Here's a few fun examples of some of my adventures:
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This 360, taken during our first 360 Media Presentation at our RockingEduTech Conference in 2017 was shared in Weebly by its embed code. Embedding gives a clean look and spotlights some of your highlights, instead of adding all (and I know it's tempting) your 360s.
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Sharing our undying passion and love for 360 media #rockingedutech17 goo.gl/PLllF9 - Spherical Image - RICOH THETA |
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Use YouTube Playlists to Bring 360s to Your Classroom
One easy to get started with using 360 video in your classroom is to create a playlist in YouTube. I've created a playlist as an example (this also helps me find some of my favorite public 360s to use in assignments). Create a playlist to house 360 videos on a certain topic and push the link out to students in Google Classroom. Or, create one for your own content (I keep mine unlisted when it includes students).
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Another tip to keep your video in its own tab with no ads or suggested videos when sharing links or creating QR codes from those links is in YouTube itself. Click the "Share" tab underneath the video's name. Then chose "embed" and highlight the text between the quotation marks, as show below (from https).
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