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Augmented reality apps are transoforming and revolutionizing the way learning and education are delivered.
This week's featured free app is Miss Spell's Class, which takes commonly misspelled words from Dictionary.com and turns it into a game!
To help you pave the way for using iPad in your class, Educational Technology and Mobile Learning Blog has brought you some great classroom posters to share with your students.
Do you use the same password for all websites? Do you overshare on Facebook? If so, you're a target for cybercriminals!
Whether you’re looking to find the best interactive whiteboard app, a new way to deliver exit slips, or simply a fun educational game that can be used in your classroom tomorrow, these app review sites are definitely your go-to source.
Write to Read is an educational iPad app that helps young kids, ages 3-10, hone their reading skills through writing, specifically story creation. The Write to Read experience is based on the idea of ‘learning to read by writing’ and ‘writing and discovering’ where the child uses his current level of written language abilities to create text to accompany pictures taken with the iPad camera.
10 Ways to Use Your iPad Offline
To create a narrated picture book on Story Creator start by inserting a picture as your book’s cover. To create a page just tap the “+” icon and import a picture, draw a picture, type some text, or do all three. After completing one or all three of those previous actions tap the microphone icon to record your narration. After making your recording you can quickly adjust it so that each word of text is highlighted to match the timing of your narration.
he Haiku Deck blog has a post containing five examples of using Haiku Deck in school. That post contains a link to Haiku Deck's Education Case Studies Pinterest board. That board currently contains 76 examples of Haiku Deck being used by students and teachers.
If you are new to the iPad, or maybe you’re just not tech savvy, there may be some things about your touchscreen tablet that you don’t know about. That’s why we are here to help. Last week, we gave you some helpful hints on using the iPad’s keyboard.
What are some of the best iPad apps for ESL students? There's a ton out there but here are some favorites!
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You can’t just spray your iPad with Windex and rub it down with a paper towel. The screen needs special care and attention in order to ensure that you keep your screen in pristine condition.
Here are some resources that your students can use to develop and practice their spelling skills.
The focus of the use of the devices NEEDS to remain primarily as a tool for: exposing students to skills, characteristic of a “modern learner“critical thinkingpersonal learningtransformative learningworkflow fluencyanytime/anywhere/anyhowcreating
To make sure we prepare the right environment for this integration to take place and part of this preparation is informing our students on online ethics and fair use of digital content and showing them how they can thrive online without compromising their digital identities.
Here are fantsatic art lessons and resources to help teachers practice some ideas on how to create art on the iPads with students.
Presentation made in Keynote converted to Powerpoint. About the use of the iPad in the school environment. Some app suggestions for teachers. By LeBaron
Is your iPad getting slow? Check out these 7 tricks to speed up your iPad. This post delivers long-term results, and it explains what does NOT work as well.
There is so much that the iPad can do that we don’t know about when we unbox the device for the first time.
Here is some help in understanding and activating AirPlay Mirroring from you iPad to Apple TV.
Haiku Deck, a free iPad app, is a completely new kind of presentation software designed to make your slides stunning. Whether you are pitching an idea, teaching a lesson, delivering a keynote, or igniting a movement, Haiku Deck makes presentations simple, beautiful, and fun.
GoClass is a free iPad application for creating short lessons and delivering them to your students. The lessons can include annotated images, free hand sketches, text, and video.
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