Product Review of Elementari

Elementari is a website for creating and publishing simple interactive and animated digital stories. The story creator — which looks and feels like a presentation or slideshow tool — fuses digital storytelling with important elements of coding and computational thinking. Learners create a series of slides featuring text, images, illustrations, sound (including music and voice-over), and code blocks (functions, variables, logic, events, and objects). Creators toggle between a Layout Design tool — that controls the visual elements — and an Event Graph tool — that controls the animations, sounds, and interactive elements — to build the two layers of the slides and the finished story. Readers then click through those slides to read through and/or listen to the story (and maybe even play a little). The site comes with a large library of existing media to use in stories, but learners can also upload their own illustrations and add their own audio for truly original content. There’s a nice community of creators that learners can participate in to share their own work or to remix/borrow from. Unfortunately, the site currently doesn’t offer detailed control over the publication and permissions of stories. It’d be nice if creators could keep stories private, only share with specific people, or unpublish stories.
For educators, the site offers the ability to create classrooms to easily check student progress, offer feedback, and showcase student work. For both educators and learners, there are ample support materials to learn key functions of the site and to develop deeper understanding of key concepts. Since projects can be remixed, those also serve as perfect learning tools. Sample projects come with all needed resources, including connections to learning standards.
Elementari’s versatility as a storytelling platform means that educators can use it in multiple subjects: in language arts for story writing or book talks, in social studies for research projects about core content, in science for illustrating key concepts, and in world language classes for developing fluency. Since stories can be remixed — and these remixed creations credit the original creators — Elementari might work well in a digital citizenship lesson on copyright. Of course, given the integration of coding, Elementari can serve as a basic introduction to coding concepts, especially scripting, logic, functions/objects/events, sequencing, etc. Though the end result is ultimately a digital story, educators can build on the bits of coding woven into Elementari with a more robust coding or computational thinking curriculum or platform that allows for more flexible creation, and/or that digs into specific coding languages and syntax.
The way Elementari combines a few different creative pursuits — writing, voice-over, scripting, art — also lends itself particularly well to cooperative group projects. Learners with different levels of experience, expertise, and interest can take ownership of a role and then collaborate on a single project.
Elementari, first and foremost, is a useful digital storytelling platform. Learners can use it to develop and refine key language arts skills — from writing to story structure to speaking — by creating well-told storybooks, or projects that showcase learning and illustrate concepts. The platform uses a slideshow metaphor that is easy to use and accessible for kids while also giving them important tech skills. But where Elementari really shines is in how it folds coding into the storytelling process without making it feel too technical or confusing. And given that the coding is motivated by learners’ stories, they’ll be driven to learn those skills to make their projects look and behave how they envision them. In this way, Elementari has the chance to make coding palatable to a whole new group of learners who might normally be disengaged with typical computer science lessons. Still, this is a basic platform — in both the storytelling and coding sense. That means kids could quickly age out of it; however, by then its likely that educators — and learners — will have gotten what they need from it. In this way, Elementari is an easy-to-use and recommended stepping stone for young kids to get better at — and interested in — both writing and coding.
Website: https://www.elementari.io/
Overall User Consensus About the App
Student Engagement
This is a storytelling and coding medium that’ll appeal to elementary learners.
Curriculum and Instruction
Effectively integrates language arts and coding in a way that makes both accessible and interesting.
Customer Support
Useful tutorials, sample projects, and videos support educators and learners, but the FAQ is limited. Projects can be remixed. Lessons offer everything educators need.