Read:The Women in Black – Madeleine St John ★★★★☆ perfect read for the time, brief looks at the lives of women working in department store in 50’s Australia. Enjoyable, funny and characters very Australian.

Notes to self as I try and teach myself to teach remotely. See More lockdown learning for some sort of background.

I remember when Apple Keynote came out I really liked it. For me the interface was simpler than PowerPoint and the files took less space. Now I am making a daily PowerPoint for our class meeting I’ve notice the file size situation is reversed. Exporting a keynote to PowerPoint is resulting in a smaller file.
I am still using Keynote as I am quicker and happier with the simpler UI.

For our meetings I am making, for me, quite long, 20 – 40 slide presentation. I get the impression that leaving out transitions and keeping them simple speeds things up. Pupils sometime get a blank screen, some of them have found that opening the chat and closing it sorts that out. I guess forces a screen refresh.

I try to keep the meeting moving along, were are doing an hour a day, covering a few different things each day. Given primary, age 8-11, I can’t expect a lecture to work. Getting the pupils to respond with voice as much as possible. Sometimes in turn, sometimes fire-at-will.

I am only getting around half my class of 24 turning up most days and imaging this would be more difficult with a class of 30.

Replied to Andrew Bailey on Twitter (Twitter)
“Blog post #MicrosoftForms and feedback. Teacher and pupil perspectives in @MicrosoftTeams on giving and viewing feedback. https://t.co/9KOIE71VDX #MIEExpert #GlowScot #DigiLearnScot #TeamMIEEScotland #MicrosoftEDU #distancelearning”

Andrew,
Great stuff. I wish I’d read this before I marked my first quiz:-) Not the most intuitive interface I’ve seem but this makes things very clear, subsequent ones should be easier for me.