The EdTech Coach Podcast

Showing posts with label book creator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book creator. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2020

Thirteen Distance Learning Tools

It’s still possible to teach your class if you or your students are out of the classroom for a long period of time.  I’ve compiled a list of digital learning tools that can help in the event students or teachers are absent for long periods of time.

 

Screencastify: Record your lectures. Record your voice over your Google Slides or Powerpoint presentation. Create questions on a Google Doc which your students answer while watching your presentation.

Explain Everything: Digital whiteboard. Record explanations of key concepts and math problems. Upload your recording to Your Google Classroom.

Google Hangouts Meet: Meet with your class or individual students over a Google Hangout.

Nearpod or Peardeck: Create student paced lessons with assessments. Include videos, short answer questions, and a space for digital white boards.

Edpuzzle: Create an assignment out of a video.  EdPuzzle allows for the insertion of questions in the video. You can even record yourself explaining a concept and turn it into an EdPuzzle video. 

Flipgrid: Students can use Flipgrid to record what they’ve learned.  Students can give an oral book report, summarize events in history, comment on a classmates video and so much more!

Socrative: Easy to use assessment tool. Use Socrative to ask multiple choice or short essay questions.

Padlet: Use Padlet as a classroom backchannel.  Set up a Padlet for each of your Google Classrooms for student questions.

Book Creator: Have students create books based on their learning. Students can insert text, drawings, photos, and recordings of their voice.

Google Calendar: Post all daily activities and due dates.

Google Classroom: Use as the hub for student work and online discussions.

Google Drawings: Great for math.  Students can work out math problems and turn in using Google Classroom.

Google Forms: Use Forms for not only assessment, but for virtual worksheets as well. Forms is also great for a weekly/daily check in with students.  Ask how they’re feeling, goals for the week, etc.  Multiple choice check-in’s are easier to review because you can then use conditional formatting in a Google Sheet to flag certain answers.

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Book Creator Gives Students Choice In Their Reading Logs




I was recently asked by a teacher how she could drop the traditional reading logs in her class. Her kids were doing it the old fashion way. They were talking out a piece of paper, writing the date, pages read, and a brief summary. After giving it some thought, I told her that Google tools could come to her rescue. She could use Google Sheets, Slides, Keep, and Drawings instead her paper reading logs. But the one tool that I focused on was Book Creator. Book Creator is a versatile tool that can be used in any discipline and for almost any classroom exercise. Book Creator allows the user to include pictures, videos, drawings, voice recordings, and of course, text. Book Creator is the ultimate in student choice when it comes to reading logs. I’ve found that when using Book Creator and giving students choice on how they’ll summarize what they’ve read, many students actually want to read! One of the downsides is that some students actually cut reading short in to get to their reading log. The teacher has flexibility too. On a certain day, the teacher can ask students to include a simple summary with a picture from the web. The next day, the teacher can ask them to record a video of them summarizing what they’re read. On yet another day, they can ask the students to draw a representation of what they’re read. They can also ask the kids to choose how they’d like to summarize their reading. The teacher has the ability to leave comments in a students book. Like creating a book, the teacher can leave comments in the same way, with text, audio, video, or by using a stylus to make comments.

Looking to give students choice in their class work? I highly recommend checking out Book Creator!

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

5 Apps For Student Field Trip Reflections

Your students are going on a field trip.  Perhaps they're headed to a natural history museum or art museum.  You want to make sure they go away with something--anything that proves that the field trip was worthwhile.  The simplest thing to do is assign a reflection of what they learned on the field trip.  



Make sure students are aware of the assignment beforehand so that they can prepare.  Allow them to use their smartphones while on the field trip so they can take pictures or write notes about what they learned.  

The following apps will help students share what they learned on their field trip:

Google Slides:  One of the easiest ways students can reflect on their field trip is by creating a presentation about it.  Slides provide a couple of templates tailored to field trips-the field trip template or the photo album template.  Or, students can create a presentation from scratch. Students can insert pictures or videos they took of their experience.

YouTube: Students can use their phones to shoot video, edit it, and upload it to YouTube.  When shooting video, advise students that they should include a piece from the visit and their thoughts on the topic.  At the end of the day, ask them to film a reflection of what they learned.

Storyboardthat: Students can use Storyboardthat.com to upload a timeline of their learning.  Use each box to document the day. Students can upload pictures from the day and include written comments.

Book Creator: Students can use Book Creator to create a short book that shares their field trip.  They can add different kinds of media such as photos, video, and sound.  Book Creator provides the students with the ability to create a comic book style book that can showcase their field trip.

WeVideo: WeVideo is a free all in one video app that allows students to shoot and edit video.  WeVideo has an iOS app for those iPad classrooms and is available on the web for those Chromebook classes.  It’s easy to use and students can create and edit video right on their mobile device.