Everyone Can Code.
We’ve designed a new program to give everyone the power to learn, write, and teach code with Swift.
As a teacher, you inspire the next generation of leaders. You make complex ideas easy to understand. And you’re always looking for new ways to engage your students. So, we’ve gathered a series of tips, stories, and other helpful materials on this page to keep you inspired. And we’ve created the Apple Teacher program to help you get the most from our products, and celebrate the work you do every day.
We designed the Apple Teacher program to help you build skills to use Apple products in the classroom. Sign into the Apple Teacher Learning Center, where you’ll discover new ways to enhance creativity and productivity by unlocking the magic of iPad, Mac, and built-in apps. After completing interactive quizzes, you’ll earn badges toward becoming an Apple Teacher. And, there’s always something new to learn with each visit to the Apple Teacher Learning Center, including the newest badges for teaching coding with Swift Playgrounds.
We’ve designed a new program to give everyone the power to learn, write, and teach code with Swift.
As an Apple Teacher, you can earn recognition for using Swift Playgrounds.
Host your own Hour of Code with Swift Playgrounds.
HongGuang Middle School
Nanjing, China
iPad Air 2
iTunes U
Camera
Pages
HongGuang Middle School is nestled in one of the most historic ancient cities in the world — Nanjing, China. As a language arts teacher, He Xin builds lessons in iTunes U on iPad for his students to access while visiting local landmarks. The convenience of having everything they need on-site helps create a more engaging experience with their language, culture, and history.
He Xin uses Discussions in the iTunes U app to encourage his students to share thoughts, add comments, and ask questions as they visit different monuments and museum exhibits. By facilitating these conversations while the students explore artifacts and sites, the learning feels more like an interactive scavenger hunt through time than assignments for a class.
Using the built-in camera on iPad, students capture their own perspectives of artifacts and insert them directly into a Pages report. He Xin also curates related web links in iTunes U so students can explore supporting facts in Safari. Students can then add their findings from Safari as secondary research into their reports.
iTunes U has moved the classroom into the real world. Creating a multimedia-rich curriculum has never been easier for the busy educator. To watch students become engaged and want to share ideas is extremely rewarding.
iTunes U gets students in Nanjing, China out of the classroom to experience their history and culture.
Watch how iPad and iBooks Author changed the learning experience by helping students in Denmark gain confidence and take pride in their work.
Animate and move elements from one Keynote slide to another with Magic Move.
Use the multitasking features on iPad with Classroom app to stay on task while guiding students through lessons.
For some students, inverting colors or changing to grayscale makes reading on iPad easier. To enable this feature, go to Settings General Accessibility. This works with text, graphics, and video.
Visualize data on iPad by creating Interactive Charts in the Numbers app.
Use Screen View in the Classroom app to see what’s on each of your students’ iPad screen at once.
Take a workshop on Keynote, Pages, Numbers, iMovie, GarageBand and more at your local Apple Retail store.
La Miranda
Barcelona, Spain
iPad Air 2
Clock
La Miranda is a multilingual school that focuses on individualized learning from primary school through high school. Marta Ruiz Benito’s young students are often challenged with staying focused and on track during math study. By using the Timer and Alarm Clock functions in the Clock app on iPad throughout the day, she creates a shared sense of responsibility for class activities, and her students are able to manage their time independently.
Marta teaches her students how to use the Timer on iPad, and then assigns them a series of activities to complete in an allotted amount of time. By giving young learners the freedom to cycle through the various activities at their own pace — but within a time constraint — they learn how to keep time while gaining independence and confidence.
The more that students use the Timer and Alarm Clock, the more familiar they become with numbers, telling time, and then managing their time. Students show increased motivation, resourcefulness in their assignments and longer periods of concentration. As a result, improved study skills have further contributed to more effective interactions that build stronger relationships with classmates.
Seeing children overcome challenges by themselves makes us feel accomplished and proud that they can better achieve their goals.
Learn how the Clock app is giving young students in Spain a new way to work through their day.
Learn how to use Apple apps on iPad and Mac to create custom learning materials. Download the collection of interactive Starter Guides.
Aspect Hunter School, Autism Spectrum Australia
Newcastle, Australia
iPad Mini 4
Maps
SketchBook Ink
GarageBand
iMovie
Aspect Hunter School caters to children on the autism spectrum. They are students who often struggle with conventional educational approaches and environments. They are drawn to specific interests like music and math, and have very personal comfort zones. Craig Smith, the school’s Deputy Principal and Aspect Practice Specialist, delivers multi-sensory lessons on iPad to tap into his students’ interests. The immersive lessons help students communicate, overcome social challenges, and become more receptive to learning in a structured environment.
Understanding the indicators that contribute to a positive learning environment is key at Aspect Hunter School. Students use the built-in camera on iPad and audio recorder in GarageBand to create a library of visual and audio cues from around their school that they layer together to create playground soundscapes. Then they use the Maps app to capture an image of their school, and using SketchBook Ink they highlight their favorite areas to show where they feel most at ease.
Students bring together the playground soundscapes and highlighted maps to reflect their comfort zones in a project they narrate in iMovie. Now students who may have previously struggled to describe their ideal learning environment can use iPad to help them express themselves using different senses. This activity helps them identify their personal learning style, and create better experiences — both in Craig’s class and their lives outside of school.
With iPad, students are sharing and building social interaction skills, including expressive and receptive communication. iPad encompasses all the best practices of autism education and helps students connect better with their school environment.
See how iPad is helping students on the autism spectrum in Australia become more confident at school.
Use the Instant Alpha tool in Pages to create beautiful images for project layouts.
Saskatchewan Rivers School Division
Saskatchewan, Canada
The Indigenous peoples of Saskatchewan have rich traditions of oral and visual storytelling, and community involvement. However, when First Nations and Métis children came to school, existing assessment practices were often culturally biased and unable to identify their individual strengths, leading to inaccurate assessment results.
Rooted in Indigenous learning models, the Help Me Tell My Story assessment app for iPad provides a new way to measure early learning success. Students bond with Askî, the friendly turtle puppet, who guides them through an informal assessment survey with his touch sensitive nose on the Multi-Touch screen, and then encourages them to tell a story, recording their voice using the built-in microphone on the iPad.
Assessment data is collected from the child, teacher, Elder, and caregiver. The results are then linked to customized learning ideas that support academic development and influence lesson planning at school and activities at home and in the community.
This assessment is different from others because children like doing it. Askî combined with the iPad helps the students feel comfortable. It becomes a powerful communication tool that gives them a voice with value during and after the assessment.
Learn how teachers in Saskatchewan, Canada are using iPad for holistic early learning assessment.
Take your class on a virtual Flyover tour of more than 250 cities and destinations around the globe in the Maps app.
Valencia Park Elementary
California, USA
iPad Air 2
Sock Puppets Complete
Keynote
FaceTime
At Valencia Park Elementary, 62 percent of students are learning English as a second language. Using iPad, teachers are able to personalize lessons no matter where students are on their language development journeys.
Using the Sock Puppets Complete app and the built-in microphone on iPad, students bring virtual sock puppets to life by recording themselves reading aloud. It’s a fun way for them to see and hear their progress with pronunciation, speed, and accuracy.
As their literacy skills develop, students use iPad and apps to demonstrate their progress. They write original stories and film themselves with iMovie, practice speaking English and presentation skills with Keynote, and read aloud with book buddies in different schools using FaceTime.
The class collaborates on engaging projects that encourage reading, writing, and speaking. Literacy and fluency scores have vastly improved and attendance has skyrocketed.
Learn how iPad is improving reading and writing skills for students in the United States who speak English as a second language.
The iTunes home for teaching resources, lesson ideas, and other materials.
Create resources for language lessons using international keyboards. Choose Settings General Keyboard Keyboards Add New Keyboard. Next choose the language you wish to add. When you are ready to type, simply touch and hold the Globe button and choose the new keyboard.
de Ferrers Academy
Staffordshire, UK
iPad Air 2
bismarck bs-spectrum
Numbers
Pages
In Greg Hughes’s Physics class, many students needed a more tactile and visual way to experience the science of sound. Using iPad, they can see and measure the frequency and amplitude of vibrations, which helps them to develop a deeper understanding.
Students fill glasses with different amounts of water and run their fingers around the edges to generate vibrations and sound. Using the built-in microphone on iPad and the bismark bs-spectrum app, they measure the variance in sound waves and analyze how water levels affect pitch.
Students enter their collected data in Numbers to explore the results with charts and graphs. Then they create lab reports on their findings in Pages to show their grasp of key physics concepts.
Before iPad, there was no way to capture any actual measurements or data unless you spent several hundred pounds on a single set of data-logging equipment. With a low-cost sound app, Pages, Numbers, and the iPad camera, students can quickly collect their own data for a range of variables.
See how students in England use iPad to measure and analyze sound.
Taking a field trip somewhere new? Share your location in Maps. Tap a location address, then tap the Share button to send your whereabouts to colleagues and students via Messages or Mail.
Watch Jodie Deinhammer help her science students interact with the functions and anatomy of the human heart.
Resources to help you integrate apps into your classes.
Swipe up from the bottom of the screen and tap AirDrop. Then choose Contacts Only or Everyone to allow files to be sent to you by people you recognize or all people in range.
Watch Larry Reiff use iPad to help his students engage with Shakespeare’s play.
Siri now works hands-free, so you can make requests without having to press the Home button. Simply go to Settings General Siri and turn on “Hey Siri.” Tap Set Up Now and repeat the phrases so Siri can recognize your voice.
Handpicked collections of teaching apps to engage students on any topic.
A guide on how to use apps for assessment during your daily instruction.
Double-click the Home button and swipe left or right to select the app you want to use.
Watch Jodie Deinhammer explain how her science class was inspired to create their own lessons in iTunes U to help teach younger students all over the world.
When you receive Excel files from colleagues or students just right click on the file and select Open With, then choose Numbers from the application list to open it on your Mac.
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