

Intro to Letters- iPad, $4.99 Montassorium App that lets kids trace and learn their letters and sounds. Due to the price, probably a classroom app that could be projected on a screen, or shared across classroom based ipads, rather than a must purchase for every privately owned iPad. Solar System: iPad, $13.99 Gorgeous App to allow kids to have a great visual and interactive experience with the planets. Mathboard: iOS devices ($4.99) K- elementary math learning/enrichment activities with problem solver to alk kids through the process as well. Other reference apps are available for $0.99 for computer science, chemistry, Physics, Biology, Algebra II and more Other iPad apps run $1.99 and include grammar, chemistry, accounting, statistics, math, geometry, economics, project management and more.

Quizmine– ($0.99) Algebra I reference: great resource for all those formulas, equations, vocabulary and definitions that can cause students (and parents) headaches when learning algebra.
Audionote lite app how to#
Instructions on how to get epub books into the iBooks app: click here
Audionote lite app for free#
Here are a couple of links for free ePub books available online: ( Children’s bookshelf can be found here)īooks for free through iBooks include Alice in Wonderland, Huckleberry Finn, Aesop’s Fables, Great Expectations, Pride & Prejudice, Classic Myths, Dracula, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and other classics. IBooks supports ePub electronic book formats, which includes Project Gutenberg books, so ebooks from all over the web can be used with the publication. Books can be samples before purchasing audio reader feature available. Books and PDF’s can be sorted into shelfs, topics- you name it. Can also be used to read PDF’s (think downloading handouts or class reading material…) and can export PDF’s attached to email into iBooks. Books (and many free books) are available through the iBooks store. Allows highlighting and note taking, as well as search, giving it an advantage over other book reading apps like the Kindle. Books can be synced across iOS devices, so you can keep your place whether reading on an iPod touch or iPad. IBooks: (ipod, iphone, ipad) (free) eBook reader for the iOS. Stacks of cards can be shared between students, and even through the site- pre-made stacks of cards are searchable and easily shared, making this a useful app for almost any class at any level. App makes flash cards fun, and the process of making them and using them seems more fun than 3 x 5 cards. Stack of cards can be made, shuffled, worked from front to back- you name it. I could see this app working well for those classes where one student is assigned to take notes for the whole class for a day, and then the notes and audio could be easily sent via email or posted on a classroom website or wiki for anyone who was absent that day.įlipside HD: ($1.99 iPad, other ipod/iphone versions available) Great flashcard building app. This again has been extremely helpful for my kids in school, especially when they are reviewing their notes before a test and can re-hear what the teacher actually said. You can draw in the app as well as type, making it very useful for students in all course areas. Think of it as a Livescribe pen in App form. This app will let you record a meeting/lecture while typing notes, and “syncs” the audio with the writing, so that when you touch a word, it will jump to that time in the recording when you wrote that particular note. This virtual agenda book has been very useful to help keep my organizationally-challenged 7th grader on task.ĪudioNote (lite and paid version) ($4.99 for paid version) It works a lot like the calendar app that comes along with the various iOS devices, but includes options to help sort assignments by subjects, set alerts, add partners for projects, add grades on assignments, and more. We’ve been using iHomework for over 6 months.

Very well done, and not a bad place to start for those feeling a little bit like the internet is still the Wild West. of Ed, iOS devices) Garfield the Cat based apps for learning about internet, computer safety and Fact, opinion and differentiating types of media.

Infinite Learning Apps: (free, sponsored by VA Dept. We would be happy to review and include any apps we’re missing or you find useful- Add your app suggestions and resources in the comments or drop us an email at with any links and/or reviews and we’ll post it here. New apps for all the emerging mobile platforms are coming out every day, so this list cannot hope to be comprehensive, but at least it is a starting place to help you find apps for your classroom and students. We’ve created this page to start to accumulate a list of apps that we’ve found useful, along with links to other lists and resources where appropriate. The questions I get asked most are – “What are the best Apps out there for the ipod/iphone/ipad for education? What works well? What’s free and What’s worth the price?”
