iPad App Aims To Make Lecture Halls More Intimate and Students More Engaged

A professor at the University of Michigan has launched an iPad app that he originally developed to help large introductory college classes seem smaller and less intimidating. But now the company sees value for it in any program where iPads are in use, including K-12 classrooms. Perry Samson, a professor of atmospheric science, turned the effort into a research project on student engagement, funded by the National Science Foundation. That project evolved into a startup with help from the university's business incubator and Office of Technology Transfer.

Now LectureTools, which is the name of the company and the product, is set to help students use their iPads to keep notes on presentations, send questions to teachers, and give responses when instructors pose class questions. The application, beta-tested at U Michigan, has been available for standard and notebook computers for two years, then, more recently, on cell phones.

The program provides a way to organize, search, and review all presentation content. It works in any web browser, the company said, and integrates with learning management systems. It replaces traditional clicker-based student response systems. Instructors can present students with interactive activities, including multiple-choice, free response, and image-based questions, and students can respond using their mobile devices, including iPads. If a student has a question about a particular slide, he or she can submit it to the teacher. Those that are answered become anonymously visible to everybody else in the class and are saved for later review.

Students can type notes right on the teacher slides and mark slides they found confusing or important.

All content is saved online and made accessible to students on any kind of mobile or computing device through their web accounts.

A teacher can assess the class' performance with aggregate or individual student data about participation and correctness for each activity that took place.

The software is licensed as a service; college-level students pay $15 per term or $60 for a five year usage license; it's free to instructors. The company is offering a discount to K-12 users.

"If you give students a chance to participate, they will," Samson noted. "Now that iPads have become more popular with learners, we've expanded our technology to take full advantage of these devices."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • robot brain with various technology and business icons

    Google Cloud Study: Early Agentic AI Adopters See Better ROI

    Google Cloud has released its second annual ROI of AI study, finding that 52% of enterprise organizations now deploy AI agents in production environments. The comprehensive survey of 3,466 senior leaders across 24 countries highlights the emergence of a distinct group of "agentic AI early adopters" who are achieving measurably higher returns on their AI investments.

  • rear view of students in a classroom

    Edthena Launches AI-Powered Classroom Observation Tool

    Professional learning platform Edthena has introduced Observation Copilot, an AI tool for principals designed to streamline the process of writing up framework-aligned teacher feedback from classroom observation notes.

  • conceptual graph of rising AI adoption

    AI Adoption Rising, but Trust Gap Limits Impact

    A recent global study by IDC and SAS found that while the adoption of artificial intelligence continues to expand rapidly across industries, a misalignment between perceived trust in AI systems and their actual trustworthiness is limiting business returns.

  • abstract network, cloud and data concept image

    New Report Examines How Enterprises are Scaling AI Initiatives

    Cloud infrastructure is central to the shift from AI experimentation to AI integration, according to a report from Cloudera on enterprise AI adoption.