Sunday, April 13, 2014

iPads in the Elementary Library

This year I have been lucky enough to have my own set of iPad minis in the library. I wanted minis because I lend them out to students and staff to use as eBook readers as well as using them with classes in the library. I presented at an ISLMA mini-conference in early March to share some of the ways I have used the iPads this year. Here is one of my favorites, and the one the students keep begging to do more: Nearpod.

I use the NearPod app so students can interact 1:1 with the material I am sharing with them. It replaces the questions I ask that only one or two students answer and instead lets everyone answer first, then one or two share their responses.  I have also used it in staff meetings to ask for feedback. It's easy to use, here's how.

From the NearPod.com web page (yes, start on the web) create an account. This is where you start your NearPod session that you share to students on the iPads. 

Here are a few of the presentations I have created to share lovely picture books with students up through grade 5. My questions remain the same but the answers the students will give me change quite a bit. I ask for predictions, character traits, quick drawings, why explanations, and so on. I ask them to cite evidence in their answers and to use the word because.  We have some great discussions! 
When I am all finished I get a results table that I can look over and use as a formative assessment. Some students give consistently weak answers because they don't really know what to do. I know to focus on them next time and ask them to share out so I can coax out a stronger answer with more to it than one or two words. 

Here is an example of a question I might ask. I mark the spot in the book with a sticky note so I know to stop there and share this page with the students.
For this question I immediately follow up with, "How do you know?"

I can also add links to web pages, so at the end of this NearPod presentation when I finished the story I let the students tap the link at their leisure to listen to Peter Brown talk about his story. At this point the students are free to get up and move around with their iPad to listen without all of the iPads blasting the video at once.  

Here is the video:




Now go forth and make your own NearPod presentations!

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