Login to keep track of what you have seen and learned.
Change number of animals/plants it will loop through at a time.
The site will loop throught a set number of items. Once you "Get It" it will move a new item into this place. To really learn, it is better to keep this number small. But to just build awareness, choose a larger number. How you set this up will depend on the type of learner you are. Log into your account and we can remember this preference for you.
See how many items at a time.
Narrow your learning by continent
Continents that currently have plants/animals:
Narrow your learning by country
Countries that currently have plants/animals:
Narrow your learning by U.S. State
States that currently have plants/animals:
Available list of Plants and Animals Goes Here
Narrow your learning experience to certain sub-categories
Bird
Mammal
Reptile
Change Timing Between New Animals in Autoplay mode
In Autoplay mode, change plant/animal every:
Automatically add an item to the 'Got It' list so you can review and quiz it after you see it certain number of times.
Move after you see it how many times:
Change Timing Between New Images
In Autoplay mode, change plant/animal every:
Fun Nature ID - Building Nature Lovers
The more you know, the more you see, the more fun nature can be
Fun, effective way to learn the sights and sounds of animals we see everyday -- and the animals we hope to one day see
We all love what we know the best.
Perfect activity before a trip - whether that is a trip to your backyard, an area park, a field trip or the wilds of Africa.
FunNatureID builds familiarity with 3 modes:
Learn - Great to build familiarity with captivating sounds and pictures
Review - Engaging you more with a delay between the sound or picture and the answer.
Quiz - Rounding out the learning experience with multiple choice format
You can view this as a guest or as a registered user. As a registered user, you can keep track of what birds, etc. you have learned.
Schools, we can create usernames and passwords for student groups.
Exposure is the key to building familiarity. But how can you build familiarity before your adventure?
Experts think humans couldn't see the color blue until about 400 years ago. It was simply a shade of gray. Imagine not being able to enjoy the various shades of blue?!!?
Likewise an African safari with no knowledge of the birds and animals turns into "Well, there were white and gray birds and lots of deer like things, huge gray animals and tall spotted animals." Or a trip through the local woods "There was a lot of trees and some birds."
Please bear with us while we build our database. This project was inspired by a US citizen's upcoming trip to Southern Africa. Coming soon more birds from around the world, as well as, insects, reptiles, mammals, fish and plants.