User Reviews: Classify It!

Classify It!
Classify It!
American Association for the Advancement of Scienc

Top reviews

  • Recheck Facts

    It's a good game to learn more about animals. However, I noticed a lot of incorrect facts about some animals. For example house geckos lay soft shelled eggs. Not hard. I'm not a biologist or herpetologist but I've noticed a few big mistakes. Also. Maybe I'm just super technical but some questions I know I answer correctly end up being incorrect.

    Still a great game though!!!
  • Ok

    It's good just it said that cockroach could fly they can't and some of them are wrong
  • Classify it

    When you go to select an item and classify it it shows up as a completely different topic. I'm not sure if this is only on my device or if it is the app itself.
  • Cool idea - but these guys need a fact checker

    AAAS - I love you, but I expect better of you.

    There are a ridiculous number of errors in this game. It reads like someone with a decent knowledge of biology pulled it out straight of their brain and didn't do any research. It desperately a fact checker.

    I mean, really. Elephants are domesticated? Mallards aren't? Seahorses aren't endangered? Jellyfish migrate? Salamanders aren't endangered? Just to name a few....

    If you're curious, the definition of domestication involves selective breeding over generations, to then point of alteration. The ONLY two ducks to have been domesticated are the Muscovy and the mallard.

    And elephants are? No. They're captive animals, some are tame animals- but they're not domestic. Humans have a huge history of using them for labor, but their long life span, late age of sexual maturity, and slow reproductive rate makes the kind of breeding needed for true domestication impossible. Generally, when new elephants were needed, they just grabbed more from the wild.

    And jellyfish... Migrate? I think you have "travel long distances" confused with "migrate." Jellyfish have little to no control over where they go. The currents push them around seasonally. They do not migrate.

    And some estimates say that half of all species of sea horses are threatened with extinction, primarily due to habitat loss.

    Salamanders are endangered - in fact, an alarmingly large number of amphibian species are. They're the canary in a coal mine - because of their semi-permeable skin they pick but up on most pollutants.

    I'll let you say that walruses aren't endangered. In reality, the IUCN classifies them as data deficient. But their populations have been decreasing.

    Listen, as someone who works in youth science outreach, I was really happy that AAAS made an educational app for kids. I wish it wasn't such a disappointment.
  • App review

    This is a very good app for sixth and seventh graders learning earth and life science. Good way to review and/or learn the information.
  • Woahh!

    My sister is not the smartest in the grade, but after this game her topic was about classifying and she even got a certificate of smartest and fastest and she's only 8!! I recommend for any age!0-infinity ❤️❤️❤️🙌🙌🙌✔️✔️✔️
  • Classify It

    Love the educational game. It is colorful and appealing for Chilean but it is not as easy as it appears. I just stayed on the easy level and have gotten things wrong! Really! Humbling. Everything isn't obvious. Will see if you school and put it up on our computers for the students.
  • Multiple errors

    Apparently shedding skin cells and hair doesn't count as shedding for humans and they must not know what counter shading is because they don't believe that penguins have camouflage. These are just a few of the errors I noticed. I deleted it after only a few rounds.
  • JenniferK

    This app is excellent! As someone who tutors students in math and science, including biology, I think this is a fun way to learn about all types of creatures. Now we just need an app that makes math fun!
  • Great for NGSS

    I thought this app was very intuitive and should be easy for students to navigate and use. Although the design is simple, the content is anything but.
    It requires students know a fair amount about plants and animals.
    I think this app is particularly timely, for the NGSS as the first of the cross-cutting concepts in the NGSS has to do with Patterns and includes classification as a key activity.

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