WH Expert 2

WH Expert 2

By Janine Toole

  • Category: Education
  • Release Date: 2014-04-15
  • Current Version: 2.3
  • Adult Rating: 4+
  • File Size: 21.59 MB
  • Developer: Janine Toole
  • Compatibility: Android, iOS 12.1
Score: 4.85714
4.85714
From 7 Ratings

Description

WH Expert 2 helps kids who have trouble with reading comprehension. The app targets one of the basic building blocks of comprehension: understanding how parts of a sentence combine to add meaning. WH Expert 2 is targeted to children in Grade 2 and above who can read the words (decode), but don't understand what they read. Key Features: - Builds comprehension skills step-by-step until mastery. - Incremental learning. New levels are unlocked only when your child is ready. - Can be used independently (just hand it over, your child will know what to do) or with a therapist for reading intervention. - Guided learning for less frustration. Your child will always arrive at the correct answer. - Fun and engaging Reward Center to increase motivation. - Kids love the silly sentences - keeps learning from being boring! Advanced levels include timers to ensure fluency. Research shows fluency in the foundation skills is critical to reading comprehension. Detailed reporting for up to 10 students to meet the needs of teachers, therapists and parents. We are a member of the prestigious 'Moms with Apps program. We collect NO private information in our app, and our apps do not allow unrestricted web access. Our apps are designed for and tested by typical and special needs children. Testers include children with Autism and other special needs. Our apps work for them! We take customer service very seriously! If you ever have a problem or find that we've missed something, contact us at our website and we will do our best to fix the problem.

Screenshots

Reviews

  • Great for reading intervention

    5
    By redheadteacher24
    Great app for reading intervention! It helps struggling readers and you get data that proves it.
  • Momo2016

    5
    By Dpml94087
    Like the app. Good for kid to learn key words to id what, where, why, who, when.
  • Who app

    5
    By Duane716
    Great app. My grandson is a reluctant reader and your programs help with teaching in small chunks.
  • Awesome Apps!

    5
    By Tonixpress
    This app is terrific! It tracks my students' progress, the kids think it's great fun and the levels increase in difficulty as they go along, further increasing their skills. The whole series of apps are wonderful! Toni
  • Speech and Language Path

    4
    By Teach'em2Talk!
    I like this app and my students love playing it! One great benefit of this app is that it keeps track of each students progress for each time they work at it. There is one aspect of this app that I don't like and that is that sometimes the sentences do not make much sense which can confuse my students. When that happens I challenge them to rewrite the sentence so that it does make sense but still answers the targeted question. Needs some tweeks but it is worth the money spent!
  • Recommend to all my students' parents

    5
    By Delene76
    I use this app when tutoring kid's who struggle to read and comprehend and its what I recommend parents get. I use it for my own children too!
  • Needs to Make Sense

    2
    By teach304431
    Although the concept of the app is not bad, we just went through two levels and the sentences themselves are poor. Students are asked to look at two sentences and decide if what’s been added in the second sentence tells what, where, etc. Unfortunately, it seems as if the sentences were just put together with random endings that don’t always make sense. For example, “The boy carried the plate.” and “The boy carried the plate in the car.” were two of the sentences. Although “in the car” told where…why would a boy carry a plate in the car? To the car, maybe, but “in” the car? Another was “Mike dropped some coins” and “Mike dropped some coins with Gina”…really? Students who are struggling readers are trying to make sense of what they are reading. If the sentences themselves don’t make a lot of sense, knowing if what was added was a what, where, why, or who doesn’t really help them comprehend. I shared with a reading specialist in my building and she was appalled! Sorry, but the sentences need work.

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