Teachers Pet App – Like the Argos Catalogue for Teachers

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tpet appFor busy teachers who need quality resources, there are probably two sites we turn to. One is Teaching Ideas and the other is Teachers Pet. Though, if I am honest I have them both on separate Chrome tabs when I am on the hunt for something for my classroom. In the past, I was probably quite snooty about sites that offered labels, word banks, posters and the like to teachers. I though teachers should make their own. But, that view was held when I was working as a consultant and I actually didn’t have my own class.

And now I am a teacher again, marking and planning take up most of my time, as indeed they should. I don’t have the 20130206-231622.jpgtime to make my own posters about parts of speech,magnets, materials, space travel or story writing. Though I may create a very interactive whiteboard file or Powerpoint on the topic, it can often be a very ephemeral resource. I often find I want to return to a topic or a teaching point a few days after I first flashed it up on-screen. Having effective and well placed visual descriptions in the room can offer a longer term reminder of key facts for my class and an aide memoir for me. They help and prompt me and my pupils during lessons on a mostly daily basis.

The resources I use from Teachers Pet are bright, colourful and very clear. I use them around my classroom and point them out during teaching, particularly at the moment when we are focussing on strengthening our understanding of parts of speech.

So, now it is even easier to browse for these resources. Now we have an app, or at least a soon to be released app from the TPet Team. I was asked to test a version of the app last week and I have since spent some time playing with it. As I was testing I was looking for bugs and glitches , but there weren’t any that I could see. Pages turned smoothly, buttons behaved, screens rendered very quickly and search boxes delivered as they should. Perhaps I had missed something.

This app is 20130206-231518.jpgeffectively a regularly updated index of thousands of useful and essential classroom resources.But then so is their website. However, I am struck by how much more natural it feels to flick and browse through these on a tablet. For regular iPad and IOS users like myself it feels so much less like work to pick up the iPad on the sofa and skim through for a space poster or writing targets , rather than powering up the ageing laptop or PC. Yes there is so much here, but the app still feels clean and tidy with lots of white space and not a hint of advertising or distraction. I think I’d like to see a similar app offering from the TES Resource bank and the collected works of Pie Corbett and then I may not have to power up my computer very often at all.

Download the app from here

App of the Day: Class Charts

classchartsI came across this browser-based admin tool in the Christmas holidays and it has taken me until now to get round to sharing it with you. Upon first glance you may dismiss this very useful and time-saving tool as another behaviour management system. Well I did at first! But look beyond this and you will realise that this tool can really help improve your assessment and class admin workflow.

As a busy teacher you are required to be data fluent about your class. I am often asked for levels and groupings and about the progress of individuals or groups. For many teachers this is kept on spreadsheets and of course softer data is stored mentally. I have tried for some time to make the flow of accessing this material easier. I had experimented with Bento and other simple databases, but if a tool or app is cumbersome then you tend not to use it for long, Class Charts feels different. For me Class charts allows me to access a range of essential information about the class by clicking through a seating plan graphic that you create. And alongside this I am able to easily record and track behaviour, all with full customisation and individual reporting.

A further bonus to Class Charts, aside from the fact that is free is that it is also collaborative, you can work with other adults who teach your class on this site too.  Try it out by registering on ClassCharts.com.

Teachmeet Twist

8132270298_74a2090da6_zLast Thursday, I attended Teachmeet Twist – a Teachmeet organised by the Night Zookeeper, Jodie Lopez Collins and Oliver Quinlin and team. As the name suggests it was a teachmeet with a difference and for me the combinations of all the best features of a teachmeet mixed with a bit of  ”collaborate for change”  laid down the blueprint for how to do good Teachmeet.

 

TM organisers take note a good event needs more than just adding your details to the Teachmeet Wiki

Reflecting back on why I enjoyed it so much and why it worked, I think it was due to the following:

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Homework today with Leo

 

Every Saturday Leo and I do his homework and try to get the job done with appropriate apps, websites and whatever else we can find. Here are the images of today’s session.

We used Clicker for sentence writing, an app called Number Bonds Pro  which he loved and for history a mixture of the BBC Victorians mini site and Purple Mash cams. As a you’ve finished reward he used 2DIY.

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