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LessonUp

@lessonup

Create more engaging, joyful and effective lessons with our intuitive teaching tool and lesson library.

Katılım Eylül 2014
1.2K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
LessonUp Hack! Right click any slide and create a multiple choice quiz.
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LessonUp@lessonup·
UK teachers — we want to hear from you. Share your experience in our 5–7 min survey on teaching, workload, tech and classroom engagement. 🎁 Win a 6-month LessonUp Pro subscription or a £10 gift card. Take the survey 👇 eu1.hubs.ly/H0sMWZL0
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Retrieval practice strengthens memory and improves long term learning
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Looking for revision strategies? These short recap activities help students practise recall and build confidence, without overwhelming them.
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
“Very easily, LessonUp has such great potential to harness the technology available to students and use it to enhance their learning experience and knowledge retention. Having the ability to easily adjust my original PowerPoints and make them interactive has sped up how I deliver the information provided by the specification.” -Kyle Smith, Lecturer in Manufacturing Engineering Belfast Metropolitan College
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Found a great lesson in the LessonUp library? Save it, customise it, and make it your own in just a few clicks. See how easy it is to adapt ready-made lessons to fit your classroom. ✏️
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Proof that a great lesson can be fun, competitive, sugary… and maybe a bit too exciting 😅
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Turn lesson data into clear, actionable insights with 'reports' in LessonUp. Instantly see how your students are progressing and adjust your teaching with confidence. 📊
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Here’s a simple way to build critical thinking, empathy, and discussion in any subject. The See–Think–Me–We method is one of the most loved strategies in LessonUp’s library. Save for later! eu1.hubs.ly/H0qFLLQ0
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Some say that celebrating women one day a year is not enough: we should celebrate women every day. I have heard it said many times, especially by women. One day cannot hold the weight of laws, traditions, online harassment, pay gaps, and everyday bias. But symbols matter. We mark wars with memorial days. We mark independence. We mark religious events. Not because one day changes everything, but because memory needs anchors. International Women’s Day is such an anchor. It reminds us that what seems normal today was once controversial. Those rights we consider basic were once demanded, fought for, negotiated. That progress did not happen naturally or automatically. It happened because people insisted. Women and men. And it reminds us that progress is not evenly distributed. While many women in our part of the world have access to education, work and political participation, this is not the global reality. Even here, equality on paper does not always mean equality in experience. The conversation is not about blame. It is about awareness. About continuing to question the norms that still linger: in textbooks, in traditions, in jokes, in algorithms, in our own minds. It is easy to say, “We are past that.” History shows we rarely are. Do we allow it to become symbolic only? Or do we let it open a conversation, again and again? Not because women need special treatment. But because fairness requires attention. And attention, sometimes, needs a date in the calendar. Or a lesson in your classroom: eu1.hubs.ly/H0skBJM0 Some practical things you can keep doing as a teacher: 🔹 Notice who speaks and who doesn’t – Invite quieter students to answer questions by making them anonymous, so participation doesn’t always come from the same few. 🔹 Use examples that reflect diversity – in lessons, mention women as scientists, leaders and creators, not only as exceptions. This makes achievement feel attainable. 🔹 Rotate roles in group work – don’t let the same students always present or lead. Assign and switch roles (presenter, note-taker, discussion lead) so everyone practises. You probably do these things already, and more. These are just some examples. Practical steps are small. They are not revolutionary. But they can make a difference. #InternationalWomensDay #EducationForEquality #TeachForEquality #WomenInEducation #EverydayEquality
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Use LessonUp's AI tools to quickly add a quiz to your existing slides and turn a one-way lesson into an interactive check-in. In under a minute, students are responding — and you can instantly see who’s with you and who needs support.
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Make your lessons come alive with Hotspots in LessonUp. Add clickable, interactive elements to images and spark curiosity in seconds ✨
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LessonUp@lessonup·
That internal struggle when a student’s joke is funny but you have to stay professional
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Create ready-to-use assignments in minutes with the LessonUp AI Tools. Save time on planning and give your students meaningful, engaging tasks tailored to your lesson. 🚀
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Want better formative assessment in secondary? Try these hinge question examples to check understanding mid-lesson and adjust teaching in real time.
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Some teachers are curious, others still find it a bit daunting, and that’s completely okay. Joanne McGovern shares her personal view on how AI is moving through the teaching world and what it means for teachers today.
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LessonUp
LessonUp@lessonup·
Your PowerPoint isn’t going anywhere when you upload it, pinky promise 🤞
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Looking for classroom management routines? These approaches support calm, focused lessons and they're adaptable across subjects.
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LessonUp@lessonup·
‘LessonUp has been game changing for us in the classroom, especially with regards to assessment for learning and participation. We can immediately check that we have 100% participation and check for understanding simultaneously. This tells us whether the students are engaged and what they know, so we know when to move on to the next task/topic and when to reteach.’ - Chris Thomas, Lead Teacher of Enterprise, Nottingham University of Samworth Academy
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LessonUp@lessonup·
Joanne McGovern shares why the spinner is one of her favourite tools in LessonUp 🚀 A simple feature that boosts focus, interaction, and a little classroom excitement. 👉 Watch how she uses it in her lessons
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