Description:
  Reader Rabbit takes a road trip, and kids who go along for the ride will  learn everything from homonyms to alphabetizing with this occasionally inspired  CD-ROM. Kids can follow the Road to Imagination to 15 different reading lands,  or visit Wordville Station for straightforward access to word games. Both of  these multilevel elements are designed for kids who already have a grasp of the  alphabet.  Each stop along the Road to Imagination has a reading-related theme, such as an  owl looking for words with long and short vowel sounds for the letter e.  Animated hot spots reinforce the theme, as well as activities that involve  rhyming, syllabication, listening to letter sounds, and word recognition. There  are also a couple of books to be found at each stop along the road (30 in all),  with questions at the end that inspire both reading comprehension and  imaginative flights of fancy. An easy-to-use recording program enables kids to  read the books out loud and play back their words. Wordville Station has four  games that teach compound words, vowel sounds, alphabetizing, and matching  opposites, homonyms, and rhyming words.   I Can Read has some bright moments: Reader Rabbit loosens up a bit and  imitates Ed Sullivan, Dick Clark, and former president Clinton as he emcees an  alphabetization exercise called the Alphabet Dance. The vagaries of the English  language are exposed when a bird of paradise plant transforms into an exotically  plumed bird of paradise, and then that same bird rolls a pair of dice. A tiny  bit of sophistication seems to have seeped into the wide-eyed world of Reader  Rabbit, and it will probably be appreciated by kids who have cut their  pop-culture teeth on the rapid-fire fare provided by Nickelodeon and Nintendo.   Fear not, Reader Rabbit and Mat the Mouse still run a pretty straight-laced  establishment, with plenty of opportunities for parents to check progress,  control gameplay and levels, and educate themselves about educating their young  readers. But there's a bit more sass here than in the Reader Rabbit programs  designed for younger kids--an intelligent way for the series to adjust to its  increasingly sophisticated audience. (Ages 5 to 8) --Anne Erickson
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