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NCMM TackleBox app for iPhone and iPad


4.8 ( 2738 ratings )
Games Education Educational
Developer: Duke University Department of Computer Science Apps
Free
Current version: 1.0, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 06 Mar 2012
App size: 8 Mb

Tacklebox is the first mobile education app produced by the North Carolina Maritime Museum in Beaufort, NC. It is designed to accompany a Traveling Trunk of educational resources that can be requested (at no charge) from the museum’s education department.

The app’s resources help students to learn various aspects of the North Carolina recreational fishing industry including anatomy, vocabulary, some local and current fishery issues, and other animals affected by fishing, namely local dolphin populations. The app is also designed to be used independently by individuals choosing to download it from the App Store.

Featuring:
•Anatomatch – Discover the correct biological terms for Bony, Cartilaginous, and Jawless fish and match them to their correct location on the animal
•Hangfish – A retrospective “Hangman” game with vocabulary clues in an interactive setting
•Fish for Words – Touch screen word search with definitions embedded into the clues
•DolFins – Get to know Beaufort, NC’s marine mammal residents by playing this image matching game using real data collected by museum curators and partners
•Jeopardy! – A digital form of a lesson designed by Kelly Odom of NC Division of Marine Fisheries. This game will help teachers review information presented in a lesson plan in a fun, interactive way


About
Tacklebox content was created by a joint effort between Duke University’s computer science course in mobile application development and by museum staff and project coordinators. TackleBox is for Recreational Fishing Education, and is a teaching supplement for Grades 4-8

Development was funded by the Coastal Recreational Fishing License Grant, a program administered by the NC Division of Marine Fisheries, and the Friends of the North Carolina Maritime Museum in Beaufort. Content was developed in collaboration with the Cape Lookout Studies Program and the NC Division of Marine Fisheries.