![]() Example: if you hit the Up arrow key, you’ll move down the keyboard instead. Opposite Space: you move in the opposite direction from normal.High-Jump Space: propels you much higher into the air so you can get across bigger spaces.Bomb Space: instant death if you hit it.If you venture too far off the keyboard, your poor little jelly man will die, but any regular black keys (unmarked) are always safe zones. ![]() You move the little guy around the virtual keyboard with your arrow keys. These are your targets–jump on all of these in a level to complete it. The goal is to jump on all the green-highlighted keys, and if you can do it within a certain number of jumps, even better! In Jelly Jumper, you control a cute little guy made of green jelly, and you’re trying to jump him around a virtual, generic black keyboard, in which certain keys are traps, certain keys are helpers, and certain keys are just there to give you fits. Again, I could on and on.Looking for a Flash game that will test both your reflexes and your skill at solving puzzles? Then give Jelly Jumper a try!Ī shot of the first level–deceptively easy! As you well know, anytime a program is more engaging for these students, the more motivated they are to log on and complete lessons. Our feeling was that Moby was more motivating for our Tier II students. ![]() Some of our students had such a difficult time with that reading program, that we switched them to MobyMax. ![]() My students only used Math and Fact Fluency as we bought another program for our reading instruction. ![]() I could go on and on about the positive features of MobyMax, but I will just bullet what has been more helpful. I am more than happy to sing the praises of MobyMax! I am an interventionist (Title One Teacher) that works with Tier II students and Moby has been a lifesaver during our remote learning. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |