Digital Magazines For Kids

Educating a child can be a difficult task in this new era of technology. Generation Alpha is noted to have created kids that are “iPad Natives” and keeping their attention off of anything else can be challenging at best. Digital magazines aimed toward child entertainment and education are an interactive meeting point between technology, learning, and digital publication. Despite this, many find the excessive use of “screentime” unhealthy for their developing brains. With all of this taken into consideration, what do digital magazines directed toward kids have to offer, and what is the impact?

To answer this question, one needs to understand what these magazines do and create for the consumer.

Similar to its paper counterpart, this digital media discusses topics specific to an edition and includes related articles and images. However, digital magazines add all the benefits of the internet. EasyTechJunkie explained that these online magazines  “add animations and links within the magazine to make it more informative or aesthetically better.” Magazines being online add several avenues of information that cannot be ignored. If a reader wants more extensive information, the reader can click reference links or watch attached videos. Everything cited and additional information is provided with a touch of a button.

This digital media has a lot to offer, but how does this relate to kids?

Over the last few years with COVID-19 and lockdown, parents began searching for different learning opportunities for their children; in that, they found digital magazines. With platforms like KidsWorldFun, parents are exposed to several options of topics to choose from. They range from educational subjects like science and math to other general fun topics like stories and social happenings. Children can also access adult-marketed magazines in a kid-friendly format on subjects they can digest. This includes magazines like Times, National Geographic, and Sports Illustrated.

This creates the value of entertainment and engagement for a kid while also teaching them about subjects that are important. A science digital magazine could have a game where children have to take care of a plant to show photosynthesis or a literature magazine that has the kids change the story with verbs and nouns. Kids could also learn about varied interests like art and music.

Within these kid-marketed magazines, children have access to fun videos, animations, games, and animated scavenger hunts. This digital media allows for an interactive learning experience that scratches a child’s need for entertainment and technology in this new era. The National Center for Education Statistics explains that 97% of all kids between the ages of three and eighteen have home internet available to them. This being noted, these magazines would not normally be difficult to download for a parent. Their child would have a fun and informative tool to use and play with. It being digital just makes it more available when a parent or child wants it.

It is fun and easy to access, but what about the known benefits?

Rocking Rockets has an entire article dedicated to the benefits found in classrooms when digital magazines are being utilized. Teachers notice their children’s excitement but also see a difference in their literacy development. The students are given access to these magazines that teach poetry, nonfiction, and additional crafts and experiments. Teachers have seen a growth in their students’ willingness and excitement to learn. This digital media creates a fun atmosphere to absorb new information that feeds off this “iPad Native” generation instead of fighting against it.

Aside from Rocking Rockets, Exact Editions claims that “Technology continues to evolve at a rapid rate and education must evolve with it by developing new learning strategies and embracing new resources.” Essentially, digital magazines serve to improve child education and development by moving with the world and the inventions and innovations of the internet. Children benefit from this media because it is colorful, expressive, and interesting. The possibilities are endless when it comes to topics and learning material. Children benefit from reading and magazines are a step in the right direction.

Is screen time the enemy?

There have been many studies based on children and the amount of screen time that is acceptable. The findings range from positive and negative. Generally, children who are exposed to screens during the crucial developmental years are found to struggle with sleep, obesity, and language delays. At times these kids miss the building of social skills. Emotional cues and facial expressions are most commonly missed in this period when screen time isn’t regulated or left unchecked.

Along with the negatives, there still remain a few positives. It allows for better reinforcement of a lesson through videos, and it also gives home-schooled children more material to use and build off of. Other studies have shown an increase in creativity and healthy habits when exposed to the right material. Many believe, including SafeSearchKids, that it is less about how much they watch and more about the content they are consuming. Clear boundaries and monitoring can help detour several of the negative impacts.

How much does it cost?

Digital magazines are accessible and particularly low in cost. Medium claims that on average a consumer would spend $10 to $20 a month. There are several streaming services that cost more than it would be to provide a child with a digital, interactive, and educational magazine. Many try one or two before dedicating to a single magazine for their kids. Several digital magazines offer free trials to assist in helping a child or parent make a dedicated decision.

A parent can find this media on websites and apps like KidsWorldFun, Highlights Every Day, National Geographic Kids, Times for Kids, and so many more.

What do digital magazines directed toward kids have to offer, and what is the impact?

Through the resources cited and provided, many will be divided on the answer to this question. It is best to make decisions regarding your child based on your parenting style and your kid’s general interests. Digital media, whether it be magazines for kids, articles, or videos, chosen with care and research can never be a wrong answer.

Kids will continue to learn, grow, and flourish through the growing digital presence. Digital magazines for kids are only the beginning of possibilities to come through online media.

The 2019 Digital Book Awards and Conference

Image of Rachel Ward

Digital Book World posted their finalists for the 2019 Digital Book World Awards on August 12. The awards will be given on Tuesday, September 10, between 5:45 and 7:15 p.m. in Nashville, Tenn. The finalists for every category of the 2019 awards can be found on Digital Book World’s website

Whether the nominees were published digitally, or if the book was published digitally at all after a physical release, each of these categories has something related to digital publishing. Through cursory research of the books in each Best Book category, it is difficult to see if these books are being featured in this awards ceremony for their particular contribution to digital publishing, or if they are merely showcasing some books that have e-book options. Most books have both an e-book option and a physical novel, even on their specific publishing company site. 

Some exceptions to this do exist such as Ayesha At Last by Uzma Jalaluddin. It is available through Harper Collins Canada on the site Rakuten OverDrive, where you cannot purchase the e-book, but find out if it is at your local library. There is clearly accessibility in mind by aiding in locating it for free. At Amazon, it can be purchased through Kindle, or paperback for ninety-nine cents cheaper. Another exception is Civilian by Deonte Osayande, through Urban Farmhouse Press. 

The goal of the Digital Book World and awards does appear to be more about highlighting the digital aspects of a shifting world, which still includes print publication. In the 2019 conference, a breakout track included will be Print Book World: “Best practices in the print publishing world, with specific attention paid to the emerging, yet very under-discussed, world of augmented print books utilizing micro digital technologies.” Even while recognizing the world of print publication, they are focusing on it in a digital light. 

On DBW’s website, the CEO of Score Publishing, which owns the Digital Book World, wrote an article entitled “Barnes & Noble: How Can We Miss You, If You Won’t Go Away?”. Within it, Bradley Metrock writes the following:

One of the persistent topics of discussion at a conference like Digital Book World is the relationship between digital books and print books. We’ve all endured the absurd ‘print is dead’ trope, and have collectively reached the understanding that print books will always be with us, even as digital books become more and more ubiquitous and evolved.

Despite the critiques of Barnes & Noble, along with physical book locations in general, there is the recognition of the market still present for print publications. 

Digital Book World will hold a pre-conference on September 9, including workshops that feature topics such as Book Marketing for Independent Publishers and Leveraging the Colibrio Reader Framework.  

On September 10, there will be several speakers and events, featuring people from Simon & Schuester and panels featuring Amazon Alexa. The final event will be the awards dinner for the announcement of the Digital Book World winners. 

On September 11, the day following the awards ceremony, there will be more speakers and attention paid to some of their breakout tracks, which were not covered previously at DBW Conferences, such as the Marketing Book World and Academic Book World. 

The final day, September 12, will focus on Building Direct Connections with Readers and the political side of digital publishing, closing with a keynote presentation from the US Army: Our Nation’s Newest Publisher. 

Click here (Links to an external site.) for more information on the speakers and presentations available at the 2019 Digital Book World Conference, and here (Links to an external site.) to find available tickets to attend. 

in News | 659 Words