Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles - Hello all. Welcome to seven tips for effective remote learning with Khan Academy. My name is Meaghan Pattani and I head up US Teacher Education here at Khan Academy and I'm joined today by my colleague Jeremy, who leads our teacher success team. So, just a little heads up, today, we're gonna be covering tips and best practices for remote teaching and learning. Again, Jeremy and I are really here to help support teachers and students as they navigate this remote learning experience. Jeremy and I are both former educators, and we've tried to do our best to put ourselves in your shoes going through this very chaotic time. And we're gonna try our best to provide clear and actionable steps using Khan Academy wherever possible. Just a heads up, today we will not be covering account setup or how to get started. If you wanna learn more about how to get started with Khan Academy. I recommend using the link below, in order to access our quickstart guide. If you want a full copy of the slides and all the links attached in the handouts tab of GoToWebinar, you'll find a full copy of the slides from today's presentation. So, why use Khan Academy for remote learning? Well, Khan Academy is built to serve learners anywhere at any time. You can assign specific skills to practice, or you can have students practice and get instant feedback, you're able to keep track of student progress, even when you're not together, which right now we know is more important than ever. Khan Academy is built to serve learners, anywhere at any time, you don't necessarily need a computer, everything students can access on the web can be accessed on a smartphone. So, if you have students with limited access they'll still be able to reach valuable content. And our content is available in over 40 languages and all for free. Khan Academy is a nonprofit, with a goal to support high, excuse me, high quality education for anyone, anywhere. So, let's start here, and while this may feel a little bit obvious, I think sometimes when teachers and students, jump into remote learning those valuable communication skills that you rely on every day seem to fall apart. So, think about when you go into your classroom. When you walk into your classroom in the morning, you never think, "I'm not gonna talk "to my students all day," of course you're gonna communicate with them. And for some of your students you are the most important relationship that they have every day and so, now more than ever, your students are in need of consistent communication. So, if you and your students can connect live, absolutely do it, even if it's a learning curve for you and for them there's some really great tools out there, like Hangouts Meet, which allows teachers to give live video lessons and record them for students to watch later, there are a bunch of other tools that are now offering their video streaming services for free, so feel free to take a look and have you have the opportunity to connect with your students live, I absolutely support taking that dive. Let your students know you're thinking about them. So, if you can't connect live or even if you have time beyond that, which I know is a stretch right now, send them a note via email or an app like ClassDojo. Find a way to communicate with your students, let them know that you're missing them. I think students right now are really hungry for that opportunity for social connection and getting a note from you as a teacher, someone who's so meaningful in their lives, telling them that you missed them and how excited you'll be to see them again, it really has a deeper meaning. And please, please, please provide feedback. A lot of students have been given a bunch of work to do while they're at home. But if they're just given the work with no feedback, how do they know that that work has meaning? How do they know that they're doing things correctly? So, please, if you've given your students work to do, while they're remote, make sure that you're giving them qualitative feedback as well. Here's a couple of examples we're seeing from our teacher community. So, the top we have a teacher who says she was channeling her inner Sal Khan, and she used video chat to whiteboard live with students and down below we have one of our ambassadors who combines Flipgrid and combines Khan Academy and creates videos for his students in order to know that he's thinking about them and they and he can message each other back. Then, let's talk about communication between students and between you and their families. So, while that communication between you and your students is so essential, students are also missing each other. And so, using something like Google Docs or Slides, allowing students to collaborate or communicate in real time around shared problems and ideas is a great opportunity. We see a lot of teachers, maybe taking a sample problem, so they'll look at Khan Academy and they see a problem that a lot of students have answered incorrectly and they'll throw it on a Google slide and then each student can add a subsequent slide showing their work on how they would solve the problem, and students can leave comments saying, "Oh that's what I missed," or "Great job," so that way your students are still able to collaborate in a way similar to what they would do in class. Also don't forget about parents and families. Right? Many of you I'm sure are now becoming both a full time, stay at home parent and a full time work from home teacher and so, think about some of those other families who are in your shoes. We're all working remotely on this journey together, and if possible try and reach out to one family per week just to share something their student might be doing well or something, you know, know about their students that's really exciting. And don't hesitate to let parents and guardians know how much you appreciate them for supporting their child through this process of remote learning. This is a really hard jump for parents and to get a little high five from the teacher saying, "You know what, "you're really doing a great job putting that effort in," that can make a huge, huge difference. And don't forget each other, right? I'm so excited to see so many people on here today because we really are stronger together and don't forget to reach out to your other teachers. Teachers you work with daily that you're used to communicating with, members of maybe your peer learning community, and just your teacher friends, they're going through this transition as well, so don't hesitate to share best practices, or just check in on each other and if you're looking for a way to communicate with them, use some of the same tools you're already using with your students. Number two, choose the best tools, and stay with them. Just the tools that are best for you and your students. There's a lot of noise right now around digital tools, and there's all sorts of things you can use for remote learning. But you know your classroom boss. So, start with things that you've already been using. If you've been using Khan Academy all year. Great. Please keep using us. If you are looking for new tools, take what fits you and your students. I don't know your classroom better than you do, and neither does anyone else. And so, find what fits your students use that.