

Google Sheets ( iOS and Android): Create, edit, and collaborate with others on spreadsheets from your device with the free Google Sheets app. If you add that with a screencasting tool, Luhtala said, you have fabulous tutorials that you’ve made on your phone. Twenty-two apps are included below, and you can locate the rest via the two links above.Īirdrop: Users receive a notification that someone wants to share something, they accept, and the resource is shared wirelessly.Īirplay: A neat AirPlay function is mirroring, in which users can take what they do on their phone and display it on a computer.
#ISTOPMOTION 3. REGISTRATION#
Her entire presentation is available here, and resources found in that presentation are available here (free registration is required in both cases). Luhtala reviewed 50 apps that can help teachers and librarians organize materials, locate information and resources, and more. “ opportunity for you to take the device you have today and start thinking about it as a computer,” she said, noting that the majority of people have access to smartphones.

She said that often, schools launch mobile technology but don’t necessarily follow up with training for teachers. “But with testing, more schools are looking at one-to-one, or certainly more mobile technology, because testing is going to be computer-based, and we’re scrambling to come up with resources to meet those needs.” “We’re not all ready to launch into one-to-one, and not every school is ready for one-to-one,” Luhtala said during an edWeb presentation.
