What Are The Best Examples Of Mobile Teaching?
by TeachThought Staff
This is part 2 of a 2-part series on Mobile Teaching. Part 1 was Making The Shift To Mobile-First Teaching.
Mobile teaching is about planning and executing learning through mobile devices.
You might want to be notified when a student accesses a quiz or reading you uploaded, or leaves a comment on another student’s blog, or shares a self-assessment. Or when a certain number of students answer a question correctly or incorrectly. Or when a student reaches a goal. This is one approach to mobile teaching.
There’s also the star of mobile technology, social media. With access to real-time social streams like twitter, or even a closed social/community page of some kind, teachers can ask other teachers for resources, facilitate school-to-school collaboration, monitor student-led and hashtag-based discussions, and more.
A logical response here might be, “What teacher has time to play on twitter while teaching?” We might respond to that question with, what does it mean to teach? If we’re connected and publishing and promoting self-directed learning, the question might be, “What teacher can afford not to plug students in to functioning digital ecologies, and join them in those spaces?”
25 Simple Examples Of Mobile Teaching
1. Google (or otherwise search) an idea mid-discussion while thinking-aloud to model for students
2. Project a display of Brainfeed for students to pick a relevant a video for a 10 minute mini-lesson tangent to current topic
3. Search YouTube to clarify a process (embrace the mini-lesson!)
4. Share group work excerpts through instagram
5. Socialize a question through reddit, twitter, or quora
6. Monitor student progress completing a lesson using any number of apps
7. Host a backchannel conversation on twitter via a hashtag based on a question or comment you overhear as students work.
8. Scan a multiple-choice/scantron exam
9. Capture artifacts of student work for sharing on closed social/community
10. Quickly add a grade using GradeBook Pro or related apps
11. Share an idea with a colleague based on student observation and share it on Trello
12. Have students podcast all group work and collaboration
13. Leave feedback on student writing via Google Docs/Drive or Microsoft Word
14. Stream a podcast or YouTube video via Airplay
15. Use the app Capture to upload a video to class YouTube channel
16. Monitor student use of adaptive learning apps
17. Create calendar alerts to share with students based on their individual goals via Google Calendar
18. Share a file based on a personalized student need
19. Ask a student a question via text using Remind101
20. Capture, tag, and archive student work instantly using your smartphone
21. Create a poll or quick quiz for the purpose of formative assessment using Socrative Teacher
22. Collect anonymous student feedback using Google Forms
23. Model for students what it’s like to reach outside of the classroom (see #24)
24. Text an update to parents using One Call Now
25. Have students create their own study materials using Bitsboard
25 Simple Examples Of Mobile Teaching