The EdTech Coach Podcast

Saturday, May 18, 2019

How To Have A Paperless Classroom



There are many apps for education. The key is to find the select few that fit your needs.  You don’t want to inundate your students with dozens of apps, confusing them as to which app is for what. In the long run, it will be easier for both you and your students if you concentrate on only a few.  Experiment with different apps until you find those that fit your needs. 


As I mentioned in a previous post, there are many reasons to go paperless in your classroom.  There are three categories that apps fit in that will allow you to go paperless.  Choose an app from each of the three categories and your well on your way to having a paperless classroom.

Classroom Management/Distribute Work

First, you need a place where students can retrieve and turn in class work.

Start with a learning management system. An LMS can serve the purpose of collecting and distributing work.  LMS’s such as Google Classroom, Edmodo, Schoology, and Showbie are popular LMS’s that can help with the everyday tasks or running the classroom.  Each learning management system is able to collect and distribute work. Find the one that fits your needs and you’ll find you’re on your way to going all digital!

Student Work

Just because there’s no paper or pencil doesn’t mean there isn’t work to do.  Students still need to get their work done in a digital environment. The following are a few suggestions for apps students can use to get their work done:

Seesaw: A very good all in one student portfolio/online class blog/LMS/student journal.  Seesaw is great for collecting student work and sharing it online via its online class blog functionality.  

Kami: If you use Chromebooks in your class, Kami is a must!  Kami allows for the annotation of PDF documents.  So, you don’t have to thing twice about assigning a PDF document to students because of the inability to type on it.  Students can upload their work to Kami and type away.  Upon completion, they  download their finished work and uploading it to the LMS.

Google Tools: Again, if you’re using Chromebooks, Google tools such as Docs, Sheets, and Slides is a no brainer.  Assigning and turning in Google Docs is easy, especially if you use Google Classroom. 

Nearpod: Nearpod is a fantastic interactive presentation app that allows you to lead your class through an interactive lesson without touching a piece of paper!  Your students can interact with your lesson in a variety of ways, from short answer, to collaborative exercises, to drawing activities.  

Explain Everything: Explain Everything is a digital whiteboard app that allows for the recording of lessons by not only the teacher, but students can also record their work as well.  Want students to explain a concept? Have them use Explain Everything and a stylus (or their finger) to record their answer, then upload it to the class LMS.

Assessment

Out of the multitude of apps that are available to serve as assessment tools, I’ve chosen three that can serve your assessment needs:

Nearpod: Nearpod was mentioned before as a good way for students to show their work.  It’s also is a good assessment tool.  Built into Nearpod is a formative assessment tool where you can craft multiple-choice questions to assess what they’ve learned.  Or, you can use Nearpod as one big formative assessment tool, posing questions using the various interactive question types.

Socrative: Socrative allows teachers to post multiple-choice, true/false, or short answer tests.  The teacher gets real time feedback as far as student scores and test progression.  And, students appreciate how they get immediate feedback either during the test or after.  

Formative: Formative is unique in that there are 1000’s of pre-made “Formatives” to choose from.  Find one that fits your subject and edit it to fit your specific class needs.  Another cool thing about Formative is that it allows you to upload your own document.  Let’s say you’ve got that time tested test you’ve used for years.  No need to come up with something new, upload your document  into Formative and insert places where students can provide the answers to the questions.

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