For your kids, summer is all about sunshine and summer camps, adventure-filled days and weeklong family vacations they’ll remember forever. But that doesn’t mean the hard work they put into learning important stuff during the school year should atrophy in the sunshine. It should bloom!

When you buy a new Fire Kids Edition tablet, there are a slew of educational apps to give them that much-needed summer brain boost.  Each new Kids Edition Tablet comes with a subscription to FreeTime Unlimited (one year only), which gives your kids access to over 15,000 books, videos, games and apps, all for free for the first year.  

Pro Tip: You can set daily goals for reading, watching and playing through FreeTime and you also have the option to block entertainment content until those daily goals are met.

 

Want to get started but don’t know where to begin? Read on for some of our favorite brain boosting apps from well-loved brands like PBS, Viacom, Nick Jr. and Sesame Workshop, all rated 4 or 5 stars and all available for free for one year on the All-New Fire Kids Edition Tablet (click for your 20% off code).

For Kids Age 3-5 Years Old

ABC’s and 123’s are all the rage with the tot lot. Add in a few animal sounds and you’ve hit the kid edutainment trifecta. Parents can help young learners build basic math and grammar skills with these kid-approved free apps on the Fire Kids Edition tablets.

Elmo Loves 123’s: Little ones can slide, swipe, touch, and trace their way through a variety of early math games about numbers 1 to 20. Elmo apps are a big hit for this age group .

Squeebles Tell the Time: Well-loved across the pond, this UK based series of apps have reached number 1 in the Apple education charts. In this app, the adorable Squeebles characters have to defeat the nasty Time Troll, offering a fun way for kids to learn to tell time.

SUPER WHY ABC Adventures: Alphabet: The Parent’s Choice Gold Award winning app (based on the PBS Kids Show) offers five interactive literacy games, teaching kids uppercase and lowercase letters, the order of the alphabet, as well as common letter sounds.

Teach Your Monster to Read:  Developed in collaboration with leading academics at the University of Roehampton, kids can create a monster and take it on a magical journey over three extensive games that introduce new characters and improve their reading skills as they progress.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar & Friends: Little ones will love Eric Carle’s best-selling book of all time as it comes to life with sound and movement, offering curious unpredictable interactivity as world’s best-known caterpillar finds healthy fruits as he wriggles across the garden.

Team Umizoomi; Math Racer: Based on the popular Nick Jr. Kids show, Team Umizoomi, kids can customize and race their own car while enjoying fun pit stop challenges including shapes and numbers so they can learn as they play.

For Kids Age 6-8 Years Old

Engage early elementary-aged kiddos with familiar faves to pique their interest in learning using their tablet. Then keep the ball rolling with some more challenging apps that teach problem solving, geography, biology and physics.

Thinkrolls: A Common Sense Media Top Pick, this app teaches logic, observation, spatial cognition, problem solving, and memory skills through hundreds of puzzles. Easy mode for younger kids and advanced mode for older kids.

Lightbot Jr:  The perfect starter app for kids who have an interest in coding and/or developing programming logic, Lighbot Jr. is an easier version than the popular Lightbot app, which many teachers use in the classroom. Available in over a dozen languages.

Geography Drive Arcade: Perfect for 3rd-5th graders, this app tests your knowledge about all 50 states, including spelling, shapes, capitals, state flags as well as history and trivia. Kids are rewarded with trophies at 4 different levels.

DNA Play: Recommended by BBC, Cool Mom Tech, this app offers an intro to to DNA, biology and genetics, as kids complete the DNA puzzles, swap their pieces to mutate and tap on body parts to trigger random mutations. Parents’ section includes basic info on DNA, illustrated tutorial, interaction hints & play ideas.

Times Tables: This simple app will take over when you get bored of reciting Multiplication Tables with your kids. Kids love the autonomy of learning at their own pace.

Pettisons Inventions: Nominated for the Best Nordic Children’s Award, this app helps kids learn about realtime physics and the science behind different features like air, fire, magnetism and jumping bunnies. Many of inventions are included in the game, but kids also have an opportunity to create their own!

For Kids Age 9-12 Years Old

Give older kids the challenge they need with content specific powerhouses like anatomy, chess, math and history/elections from trusted sources like National Geographic and Smithsonian.

Human Skeleton: Bones for Beginners:  This simple app has one purpose: to teach kids the key bones in the human skeleton, including names and locations. There are three fun modes to let them learn at their own pace.

Campaign Manager: Not only will your kids learn election terminology and trivia, but with this app they can host their own simulated election using real-world polling data, population demographics, and historical voting trends. Simulated skills include hiring volunteers, prepare for a national debate and fundraise.

Chess and Mate: This app offers a self-motived kid an opportunity to chess rules, professional tricks and game tactics with an unlimited amount of practice games. Good for beginners and more advanced players. Multiplayer option available for the whole family.

Concentration: The Attention Trainer: Designed with help from the Society for Brain Training in Hamburg, this game helps kids train their concentration capabilities in a targeted manner using 20 different task types. Similar to the award-winning game series “Successfully Learning” from Tivola.

Sherlock Holmes Mystery Collection: A hidden-picture app with award-winning illustrations that help kids develop visual and spatial puzzle solving skills. Also helps nurture an appreciation for classical literature.

Operation Math Code Squad: Consider one of the Best Math Apps from Teachers With Apps, this fast-paced app lets multiple players race against the clock as they work together to solve problems to disarm Dr. Odd’s devious devices in a race against the clock. Guaranteed to keep kids on the edge of their tablet.

 

 

—Allison Sutcliffe

Sylvan can help keep your students on track academically AND help them have a blast this summer (and retain everything they’ve learned during the school year)! Start your summer with one of Sylvan’s enriching academic camps including reading, writing, math and more. Round off the day with one of their innovative STEM camps including robotics, coding, and engineering!

It’s time to start shopping for backpacks and choosing first-day-of-school outfits. Local pools are starting to close, and you’re probably starting to search for the best area pumpkin patches. But before you break out the sweaters and boots, there are still plenty of great ways to see the summer out. Here are some of the best end-of-the-season shindigs in the region.

Photo: Maryland Renaissance Festival via Facebook

Maryland Renaissance Festival
Experience 16th-century England in living color at this annual event that seeps into fall. The story line this year takes you back to 1525, when King Henry VIII and Queen Katherine of Aragon visit as part of their summer travels. Expect to see archery demonstrations, acrobatics, comedians, magicians and staged duels. Kids can enjoy children’s activities, free pony rides and a maze. Food and shopping are available, too.

When: Aug. 29-Oct.25
Cost
: $8/kids ages 7-15; $19/adults (before Sept. 13, $10 and $24, respectively, after that)
Online:
rennfest.com

Library of Congress National Book Festival
The 15th annual event features pavilions for children and teens and the Pavilion of the States honoring America, D.C., and U.S. territories. Kids receive a brochure upon arrival, which suggests 52 books for kids to find at the various tents and booths–they get a stamp or sticker when they do. Other activities include arts and crafts and story times with authors.

When: Sept. 5, 10 am
Cost: Free
Online: loc.gov

Photo: The Great Zucchini 

The Great Zucchini
Say goodbye to the magic of summer with, well, magic. The Great Zucchini, whose simple tricks and silly antics delight kids ages 2 to 6 is the final act of Fairfax County’s Arts in the Park summer series at Mason District Park Amphitheater.

When: Aug. 22, 10 am-11 am
Cost: Free
Online: fairfaxcounty.gov

Star-Spangled Nights Fireworks at Busch Gardens Williamsburg
After a day of riding gravity-defying roller coasters or less scary, “KIDsiderate” options such as the Sesame Street Forest of Fun, including a water playground, visitors can enjoy patriotic pyrotechnics from land or sea–well, waterway, at least, aboard the Rhine River Fireworks Cruise.

Date: Fireworks are Friday, Saturday and Sunday through Sept.6
Cost: $65/kids ages 3-9, $75/person ages 10 and up
Online: seaworldparks.com

Photo: Noah Kalina via National Building Museum

The BEACH at the National Building Museum
This architectural simulation of a beach is all the fun with none of the mess–or drive time from this D.C. area. The “water” is made from 1 million recyclable plastic balls, making the ocean into a giant ball pit, complete with shallow and deep ends. Get summertime snacks like s’more pops from Union Kitchen, a food incubator, on the “shore.” No bathing suits required.

When: Through Sept. 7, 10 am-5 pm, Monday-Saturday; 11 am-5 pm, Sunday
Cost: $13/kids 3 through 17; $16/adults
Online: nbm.org

Disney in Concert at Wolf Trap
Let it go, let it go, don’t hold summer back anymore. OK, maybe those aren’t quite the lyrics, but you can make up your own as the Wolf Trap Orchestra plays instrumental versions of your–er, your kids’–fave Disney earworms. Synchronized videos from “Frozen,” “Aladdin,” “The Lion King” and more play on huge screens during the performance.

When: Aug. 21, 8 pm
Cost: $25-60
Online: wolftrap.org

Photo: Washington Nationals via Facebook

Washington Nationals Baseball Game
Take ’em out to the ballgame… See the Nationals play the Phillies at the last home game of the major league season. Hang out afterward to let kids 4 to 12 run the bases. Bonus: First time to Nationals Park? Stop by Guest Services for a First Game Certificate signed by the team’s general manager.

When: Sept. 27, 1:35 pm
Cost: Starting at $15; $15 or $32 for Harris Teeter Family Fun Packs, which include a hot dog, chips and drink
Online: washington.nationals.mlb.com

“I’ve Been Readin’ on the Railroad”
Prevent brain drain with trains! Kids who read 10 railroad-related books as part of the Summer Reading Program at the B&O Railroad Museum and the Ellicott City Station will get a free book and a chance to win an engineer’s outfit. To do it, pick up a journal at either location and bring it back completed.

Date: Aug. 24, 10 am-4 pm, Monday-Saturday; 11 am-4 pm, Sunday
Cost: Free
Online: borail.org

How do you plan on ending the summer with a bang? Tell us in the comments section. 

—Stephanie Kanowitz