
Brother P-Touch as kid’s toy – Damien Stolarz
My daughter learned the alphabet using a variety of learning aids. I particularly credit the Leapfrog DVD series for teaching her both letter recognition and phonics. The learning games on her computer also helped reinforce some of the alphabet concepts, and with our coaching, she’s learned to recognize and spell a nice sampling of three letter words – cat, mom, dad, dog, etc.
One day I was labeling boxes with my Brother P-Touch system. The P-Touch is a thermal labeling system, battery powered, with a full QWERTY keyboard. It has a digital display, and you simply type in a word, press “PRINT,” and then your label emerges.
My daughter, already familiar with a keyboard from a computer, found my P-Touch lying on the floor and became engrossed in it. I suggested that she type in her name, and after a fairly rapid hunt and peck, she was delighted to have a sticker with her name on it. I proceeded to ask her each of the words in her small spelling vocabulary and she successfully printed all of them out with very little coaching.
Probably the most fun, though, is her creative writing. I’ll come back to my laboratory where my daughter has been contentedly making up long, unpronounceable words on the P-Touch like QIDKMGKPUZ and printing them out one after another. The remarkable thing is that a 3-year-old is experimenting with words, at length, learning to use a keyboard before she can even write. believe an old test of literacy was whether you could write your name or whether you could only sign legal documents with an “X.” Well, my daughter can type her name and is certainly on her way to literacy.
Damien Stolarz is an inventor with a decade of experience making different kinds of computers talk to each other. His book, Car PC Hacks, is published by O’Reilly Media.










Sure…letting your kids use your P-Touch is great fun for the kids, but then it results in a broken p-touch and a bit of work with duct tape to fix…chronicled here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/rich_gibson/tags/pt65/
Those things are near indestructable. I’ve dropped all of mine off ladders, pallets full of boxes, on concrete. I have the bigger pc-enabled model listed in the article, as well as the more portable one ‘fixed’ by duct tape as posted in comments. To break the yellow lever off the smaller model you have to pull hard in the wrong direction. So, if your kid cant be trusted to be careful with the thing, get them some lincoln logs instead.
And a side note, with the cost of the labels I bet Brother loves this guy!
I did the same thing with my daughter, she was allowed to use the p-touch as much as she wanted as long as she wrote real words. She would cary the p-touch arround the house looking for words to copy.
// What's Trending
Raspberry Pi Design Contest
Maker Faire: Day One
A Photo Tour of Maker Faire
Arduino Announces New Wireless Linux Board
Seventeen Sneaky Secret Hides
10 Things to Connect to Your Raspberry Pi
New Arduino Robot Available in the Maker Shed at Maker Faire
Maker Faire Bay Area Ready for Showtime
// What's Shared
A better way to slice a pumpkin
DIY Nerf Darts
In the Maker Shed: Minty Boost USB Charger
100 Dollar Store Organization Ideas for Craft Rooms and Beyond
Mad’s Mouse House
Lace Princess Crowns
I Have a (Puzzling) Dream
Play the Rings of a Tree Trunk Like a Record
// Most Commented
DIY Hacks & How To’s: Get Emergency Power from a Phone Line
Resin Casting: Going from CAD to Engineering-Grade Plastic Parts
Ten Tips for Screws and Screwdrivers
Ten Tips for Better Measurement
Makers on TV: Big Brain Theory
Pitches with Prototypes: Solar Tracker
Tool Review: BioLite CampStove
Grow: A Portable CNC Router System