Take Charge of Your Lessons with Hyperdocs

What:

Hyperdocs is a transformative lesson planning tool for curating content for curriculum units. Hyperdocs are “carefully crafted digital lesson plans that require educators to have a mindset of thoughtful pedagogy” (source). Hyperdocs lessons are “visually engaging and packaged learning experiences” that incorporate student use of technology to “create, collaborate, think critically, and connect” (source). Hyperdocs are not simply a Google doc with links to assignments students must complete. 

Why: 

Hyperdocs are an important tool in adjusting the culture of a classroom. There are numerous templates to choose from that offer various pedagogical models. When implemented correctly, Hyperdocs move the teacher from the front of the room delivering content to being more of a guide through the content. Students can complete the Hyperdoc on a set schedule that you create or can complete individually. 

TIP: If you choose to have students complete individually, be sure to include optional extended learning content for those students that finish first. 

How to: 

Navigate to the Hyperdocs website and choose a template. Click on the desired template and make a copy of it by clicking File>Make a copy once it opens in your personal Drive. You may then edit the content to include your own and then give to students. You can choose to have them submit them as Google Docs by sharing them with you, or students can submit them to your LMS (learning management system). 

Next Steps:

Interested in learning more? Check out the samples below for great ideas. More samples are available on the Hyperdocs website. 

References:

All sourced information is hyperlinked as applicable above. 

TLDR (too long didn’t read):

Hyperdocs is a transformative lesson planning tool for curating content for curriculum units. Hyperdocs are “carefully crafted digital lesson plans that require educators to have a mindset of thoughtful pedagogy” (source). Hyperdocs lessons are “visually engaging and packaged learning experiences” that incorporate student use of technology to “create, collaborate, think critically, and connect” (source). Hyperdocs are not simply a Google doc with links to work students must complete. 

@hollandkaylah

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