![]() ![]() My students are now using it for a audio-photo-essay of their Digital Saturation Papers (they are using photos and recording audio directly from the essay). I originally began using it in my flipped classroom for at-home lectures that I embedded into my class website. VoiceThread: I’m finding more and more uses for this app. The products were very amusing to watch as we shared popcorn for a viewing day. I used it for the introductory material to Macbeth- students were asked to recreate the Pendle Witch Event and the Gunpowder Plot. This is helpful for all types of instruction. ![]() IMovie: Students who have never used iMovie before were able to create a movie, edit it, and upload it to Dropbox in less than two days. If you don’t have iMovie, you can use PicStitch (see below under “Art Apps”) to put the characters into a comic strip set-up and still create a story. This free app allowed the students to create characters, import them to the camera roll and create an iMovie out of them. As an English teacher, it could be fun for the students to take a pilgrimage like those of the Canterbury pilgrims. The author will create a list of tasks that can include pictures at a certain spot, create a math problem, solve a task, etc. ![]() SCVNGR: Teachers or students can create a quest for other students to go on. This app can be used for assessment purposes: “show your understanding of the quote or reading by creating a dialogue between the main characters.” While ComicTouch Lite only allows one frame at one time, students can create more than one frame, save it to the Camera Roll and then use another app like PicStitch to combine the frames into one image. ComicTouch Lite: An app that allows students to use a picture from the Camera Roll or import a picture and then add a dialogue bubble to the picture. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |