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Monday
Sep262005

Dropairs is Delightful!

Dropairs is the one of the coolest new Palm applications I have seen in a long time! This is one of those applications that could be used with kindergartners all the way up to seniors in high school. And, Dropairs can be used for virtually any curriculum area!

Here's the instructions from Dropairs' Help menu:

  • The object of the game is to match both paris before they reach the ground.
  • Two shapes are sliding from the top to the bottom, increasing speed as you advance in the game. Before the shapes hit the ground you have to find their two matching paris or your game will be over!
  • Each correct match is worth 100 points, plus the remaining bonus (up to 160 points). This means the faster you match a pair, the more score you gain.
  • When you match 16 pairs one after another without a single mistake, you get the big bonus: 5000 points!
  • Each wrong answer will deduct 100 points off your total, and the big bonus count will reset to zero.
  • To change the board you are currently playing, select "Pairs".
  • You can pause the game by tapping the menu icon or tapping the upper (title-bar) part of the screen.
  • During the game you can enter the letter "t" on the Graffiti area to see the correct answers. Warning! Viewing the correct answers will cost you your bonus
When you download the application, it comes with 12 Pair Boards, including boards where you match artist to their works, multiplication problems to their answers, and flags to their countries. The developer, NorthGlide, has another 24 Pair Boards on the website and promises many more to come. You can download boards to match state capitals to their states, American Sign Language letters to their finger shapes, and photos of minerals to their names. Dropairs even lets you review the pairs before you play the game.

State Capitals, Multiplication, & Artists Pair Boards

Can't find a Pair Board that matches your curriculum? Then use Dropairs Pair Board Maker for Windows. You can make your own Pair Boards! Making your own Pair Boards takes some knowledge of working with images. First, create pairs of JPG, GIF, or BMP images (images that are 60 x 60 or 30 x 30 work best) in a drawing program. The images can have words, phrases, pictures, diagrams, numbers--you name it! You'll import these pairs of images into Dropairs Board Maker for Windows. After completing some information fields and importing the images, you can make a PDB file that loads onto your Palm handheld. You can beam your newly created Pair Board to students! The Pair Boards tend to be large files, so they will take a while to beam. Quality Pair Boards will even be posted to the NorthGlide site so more people can enjoy the boards made by others!

I have not yet made a Pair Board myself, but I have downloaded and played around with the board maker for Windows. I plan to make a Pair Board for matching photos of the staff in our school with their names so students know the names of all adults in the building. I also want to do one for second graders where they match kinds of landforms with photos of those landforms. I think making these Pair Boards will actually be some fun! I look forward to designing my own backgrounds, colors, and sounds!

Dropairs is an amazing piece of software because it is so customizable. It's even more amazing because it is free! Even the additional Pair Boards and Dropairs Pair Board Maker for Windows are free! Thank you NorthGlide!

Reader Comments (7)

I've been goofing around with creating some addition facts for my second grader. It takes a little bit to get use to it and creating the images is repetitious but the results are worth it.

I'm going to do addition facts for 4,5,6,7,8,9.

And I'll probably wind up doing 3rd grade multiplication.

Dale Ehrhart

September 27, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

Well, I've created the addition facts for 4-9 for both hi-res and low-res. I think the .pdbs look good so I'm going to submit one on the the dropairs website and see what they think.

Dale Ehrhart

September 28, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

Dale, way to go on already getting from Pair Board made! I promised the second grade teachers in my building I would make one for their government unit by next Tuesday: so I'll hopefully join you soon as someone who has successfully used the Board Maker for Windows.

September 28, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterTony Vincent

I anybody wants to use them I can email them.

They actually turned out pretty good.

Dale

September 28, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

Dale, please email me your Pair Boards. I'd be happy to post them as an update to this blog post so others can download them! Thanks for sharing!

September 29, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterTony Vincent

Tony,

I've created pair boards for multiplication facts 1-9 in addition to The Addition facts 1-9.
Should I send the Multiplation boards to you? I submitted the Additon facts pair boards to the Learning in Hand email address and the Northglide website. The addition facts are up on the Northglide website.

Great podcast by the way.

Dale Ehrhart

October 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

It was so cool to meet Dale at the Michigan handheld conference and learn that his post are actually signed by his real name. I was thinking that Dale must be a Nascar fan and how neat to have a pen name...oh well (:

I have a wish list for either Dale or Tony to make Pair boards for telling Time-analog and digital. I need to venture out and try to create one myself, but at the moment, here is my request.

Thanks for the addition and subtraction boards....our students LOVE them!!!!

Wendy Gallagher

November 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous

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