Added by on 2013-01-27

ipad as digital whiteboard

iPads, whether you like it or not, are a popular choice among schools as the hardware of choice when talking about ‘new’ classroom technology. There are so many different ways you can use them, they’re pretty intuitive, and there are a number of teachers out there who have been sharing their experiences integrating these sexy little tablets into their classrooms.

Something that we haven’t talked much about is using your iPad as a digital interactive whiteboard for your classroom. Turns out there are a number of different apps to aid you on this journey, ranging from free to paid with varying functionality that you may or may not need, depending on exactly what you’d like to do with it. We’ve selected a few and highlighted their attributes as a starting point if you want to know how to use your iPad as a digital whiteboard.

Educreations Interactive Whiteboard

Educreations Interactive Whiteboard is a free app that turns your iPad into a recordable interactive whiteboard. You can use photos, text, digital ink, and voice recordings, and your work is easily shareable via email, social media, or on your (free) account on the Educreations website, which allows you to choose who can and can’t see your lessons. A great way to explain concepts step by step with an easy to use interface and basic functionality.

Show Me Interactive Whiteboard

Show Me Interactive Whiteboard is also free, and allows users to record voice over audio for your whiteboard drawings. It’s an especially great way to create lessons and tutorials that both show the progress of say, a math word problem, but also describe the steps with audio to go along with it. The interface is pretty simple, and though it lacks some of the bells and whistles that some of the other apps have (such as real time collaborative ability), it is simple to use, free, and offers a lot of different uses in a classroom setting, making it a particularly useful tool.

Doceri

Doceri is basically an interactive whiteboard tool that also allows you to do live screencasting, voice over existing documents or pages that you create, control slideshow tools like Keynote or Powerpoint, and control some aspects of your computer remotely. Doceri is free, and it is easy to share your work and present it too.

Groupboard Collaborative Whiteboard

Groupboard Collaborative Whiteboard is probably one of the most aptly named apps out there – the name gives you a great idea of exactly what the app does simply with the name of it. The app allows you to draw, write, and chat in real time on a collaborative whiteboard that can be used for free with up to five users. For more users, they offer paid subscriptions starting at $9.99/month. They also offer a service called Groupboard Designer, which provides a more advanced whiteboard with features such as infinite whiteboard size and multiple pages, starting at $19.99/month. Users can upload images, documents, print their Groupboards, and collaborate as they wish.

Whiteboard HD

WhiteboardHD is a relatively inexpensive paid app ($4.99), that offers users the ability to use free form drawing/writing, pre-made shapes and lines, and you can import images, too. Boards can be shared live to collaborate, or can be saved as multiple file types for further offline collaboration. The app supports external displays (with the iPad VGA adaptor), and also offers integration with file sharing options like Dropbox and Box.net.

Splashtop Whiteboard

Splashtop Whiteboard seems worth mentioning despite its steep price ($19.99) because it is actually pretty nice and offers a couple of cool options. Splashtop offers users of existing interactive white boards such as Mimio, Mobi, Promethean, Polyvision, or Smart Technologies a way to access their tools from anywhere in the class without using wireless slates. Users also have complete access to programs like Keynote or Powerpoint without being at their computer. It is not a local app, you’ll connect via wifi to your computer in order to use it.

Thumbnail via Agile Complexification Inverter (great name for this blog!)

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3 Comments

  • Hello!

    Do you know if is there something similar for Android?

    Thanks you!

  • I’d like to suggest SyncPad (http://syncpadapp.com) as well–the app represented in the main article’s picture is actually the very first version of SyncPad. It’s available for iPad and Samsung devices.

  • Bill Wallace 3 months ago

    Ouse Explain Everything many times a week in the classroom. Although not sold as a whiteboard app, for me it’s better than those listed above, (I’ve tried each), for everything except annotating a PowerPoint running on the teacher desktop. But, you can import a PowerPoint, run it and annotate so basically the same. It can also record voice and screens/slides for video distribution.

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