So over the past few months appearing on twitter #Physed Teachers have been experimenting with gifs. I think these are great to show students how to perform a skill without necessary a great internet bandwidth.
New Blog Post: Looping Skill Demos in #physed https://t.co/iASDxuONjm #pegeeks How I've been using Animated Gifs pic.twitter.com/g7LDFTIe7y
— The PE Geek (@mrrobbo) May 24, 2015
[New Blog Post] Animated GIFs in Google Forms http://t.co/6UXcnvdv7S #physed #pegeeks #edtech #GAFE
— ThePhysicalEducator.com (@phys_educator) March 5, 2015
So this week I was contact by @EF_efu asking me if you could use gifs in Padlet. Now I have been a big fan of padlet for a few years, and even used it to help me to teach @SchleiderJustin & @NicholasEndlich class when I did my international teaching from my front room. So I had read @JoeyFeith article about putting them in a google form which is a great idea, but by using padlet they could be a great collaboration tool in real time in the classroom. To be honest I wasn’t sure if they could be inserted to padlet but @EF_efu showed me they could. The possibilities are really endless.
@MrAdamPE. #YesYoucan 😉 add a #gif file in the #padlet. It moves. Cool!! pic.twitter.com/ohYcjJmKtO
— Eduard Sabaté (@EF_edu) August 31, 2015
So #Physed Teachers How could you use this in your lessons?
Padlet Example
[…] Gifs / Padlet / Physical Education […]
[…] a month ago I spoke about how I was starting to incorporate GIFs in the classroom (click here). Today I decided to try something a little different. I wanted to play the GIF image but also […]