Wednesday, October 23, 2013

iPad apps!

First off, I participated in #edtechchat Monday night, which was overwhelming! I constantly had to keep updating my page and had at least 30 new posts every time! On the other hand, I was able to interact with the author of our textbook, @snbeach! I also found a great article on prioritizing when it comes to creating your PLN.

Snapguide looks pretty cool and I am going to download it on my phone. From what I got from the website, it looks like  you can find pretty much any guide on how to do things here. The Nearpod Demo on Youtube was awesome. It allows students to answer questions and work interactively off of iPads, and the teacher receives the results of the students' answers. This is a quicker way to run your classroom, and students will be more excited to use iPads rather than the traditional pen and paper.

I love watching Khan Academy lectures, so I am really excited about this ShowMe app. I think that, as teachers, we will be able to use each other's ideas to better our lessons through this. Sometimes it is hard to teach certain subjects for one person, but is simple for another to teach. This is when you can go on ShowMe and see how other educators taught the lesson. Meanwhile, you can share your lessons with other teachers. This different perspective will implement learning.

Educreations is another neat app that is an interactive whiteboard with audio. You can add sound, text, and pictures to your creation and share it with others. I like that one teacher in the article said that she can use this to see her students' process of solving a problem to see where they did or did not go wrong. Educreations was used in this classroom and was very successful. Sometimes we forget how easily young students catch on to technological ideas, and these kids are proof!

Ask3 was my favorite thing so far! So many students have a hard time asking the teacher for help because they feel stupid, and through this app, students can ask each other questions first. Too often, students give up because they do not want to ask the teacher for help or admit they are struggling. If they see other students using the app for help, people will catch on and it will be a better experience overall. It is especially useful in subjects such as foreign languages and math because it is near impossible to explain through a text message when you have a question.

Augmented Reality seems like a great way to get students excited, engaged, and involved in class activities. It is bringing something to life, and it is a growing sensation. In our classrooms, we will need to be using this type of education pretty often by the time we become teachers. If not, our students are going to be bored, disengaged, and uninterested in what we are teaching.

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