Remove Adaptive Learning Remove Common Core Remove Flipped Classroom Remove Google
article thumbnail

43 Apps, Games, and Websites Transforming This Year's Classrooms

Graphite Blog

Bottom line: This is a pretty nice all-in-one solution for extra math support and practice with solid adaptive tech, but students might need help with the interface. Bottom line: In a genre of its own, GoNoodle is a ready-to-go and classroom-friendly exercise program that challenges students to get moving. Google Classroom.

article thumbnail

43 Apps, Games, and Websites Transforming This Year's Classrooms

Graphite Blog

Individualized, game-based math adapts to kids' needs Bottom line: This is a pretty nice all-in-one solution for extra math support and practice with solid adaptive tech, but students might need help with the interface. Google Classroom. Unlimited Books for Kids. Imagine Math. Khan Academy. Khan Academy Kids.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

43 Apps, Games, and Websites Transforming This Year's Classrooms

Graphite Blog

Individualized, game-based math adapts to kids' needs Bottom line: This is a pretty nice all-in-one solution for extra math support and practice with solid adaptive tech, but students might need help with the interface. Google Classroom. Unlimited Books for Kids. Imagine Math. Khan Academy. Khan Academy Kids.

article thumbnail

Why a K-12 Operating System is the Next Step in the Evolution of Edtech

Edsurge

One of the first curricular tools I built to share—on the first day of school—was a public, student-friendly gradebook on Google Sheets. Yes, this was before Google Classroom existed!) It felt like every tool I used in the classroom was inherently designed to work in isolation.

System 118
article thumbnail

The 100 Worst Ed-Tech Debacles of the Decade

Hack Education

The Flipped Classroom". It was probably Sal Khan’s 2011 TED Talk “Let’s Use Video to Reinvent Education” and the flurry of media he received over the course of the following year or so that introduced the idea of the “flipped classroom” to most people. Google Reader. It is fair, however, to blame “Montessori 2.0”

Pearson 145