My first experience collaborating on a HyperDoc with someone not at my school site was about a year ago when Justin Birckbichler and I worked together to create a Digital Citizenship HyperDoc (focusing on plagiarism) for 4th/5th grade. It was so much fun creating a HyperDoc with someone who lives all the way on the other side of the country! With the power of Twitter and Google Apps it's easy to get connected, collaborate and share. It motivated me to start collaborating with even more passionate teachers outside of my school to create HyperDocs that I would never have been able to create on my own!
Via
paul rayner,
Pam Sprute
In this article, Siemer discusses Hyperdocs (interactive Google Docs, Slides, or Maps in worksheet form) and the essential elements you need from Google Drive for a successful Hyperdoc. Elements include the ability to play a video from YouTube in the doc to avoid getting sidetracked on YouTube's website, changing Google Slides page sizes, and inserting tables. I had never thought of making an interactive worksheet before but am curious to find ways to incorporate this into a music classroom.