Resources for teachers, by teachers

Black History Apps for the Elementary Classroom

Black History People by Quikthinking Software This app has many of the “usual” people one would expect in studying Black History from Martin Luther King, Jr. to Rosa Parks, George Washington Carver, Bill Cosby and Barack Obama. It has the people divided into categories of Authors and Poets, Civil Rights and Politics, Education and Sports, Entertainment-Art-Business, Inventors, Law, Medicine-Science-Aviation, and Music. The information provided is limited, but does... More →

Apps for Creative Expression

As a teacher, I am often asked by parents and by other teachers about apps to use with their children. I always recommend ones that encourage children to be creative and allow them to express themselves in a positive way. These are several of my favorite Android apps for Preschool - adult. I have included a variety of types. I also like these because the product can be saved to... More →

X Construction - Physics Made Fun!

X Construction is a really fun, but challenging bridge-building simulation game/app. Students construct different length bridges in different settings, but always to allow a train of passengers to cross safely.                   Scores are based on the amount of building materials remaining unused, the length of time spent building the bridge, and the amount of stress the bridge withstands. If the structure... More →

Sony Xperia Tablet: Apps for the Primary Classroom

I'm really excited to use the Sony Xperia Tablet with K-2 students. I'm sure that they will think of even more ways to use the apps than I will.  The first 6 year old that I handed the Xperia Tablet to immediately tapped on an app to open it. It was intuitive. I did need to show her how to get back to the home screen and how... More →

Educational Apps for SONY Xperia First Post

You did it! You made the wise decision to purchase a SONY Xperia tablet.  Now what? As an educator it can be quite overwhelming to wade through the vast amount of information out there on the best Android apps to use.  Let me help you by posting my findings on a Learnist board.  This first post features Wave Recorder, Skitch Evernote, Quixey, and qPDF.  These... More →

Assign a Class Historian: Ideas for Teaching in a One Tablet Classroom 3

One of the best things about the Xperia tablet is it’s versatility. Not only do you have a content consumption device with apps to interact with, digital reader functionality, and Internet accessibility, you also have a content creation device that can act as a still camera, a video camera, a sound recorder, and a productivity suite. The challenge in a one tablet classroom is finding ways in which... More →

Create a Photo Booth: Ideas for Teaching in a One Tablet Classroom 2

So I have to admit, I came upon this idea thanks to a colleague of mine who was looking for a fun way to encourage creativity and reward good behavior. We got to talking about wedding receptions we had recently attended at which the hosts had provided a photo booth experience. You know what I’m talking about. You go into the booth, click the button and a camera... More →

Build a Voting Booth: Ideas for Teaching in a One Tablet Classroom 1

The Idea One great way to use your Sony Xperia in the classroom is to create a class voting booth. This could be done in conjunction with an election unit or simply to instill a little bit of the democratic process into your classroom. While the act of voting via clicker or via webtools such as polleverywhere.com may be a quick way to gather class information, the act of... More →

Google Apps for Education: An Introduction for Teachers

Google Apps for Education is Google’s suite of web-based tools that help the busy teacher work more efficiently and effectively for working with students, collaborating with colleagues, and communicating with parents. Here are some of the most popular Google Apps for Education: Google Drive: Teachers are using Google Drive to store all of their important documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and forms. Google Docs is now part of Google Drive.... More →

Learning About Weather

I live in Minnesota where the weather can be extreme. Thank goodness there are weather apps so that I can stay inside. If I were planning a unit on weather in my classroom, the first thing I would do is round up resources that I have available, the resources online and the apps on my Sony Xperia Tablet. In my classroom I would have thermometers, a barometer and books. Then... More →

Common Core Connections: How to Transport Your Students’ Data without Needing a Chiropractor

     It is here, the Common Core Learning Standards have officially taken over as THE focus.  The writing is on the wall as many professional teaching books, pinterest pages, and professional development conferences have quickly switched their focus.  With good reason.  The standards are guiding all of our decisions as we  educate our students to be college and career ready (not to mention that... More →

Sony Xperia Tablet and Second Language Learners

Sony Xperia Tablet and Second Language Learners from Keri Duncan on Vimeo.   The above video is an example of how the Sony Xperia tablet is used in a one-to-one situation with a second language learner. Each week a volunteer at the school comes and spends the day working with different students. For about 40 minutes she works with this particular student to help him in his fluency for sight words.... More →

The One Tablet Classroom - Listening Center

As great as it would be to have a tablet for every student, and although it may seem a little more feasible than the one to one computer solution, it still may be a ways off for many teachers and schools. There are still lots of great ways to use the one tablet in the classroom. For the primary classroom, one option for the tablet is to use it as... More →

Video to Web Site in a Snap!

     In my classroom I am constantly recording what my students are doing and putting it on my class Web site.  Finding an easy way to accomplish this feat has been cumbersome at times because there have been too many steps such as loading video onto my laptop, editing the video, converting the video for the Web, and then uploading it to my site.  Victory was... More →

So Many Apps, So Little Time…. How to Choose Apps for Learners

There are a lot of apps out there… more than we can even begin to explore. The Google Play Store has tens of thousands… but how do we choose apps for learning? What are some criteria to help us choose apps for our students? Basic Criteria Curriculum First things first, the app needs to provide opportunities for students to learn or practice something we value. This could be... More →

Math Apps for the Elementary Classroom

Kids Numbers and Math by Intellijoy - paid version - has 8 different activities for children from pre-school through second grade. First there is just the identification of numbers. A number is on the screen, it is said, child repeats it and goes to the next number. The second game is to count the number of flowers and choose the correct number. After 5 correct answers there is a little positive feedback... More →

Using One Tablet in the Classroom

So you have one tablet, does it have any use in a busy classroom of learners with an already busy teacher? YES! Having a limited supply of any tool or resource means we need to be even more thoughtful and intentional about how we use that tool. Here are a few ideas for integrating your tablet into the teaching and learning in your classroom, even if you only have one... More →

How’s Your Heart? Using Cardiograph to Measure Heartrate Instantly

Using a tablet in physical education or science as a measurement tool for measuring and recording heart rate is easy with Cardiograph by Micropinch, a free Android app. Cardiograph records your heart rate and keeps the data so you can see the rate on various and times. Each data set is automatically time and date stamped and saved into a profile. You can have multiple profiles. How it works You... More →

There is a new way to find apps…and it is kind of a big deal

On Monday January 21, Google users discovered a powerful new search tool had been unleashed, the ability to search for applications. Tell the powerful search engine what you are looking for and let Google search not only places like the Play Store but all app review sites and blogs. In the example on the left, I searched for Android Whiteboard apps and was handed a couple of suggestions quickly as well... More →

Create an eBook: Ideas for Teaching in a One Tablet Classroom 4

There are lots of ways to create eBooks these days, using lots of different tools. This post focuses on one way to create eBooks that is simple, free, and takes full advantage of the tools available on your Xperia tablet. The Idea Have your students author content for a book that can be turned into an eBook, read on digital devices, and shared with others. The content of the book... More →

Meeting the Communication Needs of Disabled Students With Mobile Solutions

Throughout the majority of most educators careers augmentative alternative communication devices (AAC’s) have been both limited in number and rather hefty in price.  Rigid solutions such as Go Talks could range up to $300 and were toy-ish in appearance without the ability to customize very much at all.  More Robust options could literally be thousands of dollars, and while well made, stood out as different from technology... More →

I Love to Read!

I love to read. Don’t you? I love books, magazines, manuals, blogs, and more. One of the challenges teachers face is how to instill that love of reading in their students. Thinking about the digital students we have today, I thought about what we can do to instill that love of reading with technology. Here are some suggestions. Connect with other readers online. Scholastic has a community for... More →

Songify: Turn Your Kids Into Recording Artists

I’ve always felt that one of the goals of a teacher is to help each student feel like a rock star. Thanks to an observant colleague who saw a couple of kids playing with Songify, I think I have the next tool to help realize that goal. What Is It? Songify is a simple and free app that you can use on your Xperia tablet to record students... More →

TED app and Inspiration

Many teachers are oppressed, more than anything else, by time. Is everything ready for tomorrow? Is the grading done? Will I ever get a full night's sleep again? Saving time to be inspired, though, is what can provide the energy not just to keep going, but to enjoy it as you do, and a great source of inspiration comes via the TED app from TED Conferences (when searching, you... More →

Movie Studio (it’s on your Android tablet)

One app that comes with your machine is Movie Studio (please excuse my busy background). If you're looking for the Xperia equivalent of Premiere, this ain't it. That said, if you need a quick way to bring together a few clips, pictures, and music, Movie Studio can do the job. The app allows adding any of the items mentioned above, as well as taking pictures and video from... More →

Multiple Students, Multiple Browsers

Having a tablet or other mobile device that may well be handed among several students as part of an activity can cause problems if the students have multiple accounts they need to access. Imagine, for example, that three students in a group will use one device, and each has a GAFE (Google Apps for Education) account. How do they access their accounts without stepping into each others' mail, files, etc.? ... More →

Web 2.0 Solutions for Classroom Management and Behavior Tracking

What Is It? Class Dojo is a robust behavior tracking and management application designed for teachers and parents which allows a teacher to create a customized icon for each student.  These icons can then be used to attribute either positive or negative behavior marks towards individual students or even the entire class.   As a I stated previously, this app can be highly individualized, but let’s... More →

5 Android Apps for Writers

The Google Play Store on your Android tablet offers a wide range of educational apps that are great for not only younger writers but writers of all ages as well. There’s likely an app that will help your students with their mobile writing endeavors! Here are some of my favorite writing apps that are great for your Android tablet. All of these apps are free and all are... More →

Symbaloo for the Xperia? Yes, please!

One of my favorite ways to curate the web is via Symbaloo, a web 2.0 tool that allows the user to create webmixes of their favorite sites. The tool is easy to learn, and it’s free. There are all kinds of reasons to like Symbaloo webmixes. First, they are very customizable. You can create custom buttons to represent each URL you would like to add. Also, you can have... More →

Streamline Your Life Now! Productivity Apps

Every educator has too many tasks, not enough time and is pulled in a million directions. Here is a quick run-down of my favorite apps to use with my Sony Xperia tablet (or other Android-enabled device) to streamline life, while still staying effective.   Evernote - Take notes on your tablet, add pictures, audio recordings or attachments quickly to your notes, along with sharing “notebooks” to collaboratively edit;... More →

7 Android Apps To Help Tell a Story

Students love to tell stories. Students love to create stories. There are loads of great Android apps that allow students to capture images and video and do things like make movies, annotate what they capture, and add in their voice. Check out these great apps that allow students to create stories on the go:   Skitch   With the built-in front facing and rear facing cameras on your Xperia tablet,... More →

Flipboard unpacks the power of social media in the classroom

Social media has become so prevalent that it seems like our lives are bombarded with bursts of tweets, pins, check-ins, quick links, hashtags, and Instagrams. What too often gets lost is the substance behind all of those short posts...and there is substance. No really. There is.   The cliché knock on social media is that it is just self-absorded nothingness post after post about where someone is eating... More →

Coach’s Eye App is Elusive Android Flipping Whiteboard

Techsmith's Coach's Eye app may have been designed for coaches and athletes to analyze athletic performance but it harbors a lot of potential for any teaching situation. It is also one a very select number of apps on the Android platform that can be used to annotate video or flip learning.   I have been looking long and hard to find an app on the Android platform that... More →

Common Core Connections: Easy Voice Recording to Facilitate Reading Assessment

     If you are in the classroom like me, then you know that getting a one-to-one reading assessment completed without interruptions is a miracle.  I have perfected the art of peripheral vision scanning of the other students as I conduct running records, and my frantic hand gestures to those that would interrupt are unmistakable.  What I have not perfected is the art of completing the forms... More →

Physics Fun

Newton’s laws of motion help us understand how objects in the world move around us. Through these apps students of all ages can understand the basics of physics and the comprehension skill of cause and effect. First I would allow students to time to explore and play with the apps. Several are listed below. Then I would introduce Sir Isaac Newton and his laws of motion. I... More →

Play Ball, Word Ball!

Word Ball is a simple game. Letters float on the screen and shrink and eventually disappear as you make as many words as you can. There is no timer, it is a race to make words faster than the balls shrink. Longer words score more points so this is an encouragement to students to add prefixes and suffixes to words as they enter them into the game. There are three... More →

Photography Apps for Beginners

By no stretch of the imagination, am I a professional photographer. I like taking pictures of my work with schools, teachers and students and I love taking pictures of school signs.   I also believe in the need to document, in pictures, the fantastic things that are happening in our schools every day. Photos capture moments that will never, ever happen again. So in working with my Sony Xperia tablet,... More →

Quick Tap Survey- Collect Data with your Tablet

Being data-informed as a teacher is critical, especially in the Information Age. The more information we have about our learners, the more capable we are of designing lessons that enhance student learning. Finding ways to collect student feedback quickly and with the user-experience in mind is becoming more and more easy. Thanks to web 2.0 and the app culture, we now have the means to take the pulse of any group,... More →

Bitdraw - Pixel Art gets your 80’s 8-bit On

I remember standing in Casa Grande Junior High School with slicked back hair and rolled up jeans on 1950's day in 1985 and telling a classmate, "You know, someday we'll be sending our kids to school on 80's day." Well, those days are here and for those of us who fondly recall the 80's and 90's enjoy the nostalgia of that era the rise of computer and video games are... More →

10 Great Places to Learn and Play

One of the things that I love about tablet devices like the Xperia is that they are playgrounds for self-motivated, exploratory learning. An Internet-connected tablet offers unlimited possibilities for discovering new, wonder-inducing things to know. That said, with all of the world at your fingertips, it is hard to know where to begin. As a service to my fellow explorers, I have provided 10 of my favorite places to learn, explore... More →

Assessing Your Students in Real Time Using Xperia Tablets and Infuse Learning.

So it’s day one of a new unit on punctuation and grammatical usage.  You have twenty students that you expect to have a working command of commas, periods, quotation marks, and everything in between by the end of the next grading period.  Where do you start?  What do these kids already know, and what are they totally unaware of?  You can craft a pre-test... More →

Draw Me a Picture

I love art. I love drawing, painting, and creating art of all kinds. My students usually cheered when I got out the art supplies. Students love art too. One of the wonderful features of the Sony Xperia Tablet is that it allows students to be artistically creative and to share their work. Illustration apps allow students to express themselves through drawing, to illustrate their stories, and to communicate. Their illustrations... More →

Common Core Connections: Shake-a-Phrase

People of a certain age remember the days of diagramming sentences for parts of speech.  Many bemoan that kids today just do not know how to write using correct grammar and perhaps we should go back to direct teaching of these important English concepts.  Have no fear, the Common Core Learning Standards (CCLS) have it covered.     Specifically, third graders are expected to “Explain the function... More →

Story Apps for the Elementary Classroom

Many kids love to read, and if they don’t, well we as teachers want to instill a love for reading in them. Reading opens new worlds to many students where they would never be able to go, or opens a fantasy land to their imagination.   Of course there are many story apps to use with your students, so I will just review a few.   Read Me... More →

Create Digital Scrapbooks with the Sony Scrapbook App

I recently came across a handy app on the Sony Xperia that was already there right out of the box. The app is called Scrapbook. If you don’t already see the Scrapbook app on your home screen, press Apps & Widgets in the top right corner to locate the Scrapbook app. To add an app to your home screen, just press and hold on it until you are... More →

ISS Detector one simple but amazing app

You know about the International Space Station or ISS. But have you ever seen it, I mean actually see it fly throught the sky? The ISS Detector App will show you when to look up into the night sky to do just that.  So you are thinking great, I get to see the space station but how does that apply to my classroom? I teach kids during the day.... More →

Take your tablet on a field trip

Do you like to know about the world around you? Want to give your students that same opportunity? Well I have two great apps to help quench that thirst. The Field Trip App from NianticLabs@Google and HISTORY Here from A&E Television Networks Mobile. The Field Trip App is Niantic Labs (a startup inside of Google) first app. They have recently become more known for their other location... More →

4 Pics 1 Word - One Great Way to Engage Students in Vocabulary

4 Pics 1 Word is a free app from "LOTUM GmbH" which provides 4 pictures and the students are to deduce the word which all four pictures represent and then to use the provided letters to spell the one word which fits all the pictures - thus the name, 4 Pics 1 Word. This kind of word game promotes thinking and discussion in younger students as well as in students still learning or developing English... More →

Xperia as Teleprompter: Ideas for Teaching in a 1 Tablet Classroom 5

As a former speech teacher, I can’t tell you how jealous I am that today’s teachers have the ability to provide their young rhetoricians with the tools that the big boys use. When I discovered that tablets like the Xperia can be used as teleprompters, I thought back to all of those student hours spent writing notecards and designing cue cards. I remembered with pain the... More →

V.I. Access Using Screenleap

As a special educator one of the most easily addressed disabilities I've encountered is visual impairment; however, it is also one the most overlooked. This statement is in no way intended to minimize the challenges students with visual impairments face.  It is simply intended to point out the wide range of magnification and access tools available to students in today's technologically advanced world.  Despite this, I... More →

Apps for Aspiring Artists from PicsArt

 PicsArts for Kids (free in the Google Play store), has features that will appeal to all aspiring young artists. Students can draw freely on a blank canvas (which supports multi-finger touch), color a variety of different pre-made pages (your tablet can also be your coloring book!), and students can learn to draw more complex figures by combining different shapes. For a free app, it has a lot of nice... More →

Michigan-based Learning Gems brings educational apps to Android

Learning Gems is an educational app development company based in Portage, Michigan and working to produce a number of offerings on the Android platform and for other devices. At last check the outfit had three pages of apps available in the Google Play Store. Apps range in price from free "lite" versions to $2.99. I caught up with Learning Gems' Robert Gleasson this week in Detroit at the 2013 MACUL conference.   ... More →

Build a Google Voice Feedback Hotline

With the Google Voice app you can easily put a new spin on formative assessment. By installing the app and then signing up for a free customizable number (I was even able to get my last name in mine.) teachers can create a feedback hotline for students and parents to leave comments, reflections, or questions. Here is an easy example. A teacher asks her class to read three poems by... More →

MyScript Calculator - Almost Magic

MyScript Calculator is a free calculator app with a special feature, it is designed especially for touchscreens, providing handwriting recognition as it does its calculations! This is almost like magic. You can scrall a wide variety of mathematical operations and equations on your tablet and this app quickly translates your handwritten numerals and symbols into digital text and delivers the computations in almost real time.       This calculator... More →

Common Core Connections: Literacy Can Be a Comic(al) Experience

     If you teach third-grade boys you know that in their independent reading bag they will at some point have a graphic novel like the books by Dav Pilkey in their independent reading bag. This is not to say that the girls do not appreciate this genre too.             As third-grade teacher, I have observed first-hand how ears perk up whenever... More →

Common Core Connections: Literacy Can Be a Comic(al) Experience

     If you teach third-grade boys you know that in their independent reading bag they will at some point have a graphic novel like the books by Dav Pilkey in their independent reading bag. This is not to say that the girls do not appreciate this genre too.             As third-grade teacher, I have observed first-hand how ears perk up whenever... More →

Common Core Connections: No More Excuses!  Xperia as Student Planner/Organizer

    The titles of my blog posts usually begin with Common Core Connections.  At first a post on homework planners for the Xperia table might not make sense.  However, if you think about it, students will be better equipped to meet the CCSS if they are organized and actually do the reinforcement work and projects teachers assign.  I taught first grade for 10 years and homework completion... More →

PopOut! The Tale of Peter Rabbit - For Springtime Reading

Popout! The Tale of Peter Rabbit is an electronic book/app which has enough of the classic illustrations, vocal performance, soft piano background music, and story to please Beatrix Potter traditionalists AND enough interactivity to engage and enthrall the young ones just being introduced to the work of Beatrix Potter as well.   Some interactions built into the app are reminiscent of a paper-based pop-up book. There are little tabs... More →

Google Apps for Admins: GMail

We’ve all grown attached to our email programs, but there are some distinct advantages for using GMail as your email client when you’re an educator, and particularly as an administrator. Here’s my top five reasons to use GMail in an educator’s life:   1. Ability to search all emails - using the search box at the top of the page, I can search... More →