Why does edmodo look like facebook




















Enforce online etiquette guidelines for students when using Edmodo to help them build digital citizenship skills. Encourage students to practice their language skills, as well as spelling and grammar, through conversations in Edmodo. Organize a book group in Edmodo to encourage students to read and discuss novels with each other. Set up an Edmodo group for your next PD workshop to enable teachers within your school to discuss ideas and share content before, during and after the workshop.

Give students the opportunity to learn about other world cultures by connecting your classroom with classrooms around the globe via an Edmodo group.

Inspire real-time discussions and extend learning beyond the classroom walls by hosting a backchannel in Edmodo. Promote discussions and bring more interaction to your science class by engaging your students with science probes in Edmodo.

Integrate the Edmodo mobile app into classroom curriculum to make learning interactive anytime, anywhere. Use Edmodo Badges to help motivate Students to push their learning and increase their practice time on new topics. Badges let Students show off their accomplishments. Deliver differentiated content in your classroom through the use of small groups and shared folders.

Join an Edmodo Community to connect with other educators around the globe and share resources, exchange ideas or get advice. New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic system. Edmodo started out as the Facebook or Yammer for classrooms—a social network-style place for teachers to coordinate online with their students and sometimes parents. Today the company becomes even more like Facebook as it opens up its API so that outside companies can build apps that sit on top of the Edmodo platform.

CEO and cofounder Nic Borg tells Fast Company the change will make things easier for teachers, helping them save time by allowing them to plug the digital tools they often are already using directly into their Edmodo classrooms. But it also presages a larger digital shift in schools—one in which every classroom may very well one day have an online hub that will sit at the center of their on- and off-line worlds.

Another app allows students to run science labs online. Borg says connecting the apps with Edmodo means teachers can save time setting up accounts and transferring student information from one system to another.

But he also says it will accelerate the development of new digital products for classrooms. The biggest challenge many education innovators have is getting teachers and schools to become aware of their products.

And they would build it. Within a few months, they launched Edmodo and sent it out into the world with a single tweet, according to Kothari. As the company approaches its seventh birthday in September, it counts more than 51 million users around the world and is one of the top two most widely used learning management systems available. Stay informed.

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