McGraw Hill and Verizon Add New Free AR/VR App Lesson Plans for K–12 Teachers
        
        
        
			- By Kate Lucariello
 - 09/11/23
 
		
        K–12  teachers across the United States looking to incorporate virtual  reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) into their classrooms can  take advantage of a partnership between McGraw Hill and Verizon, who  created the Verizon Innovative Learning HQ and have recently added  new lessons to its repository.
The  free mobile AR app was launched in 2022 and offers over 350  standards-aligned lessons using immersive and interactive technology  to give students new ways to learn content. The app is available at  the App Store or Google Play to download to any Apple or Android  tablet or smartphone.
Some  of the lesson plans available on the app include the Quadratic  Functions math course, for grade levels 9–12, which uses a  fireworks display to teach students quadratic functions in one to two  class periods using AR on a smartphone. A lesson plan and student  worksheet are available. Learn more here.
In  a history lesson plan for grades 6–8, students can learn about the  Boston Massacre during colonial times. They can view four different  and conflicting eyewitness accounts and come to understand and  analyze the positions of both the colonists and the British. This AR  lesson is also available via smartphone.
Another  available course, called The Human Eye, allows students to virtually  dissect a human eye and understand how it works.
To  watch videos of educators using AR in the classroom, visit  this TimePod Adventures page, with teachers and  students talking about their experience.
Teachers,  administrators, and parents can go to the Verizon  Innovative Learning HQ page to sign up for a free  account and peruse the hundreds of lesson plans available. All  content is free to download and use. Professional development  resources are also available free of charge.
According  to Verizon, these free resources are part of the "Citizen  Verizon initiative, whereby Verizon strives to move the world forward  for all people, with a goal to invest $3 billion by 2025 in areas  such as digital inclusion, climate protection and human prosperity.  Verizon does not profit from this or any of its other corporate  social responsibility programs."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.