Reflector Teacher For Mac
Website: What does it help with? Teachers can now wirelessly present what students are doing on their devices to the “big screen” for the whole class to see.
Reflector Teacher For Mac
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Students and teachers can share what’s on their device from anywhere in the classroom. This keeps teachers from being tied to their desk to share notes or examples from their own mobile device, and keeps students from huddling around devices to see what their peers are working on. With a simple click, multiple students can share their device screen next to one another for student-to-student collaboration. Teachers and students can be truly mobile with their mobile devices.
With Reflector Teacher, teachers no longer have to adjust and optimize the Reflector settings for their classroom. Reflector Teacher comes already set up with our recommended classroom settings and compatibility with our companion applications.
What grade and age range? K-12 Is this core/supplemental/special needs/extracurricular/professional development or what?
Classroom technology facilitator What subject, topic, what standards is it mapped to? Reflector Teacher is not mapped to any particular subject or topic. Students can share their device screens to a teacher’s computer to show what they’re working on in real time, no matter the subject. What lesson time does it use? All a teacher has to do is open Reflector Teacher at the beginning of class, and throughout the lesson, teachers can have students mirror their device screens using the native AirPlay, Cast or Miracast technology that’s built into their devices. What is the pricing model? $14.99 per teacher computer Are there services around it?
We have a full support team on hand to help make sure Reflector Teacher is running smoothly for teachers and to assist as issues come up. What makes it unique? Reflector Teacher is unique because it’s the first time the Reflector screen-mirroring technology already in more than 100,000 classrooms around the world has been refined specifically for classroom use. Reflector Teacher was built using years of feedback from teachers, and it has features that are specific to the classroom, including compatibility with other Squirrels education apps, Reflector Director and Reflector Student. A description of the characteristics—how is it designed for user interface, user experience?
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What instructional design principles are at work here? Reflector Teacher was redesigned for modern operating systems and includes interface updates that make mirroring and managing connected devices easier.
Common user actions are easier to find and use. On Windows, Reflector Teacher is located near the Start button instead of the system tray by the clock where Reflector 2 was located.
Connected devices are now visible in a window that makes it easier for teachers to access. On macOS, Reflector Teacher is in the system tray near the clock. It’s accessible to teachers at any point during a lesson. Reflector Teacher includes preconfigured settings that are ideal for classrooms. Teachers will notice security settings that keep unwanted connections from distracting class, and they can see a preview of the device screen before showing it to the entire class. Teacher reviews: “Reflector is a great way to show different ways that multiple kids have solved problems.
I like how Caiden solved using this strategy, now let’s listen to Lexi as she walks us through the strategy that she used. It’s easy to flip from one iPad to the next.” - Kami Esterline/Teacher at Holly Springs Elementary, North Carolina “Using mobile devices without being hardwired makes instruction more efficient. Reflector allows me to easily show the entire class what I’m doing and how they can use the technology.” - Lorien Cafarella/Teacher at Lantana Middle School, Florida “Reflector promotes a collaborative learning environment. Students can find their voice and easily share their work with peers. This is key to improving their soft skills/21st-century skills.” - Courtney Kofeldt/Educational Technology Coordinator at PA Leadership Charter School, Pennsylvania.
Do not touch Retrospect. Garbage in garbage out.
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They abandoned OS X development for 5-6 years while their company floundered, and then when they were bought out by EMC (IIRC) it was only minutely better in terms of support but no new product (bug fixes for using PPC-only code reliant on Rosetta in earlier versions of OS X) and only started to.attempt. to be a marketable product after Roxio bought it. Do not use Carbon Copy Cloner for backup, over Time Machine? Well yes, you might prefer Uranusium backup over the built-in Windows backup: Point being, the provided software does work, but has its limitations. Some advisable products for OS X backup are P4 Backup (formerly PresStore) if you need tape, CrashPlan Pro for backup to disk.
Odds of any commercial product supporting Open Directory and actually (!) being able to back it up live, are next to none. You can use built-in utilities to accomplish OD backup and then back that up to your external BU. You can set up Open Directory replication and it works and has done for many iterations of OS X.
As to OS X Server 'not being a server OS' - rubbish. It has its limitations and is not going to do some things at all or as well as Windows Server, no more nor less than some people's would-be panacea, Linux (which is silly: What distro, you can know one and be lost on another).
Before Linux there was BSD, and much of the server aspects of OS X under the hood (Unix aspects) have BSD-Unix origins. When it comes to troubleshooting certain kinds of issues, give me OS X/BSD any day with dtrace tools over Windows.
Do I wish that Apple had not dropped the X-Serve? But it was so badly dated technology-wise anyway. For lightweight services, Minis will do you fine.
I have several I maintain and their uptime is measured in years. The only normal exception being for updates (security & otherwise). As to the real issue(s) you're asking about: There's no easy or great way to do what you're hoping for.
What you.can. do is setup Open Directory replicas, IP Failover is no longer present in OS X Server. Better handled via DNS and your network load-balancing device(s)/strategies.
There is you don't need to use the pre-assign SSLVPN range that comes with the firewall. I usually create another range anyways. For the IP change first create a new IP range in your addresses. Then in VPN, SSL-VPN Portals, change the source IP Pools to the address range you just created. Then go into SSL-VPN settings, and change that IP range as well.
While in the setting you can also change the DNS IP as well, just select Specify for the DNS server and type in the DNS IP you would like to use. Last is to change your SSL-VPN tunnel polices and swap out the address ranges if they are specified there as well.