Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
77.9K views | +0 today
Follow
Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
Literacy in a digital education world and peripheral issues.
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...

Popular Tags

Current selected tag: 'presentations online'. Clear
Scooped by Elizabeth E Charles
Scoop.it!

Two Powerful Tools for Creating Interactive Educational Presentations ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning

Two Powerful Tools for Creating Interactive Educational Presentations ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning | Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path | Scoop.it
Over the last few years we have reviewed a number of powerful presentation tools to use with students in class. These include tools such as Haiku Deck, Prezi, Google Presentation, Keynote to mention but a few. Today we are bringing to your radar two more presentation tools with huge educational potential. You can use them to design visually attractive presentations that include a wide range of multimedia content such as text, sound, videos, images, PDFs and many more.
Mark Solomons's curator insight, June 17, 2016 4:44 AM
two more tools worth a look
Scooped by Elizabeth E Charles
Scoop.it!

Maximize In-Class Time by Moving Student Presentations Online

Maximize In-Class Time by Moving Student Presentations Online | Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path | Scoop.it
As a faculty member, I am always challenged with finding pedagogical techniques that allow my students to connect with course content, each other, and myself in new and interesting ways. Student presentations can help achieve this goal, but they require a wealth of time for each student to present and get immediate feedback from peers and the instructor. Some classes are so large that in-class presentations may not be feasible at all. Or, if you are a faculty member who is not on a block schedule, you would have to use several of your 50-minute class sessions to allow each student a chance to present his or her work. What’s more, some students have a difficult time listening to dozens of peer presentations in one sittings and may tune out after the first few presentations.
No comment yet.