Engaging learners for future success.
View this post on Instagram You can store PDFs in the Books app on your iPad. Opening a PDF in Books and tapping the Markup icon allow you to write on the page. As a fifth grade teacher, I loaded up the PDFs of my teachers guides and student books so that I could instantly call them up and write on them while mirroring my screen. Markup tools include pen, highlighter, text, eraser, arrow, shape, and magnifier. When done, tapping the Markup icon again saves the annotations and exits Markup mode. #teachersofinstagram #ipaded #appleedu #appleeduchat #remoteteaching #distancelearning #appletv #googlemeet A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Aug 23, 2020 at 8:54am PDT
You can store PDFs in the Books app on your iPad. Opening a PDF in Books and tapping the Markup icon allow you to write on the page. As a fifth grade teacher, I loaded up the PDFs of my teachers guides and student books so that I could instantly call them up and write on them while mirroring my screen. Markup tools include pen, highlighter, text, eraser, arrow, shape, and magnifier. When done, tapping the Markup icon again saves the annotations and exits Markup mode. #teachersofinstagram #ipaded #appleedu #appleeduchat #remoteteaching #distancelearning #appletv #googlemeet
A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Aug 23, 2020 at 8:54am PDT
View this post on Instagram Jamboard is Google’s whiteboard tool that can accessed on the web or in the mobile app. Each new whiteboard file is called a jam and jams can have up to 20 frames. You can add drawings, sticky notes, and images to a jam. Currently there are only a few backgrounds to choose from. You can enlarge an image to take up the background, but it’s not ideal as an image can be accidentally selected and moved. The sharing features are what set Jamboard apart from similar apps. You can share a jam just like you would share a Google Docs file. You can add collaborators by email address or you can get a link so that anyone with that link can be a viewer or an editor. A maximum of 50 collaborators can simultaneously edit a jam. These collaborators can be a combination of users on the mobile app and web app. #distancelearning #googleedu #jamboard #gaetc20 #iste20 #edtech #googlemeet #teachersofinstagram #googleclassroom #googleforeducation #googlejam A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Aug 16, 2020 at 9:03am PDT
Jamboard is Google’s whiteboard tool that can accessed on the web or in the mobile app. Each new whiteboard file is called a jam and jams can have up to 20 frames. You can add drawings, sticky notes, and images to a jam. Currently there are only a few backgrounds to choose from. You can enlarge an image to take up the background, but it’s not ideal as an image can be accidentally selected and moved. The sharing features are what set Jamboard apart from similar apps. You can share a jam just like you would share a Google Docs file. You can add collaborators by email address or you can get a link so that anyone with that link can be a viewer or an editor. A maximum of 50 collaborators can simultaneously edit a jam. These collaborators can be a combination of users on the mobile app and web app. #distancelearning #googleedu #jamboard #gaetc20 #iste20 #edtech #googlemeet #teachersofinstagram #googleclassroom #googleforeducation #googlejam
A post shared by Tony Vincent (@learninginhand) on Aug 16, 2020 at 9:03am PDT