I was fortunate to be invited to the Pre-Launch Party on Monday night for Fable, a new tablet for young readers and learners. It was a very intimate
gathering held in the lovely map room at the Boston Public Library. The Boston Public Library was the perfect
location to combine local and literary, reflecting the roll out of Fable by Isabella Products, a local
company based in Concord, Massachusetts.
The founder and CEO of Isabella, Matthew Growney, in a sharp
suit and fashionable eye glasses, welcomed the group to the event and introduced
the first speaker, Kristen McLean. While chatting
with Cambridge-based Publishers Weekly journalist
Judith Rosen at the beginning of the event, I was introduced to Kristen. She has an amazing history in the industry,
working at places like Brookline Booksmith and even repping the MIT Press, before
ultimately founding Bookigee and currently serving a stint as entrepreneur in
residence at Nielson.
Guests and speaker Kristen McLean at the Fable Pre-Launch Party in the BPL's Map Room |
Kristen's talk was fascinating: she pulled from very current data about the learning,
reading, and gaming habits of children 0–6 and 7–12. The stat that blew me away most was that
tablets increase reading time for boys by 24% (12% for girls, who are
bigger readers in general). That's the
kind of trend that the creators of Fable are hoping to capitalize on.
The next speaker was Furnell McGrath, a second grade teacher
at a public elementary school in Everett. She ran a pilot program with the Fable tablets in her summer
school classroom and then in her second grade class this school year. She said that students engaged with the
content more fully and for longer on the tablet and that it had practical benefits
for children with learning disabilities. She used the word fun more than once, and even attributed
the Fable to better summer school attendance. My big takeaway from Mrs. McGrath was that, in this digital age, young
learners have so much access to so much information, and not all of it
age appropriate. Because the Fable
doesn't have a browser—just a cloud-based marketplace accessed only via a
parent's or teacher's PIN—young learners can access only content tailored
specifically for them. But because of
the tablet's easy usability, young users maintain the feeling of control in
their experience.
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