Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to:
The nice thing about Jamboard and Annotate is that they work in every OS that runs Chrome, including MacOS, Windows 10/11, and ChromeOS. We will also introduce Tango, a tool for quickly creating step-by-step tutorials for apps.
Rather than having to share the entire screen (which can introduce privacy concerns), you can share just the browser. It will work with screen sharing on Teams, Zoom, and Meet (plus most other collaboration platforms). By just sharing the browser, you can also bring up other applications (and teaching notes) without sharing them with your students. The drawback is that you will not be able to present multiple screens, although you can set up multiple tabs.
The three most common platforms for online collaboration and teaching include:
You will need to configure your pen tablet software so that it uses only a single monitor if you have a dual monitor setup. Two monitors are helpful as you can view chat comments and lecture notes on another monitor, although using a phone or a tablet computer (e.g., iPad or Android Tablet) and logging in twice works even better. Teams allows multiple logins from the same person/account in the same session while others may not.
Consider exporting your presentation from PowerPoint to HTML or a JPG files – that way you can scroll through them and they load fast. Another alternative altogether is not using PowerPoint or Google Slides but building slides using markup and knitting them to HTML.
Consider using increasing the interactivity of your online classes with polls through PollsEverywhere or collaborative boards with Miro or Padlet.
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