The following are among the teaching tools that your teacher may be using for remote learning.
Google Classroom: With Google Classroom, teachers can connect with students to stay organized and share content. Google Classroom is a platform that allows teachers to create and share content and grade assignments. |
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Seesaw: Seesaw is an educational platform designed with K-2 students in mind. Students can use creative tools to take pictures, draw, record videos, and more to capture learning in a portfolio. |
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Schoology: Some teachers may use Schoology to support remote learning. Schoology is a platform that allows students to view lessons, engage in discussions, and take quizzes. |
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Google Forms: Teachers can create surveys, questionnaires, feedback forms, and quizzes. |
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Google Sheets: Teachers can organize data, create lists, and share graphs with students. |
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Google Docs: Teachers can create and share documents with your students for writing assignments, collaboration, and instruction. |
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Google Slides: Teachers can create and share presentations with your students to deliver content and to engage in learning activities. |
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Pear Deck: Allows teachers to enhance interaction and engagements in their slideshows by embedding questions and interactivity. |
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Flipgrid: Teachers can increase student voice and connection through Flipgrid’s social learning tool by recording and sharing short videos. |
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EdPuzzle: Teachers can turn videos into lessons. With EdPuzzle, teachers can add notes and questions. Teachers can also use EdPuzzle to embed formulas, images, documents in questions and notes. |
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Padlet: Teachers can create collaborative and moderated boards where teachers and students can share links, pictures, and short-written responses. |
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Google Hangouts Meet and Zoom: These are both video conferencing applications that allow teachers to connect with students remotely using video and/or audio as well as typed chats. Teachers may use these applications for office hours and to provide remote instruction. |
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