Thursday, May 5, 2016

Blog Challenge: Day 13

Name the top edtech tools that you use on a consistent basis in the classroom, and rank them in terms of their perceived (by you) effectiveness.


As much as I love integrating technology into my classroom, it is one thing I find extremely difficult to stay consistent with week in and week out. I feel myself getting bored with certain tools. If I'm getting bored I know my kids are certainly bored! There have been a lot of tools I have used briefly (EdPuzzle, Class Dojo, Edmodo...) but I have not used those on a consistent basis. I'm only going to list tools that I use regularly and that my students are currently familiar with.

SmartNotebook

I am fortunate enough to have a SMART board in my room and I use it on a daily basis. The Smart Notebook software in particular, is fabulous for our interactive notebooking. My students and I are now in a routine: If I write, you write. Your page should look like my page. I set up my Smart Notebook page to look identical to their notebook page -- I place pictures and diagrams where they should go and approximate their size. When I write notes, students can easily see and place their notes accordingly. My favorite part is that I can easily save it as a PDF (Print to PDF to be exact) and post it to my webpage. I date all the documents so students can easily find anything they missed from a day they are absent. It is an absolutely wonderful tool for interactive notebooks!

Effectiveness rank: 10/10!

Document Camera

If the Smart Notebook has one downside, it's how difficult it is to color diagrams. Color coding text is simple, but coloring diagrams becomes difficult. I have tried using the pens, highlighters, and there are just so many problems with getting colors to look correct. It became frustrating to both me and my kids. This year I was able to get a document camera through a grant from our PTSA. The document is very simple -- it plugs into a USB on my computer and I can project the picture from my computer onto the board. It is so helpful to use the document camera when coloring as students can much more easily see where and what I am coloring. It's also great for showing directions for foldables or more complicated gluing in our notebook.

Our district also utilizes GradeCam (which I will discuss in a moment) but the document camera works hand in hand with GradeCam that makes grading tests and quizzes cinch!

Effectiveness rank: 8/10 -- sometimes the picture is too dark or fuzzy, but it gets the job done!

GradeCam

Our district utilizes online tracking for all our common assessment data. A new tool they introduced is GradeCam. It allows us to print "bubble" sheets for tests and quizzes and grade them instantly with our LadyBug document cameras! It's so fantastic and such a time saver! Although I don't use this option often, since I don't often give multiple choice assessments, it makes grading 150+ tests so much easier. It also has fantastic data aggregation options that are extremely helpful when we meet as an instructional team. I highly recommend using GradeCam if you can!

Effectiveness rank: 10/10!


D2L / Class Website

Our district uses D2L as our class website platform, and I utilize on a daily basis. It is all customized with our calendar, notebook pages, resource links, study guide answer keys... it is simply a must in this day and age. My kids know what I will say if I hear What did we do yesterday? CHECK THE WEBSITE! It really cuts back on the paper shuffling and helps teach my ninth graders responsibility.

Effectiveness rank: 10/10!

CamScanner

The last edtech tool I want to mention is CamScanner. It's a free app for your phone. It typically has a subscription, but if you're a teacher you can get it for free! It allows you to utilize your camera as a scanner (hence CamScanner... haha...) and you can scan everything from single page documents, to packets, to pictures and diagrams. Once you take a picture of it, you can edit it to the correct size and color and then you have so many options for how to share it. My personal favorite is to upload it directly to your Google Drive. It uploads very fast so you can get your document quickly.

My favorite thing to use this for is answer keys. I like to post answer keys for my students when they have a study guide, so they can check their answers and work at home. For chemistry when we have a lot of math problems, it is very time consuming to type the answers and much easier to do them on paper. I fill out the answer key, CamScan it, upload it to Google Drive and then I can post it on the class website, print it out, or email it to another teacher. So handy and useful for so many things.

Effectiveness rank: 10/10!


What are your favorite edtech tools? What is the next thing I need to try?

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