Students Are Telling Us They Feel Invisible. We Should Listen.
Every week, another story surfaces about what it feels like to learn in the shadow of AI. The one that stuck with me most recently came from Maclean’s: a student […]
Every week, another story surfaces about what it feels like to learn in the shadow of AI. The one that stuck with me most recently came from Maclean’s: a student […]
A common warm-up activity in humanities courses is visual analysis. In this exercise, instructors share an image related to the day’s topic or theme and invite students to examine it […]
Generative AI tools like ChatGPT are changing the way students approach coursework—and not always for the better. Faculty are noticing a sharp uptick in generic, AI-generated discussion posts that dilute […]
Instructors using Blackboard Learn can now assign Hypothesis-powered readings using Learn’s built-in Groups feature, enabling learners to annotate together with fully customizable group settings that fit any course configuration.
This webinar introduces and demonstrates the Hypothesis annotation tool and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.
This webinar introduces and demonstrates the Hypothesis annotation tool and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.
This webinar introduces and demonstrates the Hypothesis annotation tool and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.
This webinar introduces and demonstrates the Hypothesis annotation tool and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.
This presentation, followed by Q&A, introduces high school as well as middle school educators to the Hypothesis annotation tool, and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.
This presentation, followed by Q&A, introduces high school as well as middle school educators to the Hypothesis annotation tool, and shows how collaborative annotation can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.