Peninsula Public Library is using technology in an effort to encourage kids to read as it installed a crayon kiosk, an educational iPad, in the children’s room last month with the help of $20,000 that was provided by State Sen. Dean Skelos (R-Rockville Centre).
Produced by Aridan Books, a Long Island-based company that creates reading apps for kids, the kiosk, which takes the form of a yellow crayon, has four iPads and corresponding headphones and chairs. Each iPad is installed with multiple reading and learning applications.
Library Director Karen Porcella, said that the kiosk will, “promote educational learning through interactive play.” “Technology is very popular now,” said Porcella, when asked what prompted her to purchase the kiosk. “Children’s computer programs encourage them to read, and we’re very into literacy.”
The suggested age range for use of the kiosk is two years and older, but Carolynn Matulewicz, the children’s librarian at the library in Lawrence, has seen adults also playing on the kiosk.
“The feedback has been so positive,” she said. “[The apps] cover a wide range of subjects like reading, spelling and geography.”