Apple Rolls Out iPad Learning App Updates, More Resources for Educators

Learning Coach Program Now Accepting Applications for Next Cohort

Apple recently announced a number of updates and new resources for K–12 educators, including new instructional resources emphasizing project-based learning, creativity, and collaboration, as well as professional learning opportunities.

What's the Big Deal About Apple Learning Coach?

Three educators who completed the ALC program explain how they, as coaches and technology integration specialists, benefitted from Apple Learning Coach, and how the coaching methods and the iPad educational apps and features they learned about have helped spark new enthusiasm and creativity across their district. Plus: When professional learning manifests as a wildly successful student film festival. See Podcast Details

 

Now through Nov. 16, 2022, Apple is accepting applications for the second nationwide cohort of its Apple Learning Coach program, which trains instructional technologists, digital learning specialists, and other educators in coaching roles to help teachers maximize Apple technology, in part by focusing on classroom creation instead of just consumption.

Apple Learning Coach includes self-paced lessons and two days of virtual workshops with Apple Professional Learning Specialists. The free program is open to employees of K–12 schools and districts in the United States who have an iPad and have earned their Apple Teacher recognition, a course in the Apple Teacher Learning Center that teaches foundational skills with Apple technology.

Educators wishing to participate in Apple Learning Coach must submit an application and obtain written approval from their school or district administration, Apple said. Learn more about ALC and hear from educators who have completed the program on THE Journal Insider podcast October episode.

The ALC program overview details how participants learn how to coach teachers to creatively integrate technology into learning, using free apps and resources from Apple’s Everyone Can Create projects, each of which includes teacher guides for helping students illustrate their learning through creating, using native iPad video, drawing, music, and photography apps.

The first public cohort of ALC was certified in July, following two pilot programs last year; over 1,600 K–12 educators across 49 states and the District of Columbia have earned their Apple Learning Coach certification, Apple said.

New Teacher Resources

Within the Apple Education Community — a hub for educators using Apple devices that launched lasst month — are new Everyone Can Create projects, designed to “empower educators to build their creative teaching skills and deliver engaging learning experiences on iPad,” Apple said.

New Everyone Can Create content includes:

Updates to Native & Free iPad Learning Apps

Pages, Numbers, and Keynote, iOS-native apps widely used in Apple-device classrooms, rolled out several updates, including giving users the ability to view recent activity in collaborative files and get notifications when people join, comment, and make edits.

Additionally, all three apps now enable users to automatically remove the background of images, and users can remove or replace the background of live video objects in Keynote.

Swift Playgrounds — available as a free download on the App Store and requiring iPadOS 16 or newer or macOS Ventura or newer — now helps users “learn the fundamentals of machine learning by training a model with a simple rock, paper, scissors game, demonstrating how computers make predictions from data,” Apple said in a news release.

Additional features show how to arrange app layouts by building a journal app. Swift Playgrounds requires no coding knowledge, making it a popular tool for classrooms just starting with coding. The app is based on widely used programming language Swift.

Updates across iWork and Swift Playgrounds support new desktop-class iPad features on iPadOS 16, including a customizable toolbar, new document menu, and support for Stage Manager, which aims to make multi-tasking on iPad easier.

Learn more at Apple.com/education.

Featured

  • horizontal stack of U.S. dollar bills breaking in half

    ED Abruptly Cancels ESSER Funding Extensions

    The Department of Education has moved to close the door on COVID relief funding for schools, declaring that "extending deadlines for COVID-related grants, which are in fact taxpayer funds, years after the COVID pandemic ended is not consistent with the Department’s priorities and thus not a worthwhile exercise of its discretion."

  • laptop and fish hook

    Security Researchers Identify Generative AI 'Vishing' Attack

    A new report from researchers at Ontinue's Cyber Defense Center has identified a complex, multi-stage cyber attack that leveraged social engineering, remote access tools, and signed binaries to infiltrate and persist within a target network.

  • Ativion StudentKeeper

    New Platform Combines Content Filtering, Classroom Management, Device Management Tools

    Ed tech, remote access, and cybersecurity solution provider Ativion has introduced StudentKeeper, an all-in-one platform that encompasses digital safety management, filtering, and reporting tools for supporting and protecting students.

  • A child surrounded by glowing, fluid virtual patterns and holographic shapes, illuminated in a dark gradient environment of blue, purple, and pink.

    ClassVR Gets Expanded VR/AR Content Library

    Avantis Education has announced a new content library for its ClassVR virtual and augmented reality platform. Dubbed Eduverse+, the library features four content suites — EduverseAI, WildWorld, STEAM3D, and CareerHub — that can be tailored to suit a variety of educational levels.