Good night from Maine the place the solar has set on the shortest month of the 12 months. It additionally appeared to be the coldest month of the 12 months. And to shut out the month we’re having one other snowstorm!
AI (synthetic intelligence) is the preferred matter in all the academic know-how panorama as we speak. Likewise, 4 of the preferred posts on this weblog in February have been about synthetic intelligence instruments.
As I do on the finish of each month, I’ve put collectively an inventory of the ten hottest posts of the month. Have a look and see if there’s one thing attention-grabbing that you just missed earlier this month.
1. 10 Instruments for Gathering Actual-time Suggestions From College students
2. Free Course on ChatGPT and AI in Training
3. The Makers of ChatGPT Have Launched a Instrument to Detect Textual content Written With AI
4. Three Good Instruments for Recording Brainstorming Periods
5. 75 Google Paperwork Tutorials
6. Three Instruments for Detecting Writing Created by AI
7. 167 Math In “Actual Life” Classes
8. GPTZero – One other Instrument to Detect Writing Created by AI
9. New Padlet Characteristic! Current Padlet Partitions as Slideshows
10. Lumen5 – Rapidly Flip Your Writing Into Movies
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50 Tech Tuesday Suggestions!
- The Sensible Ed Tech Publication comes out each Sunday night/ Monday morning. It options my favourite tip of the week and the week’s hottest posts from Free Expertise for Lecturers.
- My YouTube channel has almost 45,000 subscribers watching my brief tutorial movies on a wide selection of academic know-how instruments.
- I have been Tweeting as @rmbyrne for fifteen years.
- I replace my LinkedIn profile a time or two each week.
- The Free Expertise for Lecturers Fb web page options new and outdated posts from this weblog all through the week.
- If you happen to’re interested by my life outdoors of schooling, you may comply with me on Strava.
This submit initially appeared on FreeTech4Teachers.com. If you happen to see it elsewhere, it has been used with out permission. Featured picture captured by Richard Byrne.