EDCI 336 Response Blog

Category: Free Inquiry

This is the category to apply to your Free Inquiry posts.

QR Code Tutorial Reflection:

While using QR codes is something I have become very familiar with by this point, I was not at all well-versed in how to generate them. For a previous assignment this semester I signed up for an online service that offered QR code generation (though I had my concerns about sharing my email with the service) and I have been receiving promotional emails almost daily since then (I only unsubscribed this morning). Through this tutorial I learned that my IPad has the capacity to generate QR codes, and I had my first introduction to the “shortcuts” application. There is a certain degree of irony in discovering the shortcuts app in such a round-about way, though I am glad to have been introduced.

QR codes are a great way to link to digital resources and materials without the need to type in a URL, and can link to material that be made otherwise inaccessible. In a classroom context, there is the concern for student cellphone use; from an equity lens, does every student have access to the technology and; with the new cell phone policy in schools, is this a appropriate technology for use in classrooms?

Ultimately this is a powerful tool, and it falls upon teachers and policymakers to decide to the appropriateness of its use in educational settings. This tutorial made me aware of a functionality of a device I use every day, and for that I am grateful.

Mentimeter Tutorial

Mentimeter has become a familiar tool through the duration of the semester; from teacher and guest presentations, to student lessons. Mentimeter has many of the functions that other slide-deck-style tools offer, with an added focus on audience participation and polling. Being able to poll an audience in real time offers a valuable “in” for engagement in a format that is otherwise rather didactic. I can see myself using Mentimeter in place of google slides or PowerPoint for future presentations as the engagement element lends itself well to audience enjoyment and information retention. I had not heard of Mentimeter outside of my classes in this program, so it has been great to have a new presentation tool to benefit from in my education.

Google Classroom

https://classroom.google.com/c/NzM2MzE5OTA0OTk0?cjc=s45jejs

Google Classroom is another tool many of us are familiar with; being used in many public schools in BC as well as by some UVic professors. Google Classroom is a great platform and organization tool for teachers as it is easy to create and publish material, collect assignments and evidence of student learning, grade assignments and provide feedback, and communicate with students and their guardians. Prior to this tutorial, I was not aware of just how easy it is to create a class on Google Classroom. It was an interesting peek behind the curtain of what some of my educators have used to run my classes in the past, and it was almost alarming just how simple a tool it is to use.