Our CIO just announced a request for proposals from faculty exploring the use of an iPad in teaching. The carrot here is an iPad for the faculty member! I love thinking about better ways to use technology in helping me improve my teaching and helping my students advance their learning. And a "free" iPad wouldn't be too shabby either. :-)
But I'm not really that familiar with the capabilities of the iPad as it might apply to teaching inorganic chemistry. Anybody out there have any ideas? Are there any good apps out there that might be applicable? If you are an iPad user, what features do you like best that are different from a laptop and that might be useful to think about in applying it to your teaching?
I am not sure if there is a separate program for the students to gain easy access to an iPad for class or if this would just be something that I might have to use in the classroom. If the students could get one too, one thought I had was to use this to solve the "no perfect textbook" for my course conundrum.
Curious to hear from the wisdom of the VIPEr crowds on this...
Dear Maggie,
I just published a brief contribution entitled "What's in Your iPod?" in the October 2010 issue of the J. Chem. Educ. I have not thought about the iPad though!
I've always thought that this would be a great way to help with online office hours with my students. Talking with students online is easy these days, but drawing structures, doing math, equations, etc. is much harder. The iPad seems like it will bridge some of the difficulties with writing online.
Last year when I taught general chemistry, I've had 1-2 online office hours a week using Elluminate (over Blackboard). My one complaint about online office hours is that I find it hard to draw using a mouse, so it's hard to do things like equations, etc. I fiddled around with using an iPod (app = Whiteboard), but the screen was too small for me. There is definite potential with writing on an external device and broadcasting to an audience.
I'd like to try this again with an iPad next semester. I'll give Whiteboard another try) since it showed promise. My informational technology person recently suggested that I try http://www.scriblink.com/. I haven't played with this one yet so can't comment on it.
If anyone has a recommendation for a good stylus, I'd love to hear it.
Somewhat related. You might try using a livescribe pen (pen casting). You can show anything that you are able to draw on a piece a paper and back it up with an audio narrative. The pen you use feels very normal. You have a special tablet (tablet looks like a spiral binder with paper pages) that the pen uses to sense where the pen is on the page.
I will insert a small nomenclature exercise I posted for my inorganic class. I usually post these on blackboard.
www.livescribe.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/LDApp.woa/wa/MLSOverviewPage?sid=…
I hope you are able to access the above. It took me about 10-15 minutes to write it out and post it. Very interesting technology.
Kurt
wow, Kurt, that looks really cool!
Adam
These livescribe pens and pads are not very expensive. One pen and a set of 5 spiral notebooks which could last you several years is about $170. I think the pens sell at Target now. I have no financial stake in the company. Maybe I should though.
Info can be found a www.livescribe.com.
Kurt
After doing some research, I found several blogs, wikis, forums etc. that addressed the use of iPads in teaching, favorite apps, etc. Here is a small list of useful sites I found. Be sure to browse the comment threads as these hold a lot more good suggestions!
1. ProfHacker from the Chronicle of Higher Ed: 5 iPad Apps I Can't Live Without
2. NITLE: iPad Apps for Small Liberal Arts Colleges
3. Vassar Blog: iPad Talk - the iPad in Education
4. Female Science Professor Blog: Cool Teachings
And the good news is that I was able to pick up a "free" iPad from my institution to evaluate for use in teaching. I'll report back with anything exciting I do in the area of Inorganic Chemistry. The App I am most interested in trying out in the classroom is called AirSketch. And of course, trying to figure out a learning object with the Elements app by Theo Gray. Again, I promise to share with the VIPEr community!
Hi all,
I've been using a Wacom graphics tablet (purchased with intramural technology funds) in my general course and Advanced Inorganic course for the past 5 years. I couple the tablet with the Mac app Curio (best app I own!) to create slides and annotate them on the fly (see http://chemdac.uwsp.edu/455/presentations.html for some samples). For capturing audio, I use an external MP3 recorder (I haven't played with ProfCast, since it can't annotate).
I've shied away from the table approach a bit in the Advanced course, since having three chalkboards in a room can sometimes be easier to use.
On the original intent of this document, I've been toying with the idea of developing an Inorganic textbook geared towards iPad deployment. Anyone interested?
Hello everyone,
I am in my second semester of my tenure track appointment and I am teaching Inorganic for the first time. I have 6 students and 4 of them bought the electronic version of the book and are using tablets of varying sorts to take notes and read the material.
I am taking part of a pilot program designed to help with development of active learning strategies in the classroom especially ones that incorporate technology. As part of this I get a professional development stipend that I thought about using to purchase an Ipad and incorporating it in Inorganic chemistry.
Maggie I look forward to hearing how it worked for you last semester and any ideas that you may have along with the feedback that you have gotten. I think that this is an excellent possibility and something that is going to be at the forefront of education in the future as more and more students purchase electronic text books.
Nicholas-
welcome to the UM system. I too am trying to incorporate my ipad into my classroom, although I'm still a little at a loss as to how to do that. I recommended the ebook for inorg but I think only 1 student out of 20 chose that route. I'd love to talk to you more about what you're doing with the tablets.
If you are interested in 3-D visualization of molecules on the iPad and you have the 'Molecules' app already installed, try navigating to http://tiny.cc/SmallMol . Here you can link to assorted small molecules. Note: any browser should navigate to the SmallMol page, but many links from that page and sub-pages will appear to be broken unless you are accessing them using an iPad, iPhone or iPod touch on which the free 'Molecules' app has already been installed.
The app called Molecules runs on the iPad/iPhone/iPod touch. It is designed for interacting with 3-D molecules found in the .pdb, much like Jmol or Chime, albeit with limited functionality. Two of my students and I have been formating some small molecule data to be easily imported into Molecules. It is a work in progress, so check back regularly.
If your class is small enough, consider loading a small molecule onto the iPad, then pass your iPad around the room. Students seem to see the 3-D better when they are manipulating the image. I like to use live images in class. Sometimes I pass around a bluetooth mouse and let the class interact with the image on the lecture screen while I speak.
Greg,
Thanks for posting this resource! I had been looking for something like this for the iPad. Unfortunately, when I tried the Molecules app with a few rhodium carbonyl cluster pdb files that I had on hand, I was disappointed in that the default settings did not draw all the bonds I wanted, and so it made it somewhat difficult to recognize the molecular structure. Is there any way to control the default settings for what constitutes a bond between any two given atoms?
Also, is there an easy way to set up some online directory to point the app to (as you have done above) to readily access a bunch of pdb files? I was transferring them 1 by 1 to the iPad using DropBox but that is not the most efficient way to have a large number of files at my fingertips.
Now, if only someone could take an app like this and allow one to draw in the locations of any symmetry elements they see...hmmm......
Dear All,
Well, I purchased the iPad2 as a b-day gift for myself not really for use in the classroom. However, I did use it recently to show a powerpoint presentation, which worked out well. Since there is no ChemDraw app, that I am aware of, we can't draw structures on the iPad. Still learning to use it....
Sibrina
I may be aquiring an ipad soon, with the hopes of using it in my research as a laptop substitute and eventually in teaching. I'll definitely check out all of the links above, and I'll keep my eyes out for more useful apps. I've got to plug a web-based App that was developed by a collaborator's group that puts together a database of activation energies and the thermodynamics of surface-based reactions relevant to catalysis. It could be used in teaching upper level-inorganic, materials science, or catalysis clases.
http://slac.stanford.edu/~strabo/catapp/CatApp.html
http://suncat.slac.stanford.edu/catapp/
-Kyle
I've finally found a great application for the iPad - teaching instrumentation. I have picture of instrumentation & theory in Keynote presentations and can refer to this as I'm teaching students instrumentation.
I rushed out and bought (with my own personal funds) an ipad 1G planning to use it for teaching only to be stymied by the inability of the 1G to project from all but a few apps. The ipad 2G solved that issue, so again, I rushed out to buy the 2G (again with my own personal funds). This time I was frustrated by the fact that my school cannot afford wireless projectors so I was still tethered to the front of the room. Now, a year later, I have finally found my solution and I am so excited!
Doceri (doceri.com) is an app that allows you to control and interact with your laptop/desktop using your ipad. You can annotate powerpoints, look up webpages, etc. all from the middle of your classroom as you're working on active learning with your students! It will also record your annotations so that you can share that with your students. I am not sure what else it can do, since I have just found it, but I will post more as I explore, and if anyone else is familiar with it, maybe you will chime in.
Here's what I have done with it:
When you are connected, you still have full functionality on the laptop itself.
It is very inexpensive. The iPad app is free. The desktop/laptop app is $30. They do also sell a special stylus but you can use any stylus (or your finger).
Hi again,
So, with an ipad in hand, i searched some apps, and here are some that might be useful in teaching(all free because I'm a cheapskate)
1) Data Analysis - This could be used in a lab if you give each team an ipad and they can record data as they collect it and fit lines.
2) MolPrime - drawing like Chemdraw (annoying ads though) and includes templates for common inorganic chemistry structures like bipys
3) Ball & Stick - basically the same as "Molecules"... haven't seen if you can import files from web addresses like you can with Molecules
4) Distillations - Connection to the Chemical Heritage Foundation (http://www.chemheritage.org/) Podcasts, which could be cool to play for a class
I'll let you know if I find more.
-Kyle
Hello viper community,
cCWCS has an upcoming workshop on teaching with iPads!
http://www.ccwcs.org/
Unfortunately, I have a conflicting event already planned for those days in January. However, if someone attends the workshop, I would love to hear about it!
Here's two other free apps I've found recently that could be used in teaching:
Chemical Engineering App with lots of resources:https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/chemical-engineering-appsuite/id5261581…
ChemDoodle also has an iPad App.
Cheers,
Kyle
Postdoctoral Researcher, UCSD
App collection: Just saw this in a recent ConfChem posting. A wiki has been set up for collecting science-related apps. Check it out and add your own favorites!
http://www.scimobileapps.com
Thanks Joanne, that looks like a great resource!
Did anyone go to the ccwcs teaching with iPad conference? I hope to go next time they have it.
-Kyle
ChemDraw is now available for the ipad! (Thanks for the heads up, Karen.)
I downloaded and played with two note taking apps for my new iPad. I used them at the organometallics Gordon conference and then at the workshop at Northwestern last week. they are UPad and Notetaker HD
UPad. This app as a great GUI and i like the smoothness of the writing with my stylus. It is an optical trick; if you move the pen faster it makes a thinner line so the writing is more realistic. The app is somewhat buggy (but free if you only create <5 new docs; you can delete or export old docs to dropbox, pdf, email, etc) and the website for tech support no longer exists.
Notetaker HD: I bought this app for something like $4.99. It is stable and provides good import/export capability. I am currently using this app to annotate a grant review pdf. You can write, type, highlight (as you can with UPad) and then export in a variety of ways.
Has anyone used chemdraw on the ipad? Comments/thoughts?
-Kyle
I've used Explain Everything (https://explaineverything.com) on my ipad to make videos for uploading to youtube, BlackBoard (or Moodle). You can start with a blank page in a variety of designs and, using a combination of stylus sketching or typing (also on the iPad or with a wireless keyboard), you can build lectures with audio captured.
As an alternative, you can start by uploading a pdf (could be a slide talk, a single- or multi-page handout) that you can annotate in real time again with captured audio. I've used this to make both short (5 minute) and long (45 minute) videos to supplement the lecture, starting with a template that contains routine stuff that I don't want to write out (character tables, tables of constants, equations, etc).
Kyle,
I have used ChemDraw on the iPad. It is fairly intuitive and easy to use. I acutally like it better than ChemDraw on my computer. My colleagues are starting to use it more in organic chemisty as well.
A.
a few updates
1) chemdraw no longer is supported. supposedly it still works if you downloaded it before but you can no longer get it.
2) I still use Notetaker HD for notetaking. Its a great app
3) I just bought Doceri and hope to use it this semester in Frosh chem
4) a lot of students use Notability for notetaking and annotating PDFs. I have seen students use it and I have it on my iPad but haven't used it. It seems similar to the Notetaker HD app, but more designed for filling out pdf worksheets and pdf design and not just notetaking. I've played with it a little and it seems like a good app. its $9.99
I have transitioned my inorganic class to be totally iPad based (with the exception of paper lab notebooks). I have found over the course of the semester several useful tips.
If anyone has any questions about how I set my course up, feel free to ask!
Hi Anthony,
Thanks for sharing! I am working to transition myself to my ipad fully. I use Notability (which I learned about from a student) and find it's going very well. Few questions for you!
Do you use your ipad during lectures?
Do you share your notes with your students after lecture seeing as they are in an easy pdf format?
What are the "good" strucutre drawing programs?
Thanks for your time in advance!
Natalie,
If you are thinking about the transition, I would be more than happy to speak with you about how I accopmplished the transition and the things I have learned during the process. Let me give you a few ideas and answers to your questions below.
If you have any other questions, pleae reach out to me directly my email (fernandeza@merrimack.edu) and I would be more than happy to have a longer video chat or phone call with you. Good luck!
In addition to what people have already mentioned, I use an iPad during lecture, but I use the Doceri software.
Like notability, it allows me to annotate notes in class, however, I use Doceri for the ability to live-record my lectures and capture my voice, notes, and annotations I make on the slides when coupled with Kaltura. Our classrooms have classroom desktops that I can pull up PowerPoint slides on and a software called Doceri Desktop (located on the desktop) links with the Doceri (free on an iPad/surface pro) so everything on the desktop shows up on my iPad and I just teach from that and the desktop captures everything I'm writing.
The reason I do it is I use Kaltura software (our university has it on the desktop, but I believe there is a web version) to record lectures each day and I love that students can see everything I am writing on the slides.
I would be happy to talk to anyone about how I have integrated the technology to work together!
I have a XP-Pen graphics tablet ( Deco 01 V2 ) . I downloaded a whiteboard app and my life is so much easier. I use it to make my math videos mostly, but it has also been useful in drawing summary pictures for reading, underlining information in articles during video meets, and other things.