is included.

Students use the ipad message function to send their parents photos of themselves in action and share trailers of their upcoming performanc­es.

The kids are keen to talk about it, and parents say the endeavour encourages communicat­ion beyond the usual daily stream of commands: Eat dinner, take a bath, go to bed.

“I realized I tend not to wait for what the children have to say,” said hospital worker Masami Uno, whose son, five-yearold Ayumu, and two-year-old daughter attend Coby. “It made me stop and think about that.”

The kids AP spoke with favoured the usual sorts of career goals, saying they wanted to be ballerinas and soccer players. None said they wanted to be a computer programmer when they grow up.

But they like the Kits. “It’s fun,” said Yume Miyasaka, 6.

She noted with a little pride that her father uses an ipad for work. But, referring to her ipad creation, she said, “He usually doesn’t draw shaved ice.”

 ?? YURI KAGEYAMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Children work on a digital program at Coby Preschool in Yoshikawa, suburban Tokyo, on an assignment, which was to draw on a triangle on an ipad. Japanese preschool programs equipped with tablet computers aim to prepare kids for the digital age.
YURI KAGEYAMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Children work on a digital program at Coby Preschool in Yoshikawa, suburban Tokyo, on an assignment, which was to draw on a triangle on an ipad. Japanese preschool programs equipped with tablet computers aim to prepare kids for the digital age.

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