Remove Android Remove Classroom Remove Exercises Remove Social Media
article thumbnail

Give Classroom Photos Some Flair with the Moldiv Collage App

Fractus Learning

Compatibility : iOS / Android. Take a look at some of the examples created by History teacher and education blogger, John Mitchell who uses Moldiv to create fun exercises for his students. Try creating a classroom poster using photos that will get your students’ attention and then add your message using the text overlay.

article thumbnail

Lessons from Teaching with Games

ProfHacker

As an advocate of games in the classroom , I was very excited when I first saw the call for this issue from editors Jennifer deWinter and Carly A. Here are a few of the takeaways that might inspire you with a new way to bring games into the classroom: Games offer space to explore historical action. Photo by Flickr User Karen ].

iPhone 40
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

15 Ways for Students to Use Google Keep [infographic]

Shake Up Learning

There are so many possibilities that I decided to put together this post and infographic with ideas for how Google Keep can be used in the classroom: 15 Ways for Students to Use Google Keep! Using Google Keep in the Classroom. I love to think of all of the possibilities that Google Keep creates for the classroom.

Google 28
article thumbnail

Facebook and Fake News: Esther Wojcicki On Teaching Digital Journalism in High School

Edsurge

Esther has been teaching for more than 30 years and was an early adopter of edtech in her classroom. Today she's turned her classroom into a multi-million dollar media center. Students will use technology effectively in your classroom if you show them how to do it and tell them what you're expecting.

article thumbnail

Educator tools for media literacy and how to advocate for truth

The Cornerstone for Teachers

How social media and search engine algorithms shape our thinking about what’s true. It’s a rundown of what happened the week before that you can use in the classroom to teach news literacy. Having open, offline conversations with people who think differently.

How To 96