The educating TV: 'Little Einsteins'

We continue with our special on children's television and today we zap until we stay with another one of those television formats that comply with the basic requirements that are required to be followed by the smallest. This time we stop at 'Little Einsteins', a series of cartoons released 2005 that has made a hole in the morning of Disney Channel (previously broadcast on Clan TV). The program is broadcast daily around 8:00 and allows, during the 25 minutes of each episode, that children can live many adventures that star in their characters.

'Litte Einsteins' was created by Eric Weiner, one of the parents of 'Dora, the explored one', and during the two seasons he currently has, he intends to become one of those experiences that make the child spectator a protagonist. Fiction uses the breaking of the fourth wall to carry out the interaction with the spectators, motivating them to participate in the challenges proposed in each episode, an increasingly recurring mechanism in television programs aimed at children.

Who are Little Einsteins?

'Little Einsteins' collects the adventures of its four protagonists (June, Quincy, Leo and Annie), four-year-old children who own a ship with which they travel to different places to fulfill numerous missions They must solve. To complete each mission they require the help of the spectators, through the questions that they must solve or contributing the ideas that the characters need to advance.

Fiction stands out for the inclusion of real images of the sites to which its protagonists travel, stopping in different aspects of reality to show them to the public. There are times when the characters of 'Little Einsteins' meet The Great Reactor, a ship that hinders its passage and tries not to meet the objectives ahead.

What can we expect from the series?

The current Disney Channel series is based on the proposal of a mission that involves viewers in each episode, as if it were a game in which the protagonists must live a great adventure. That is the excuse to invite children to follow their plots, which they hide various aspects that are aimed at the public discovering that world that exists around him.

Music, art or places on the planet are some of the points that focus on the episodes of 'Little Einsteins', which seeks the interaction of viewers to think and respond to the riddles faced by its protagonists. The adventures of the series intermingle real images, through which places or monuments that exist in reality are discovered, and paintings extracted from some famous paintings, which have a great prominence in their plots.

The decision that 'Little Einsteins' is starring four children causes companionship and friendship are very present in the series, outstanding values ​​that could well be imitated by children during the development of their playtime. This union conveys the importance of teamwork, showing the positive consequences that are drawn from collaboration between several people. 'Little Einsteins' also intends to develop the imagination of the little ones, thanks to the ingenuity that most of their adventures give off.

In the chapter offered in this article, the protagonists of 'Little Einsteins' are immersed in the search for a treasure, which they must find before The Great Reactor does. For this they have a series of clues, where riddles stand out in which music has a lot of prominence. At the beginning of the episode different works of art are shown, which are related to the places that their protagonists visit later. In the development of the plot we can see real images of the seabed, where a series of animals that are identified by the protagonists are shown.

'Little Einsteins', great educational adventures

The arrival of 'Little Einsteins' to Disney Channel has been an added value in a morning designed for the little ones. Fiction follows in the wake of other cartoons like 'The house of Micky Mouse' or 'Pocoyo', using the active participation of children and focusing on basic aspects that review keys to his teaching. 'Little Einsteins' has more than 50 chapters in which adventures are very present through scripts that seek entertainment without forgetting their educational responsibility.

Like so many other series, 'Little Einsteins' has expanded beyond its passage on television, leading to the edition of different DVDs in which many of his adventures are collected in the form of specials or movies and the publication of several books aimed at continuing several adventures. Since its premiere, fiction has reached many countries, such as Japan or much of Latin America, a fact that can boast a fiction tailored to the smallest of the house.