VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
1614
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Azione dal vivo e animazione si fondono in questa fantasia educativa su una famiglia di leoni che gestisce una biblioteca piena di libri avventurosi e musicali.Azione dal vivo e animazione si fondono in questa fantasia educativa su una famiglia di leoni che gestisce una biblioteca piena di libri avventurosi e musicali.Azione dal vivo e animazione si fondono in questa fantasia educativa su una famiglia di leoni che gestisce una biblioteca piena di libri avventurosi e musicali.
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When I was a kid all I ever wanted to watch was Electric Company. Seeing past episodes of it now, I kind of laugh and think it is silly, but it served its purpose. The whole reason behind the show is to teach pre-reading skills. The best way for most children to learn initially when they are pre-school age is through repetition. The characters are lovable, children will attach easily to them, which will also help to increase pre-reading skills. In this day and age reading starts so much earlier in school systems it's nice to have a show that is trying to help specifically with this task. Sesame Street is up there too it just isn't focused solely on reading. Some of my favorite Muppet voices are in this show: Moakley from Fraggle Rock among them. I love this show and think that it is a must to have in the household and my children both love it. Including Cliffhanger. However, their favorite is Chicken Jane. It's a FUN show.
This is exactly how I learned how to read. My grandmother gave me what we call the "AT list" You know, words that end it "-at" like, bat, fat, sat, you know. This is exactly the kind of reading this show teaches. And it teaches family values too! I think we should incorporate it into school cirriculums. I know I would! (And I'm a teaching assistant!)
I spent a lot of time last year teaching children how to read, but using the methods described in the teacher's book just got the kids more and more confused. So I brought a game of Scrabble to school with me, and followed what they do on the show, I based the entire lesson on one sound, or taught them how silent "e" can change vowel sounds, like pin and pine or plan and plane. And the kids started learning! it was fantastic!
Great for kids. 9 out of 10!
I spent a lot of time last year teaching children how to read, but using the methods described in the teacher's book just got the kids more and more confused. So I brought a game of Scrabble to school with me, and followed what they do on the show, I based the entire lesson on one sound, or taught them how silent "e" can change vowel sounds, like pin and pine or plan and plane. And the kids started learning! it was fantastic!
Great for kids. 9 out of 10!
1. I am a parent of a 6-year-old child with autism. 2. Said child has difficulty with language due to her disorder. 3. "Between the Lions" helps her with her reading and language skills. 4. I graduated from college with a degree in psychology.
Honestly, I can't imagine why anyone would dislike the show. I find it enjoyable to watch with my daughter, and find that a good deal of the humor is directed at grownups who may be watching with their kids. My little girl loves this show, and it really is helping her learn. Those who don't like it either aren't paying attention, or simply don't understand child psychology and the learning process. This is a clever and well-done series, and I am grateful to its creators for how much they have influenced my child's reading and language skills. Music and repetition are especially key to learning with special needs kids. This show has all that and more.
Honestly, I can't imagine why anyone would dislike the show. I find it enjoyable to watch with my daughter, and find that a good deal of the humor is directed at grownups who may be watching with their kids. My little girl loves this show, and it really is helping her learn. Those who don't like it either aren't paying attention, or simply don't understand child psychology and the learning process. This is a clever and well-done series, and I am grateful to its creators for how much they have influenced my child's reading and language skills. Music and repetition are especially key to learning with special needs kids. This show has all that and more.
"Between the Lions" is a thoroughly engaging, well written, entertaining program that I wouldn't hesitate to recommend. My 3-year-old and I like to get up early and watch it together. The only character I could really do without is Arty Smartypants; the others are entirely likeable, even the curmudgeon Busterfield. My wife and I feel that "Between the Lions" is like "The Electric Company" reborn, except that the writing is superior, especially with the incorporation of puns and other wordplay that are meant for grown-ups to enjoy ("Click" the computer mouse, a dinosaur called a thesaurus, Clay and Walter Pigeon, Chicken Jane, the sidekick Russell Upsomegrub, the author Livingston Dangerously, Monkey C. Monkeydew, etc.). "The Electric Company" was fast-paced, musical, and educational, but it can't match the humor and thus the total value of "Between the Lions."
This is in response to the review that david-345 wrote: Don't take yourself too seriously! My wife and I homeschool our little boy, and he was having trouble learning to read. He was just not interested enough to put in the effort to really learn. My sister-in-law, a first-grade public school teacher, suggested that we begin watching "Between the Lions." She uses the show in her classroom sometimes.
After we began watching it, my little boy began to become much more interested in reading. He began to see the value in reading. He went from a beginning reading level to reading at 2nd grade level in less than 6 months. He especially related to the "boy" lion, Lionel. He even asked for a Lionel stuffed toy recently. This seems to be because he enjoyed the show! He was very entertained by the skits, and the repetition allowed him to learn more quickly.
I think it is arrogance to view a child's television program with the same type of standards as that of an adult. Often children like things that are "obnoxious" to adults. And in this case, I personally find many of the characters entertaining. The "Chicken Jane" clips are a great parody of the old "Dick and Jane" series. And, although annoying to me, my little boy loves the Cliffhanger character.
It's also great how they introduce other cultural aspects from around the world to children, and they usually stray away from the trap of many shows that preach political correctness to indoctrinate children.
In short, the show is effective, and entertaining to children. Therefore, it is a great show.
After we began watching it, my little boy began to become much more interested in reading. He began to see the value in reading. He went from a beginning reading level to reading at 2nd grade level in less than 6 months. He especially related to the "boy" lion, Lionel. He even asked for a Lionel stuffed toy recently. This seems to be because he enjoyed the show! He was very entertained by the skits, and the repetition allowed him to learn more quickly.
I think it is arrogance to view a child's television program with the same type of standards as that of an adult. Often children like things that are "obnoxious" to adults. And in this case, I personally find many of the characters entertaining. The "Chicken Jane" clips are a great parody of the old "Dick and Jane" series. And, although annoying to me, my little boy loves the Cliffhanger character.
It's also great how they introduce other cultural aspects from around the world to children, and they usually stray away from the trap of many shows that preach political correctness to indoctrinate children.
In short, the show is effective, and entertaining to children. Therefore, it is a great show.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizChristopher Cerf admits that the "42" on Lionel's rugby jersey is a deliberate homage to Douglas Adams and his Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
- BlooperWhen he and Cleo are announcing the sponsors, Theo claims to like it so much he could "do it at least once every day," to which Cleo responds, "we do." They actually do it twice, as the sponsors are spoken at the beginning and ending of the show.
- Curiosità sui creditiAt the beginning of every show before the opening sequence, Announcer Bunny pops up and shows us a small preview of what we'll see in the upcoming episode. Then, Cleo and Theo are heard reading off the sponsors and occasionally slipping in a few comments.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Bernie Mac Show: Mac 101 (2002)
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By what name was Between the Lions (1999) officially released in India in English?
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