8 Free Collaboration Tools for Educators

Ready to bring collaboration into your classroom? Here are eight free apps and tools you can use to get students working -- and learning -- together, in and out of the classroom. (Note that while some of the app developments may charge for "premium" versions of these products, all of the following apps are free to use at a basic level).

  1. Flowboard. A free touch-publishing mobile app, Flowboard lets students create, publish, and share their work and ideas via their iPads. Users choose a template (Flowboard offers free ones, or students can customize their own) and then use it to create vacation photo journals, classroom presentations, and other publishable content. Flowboard also pulls photos and videos directly from camera rolls, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
  2. Google Drive (formerly Google Docs). Google’s free online document creation and editing app is popular among instructors that want to collaborate with students, colleagues, and other individuals in “real time” online. Users with editing and review privileges (granted by the original creator of the doc) can view all changes and contribute their own edits to the documents.
  3. Google+ Hangouts. This free app lets users connect with friends, students, professors, and others who want to “hang out” online. Tara Ross, a political science professor and chief academic officer in Sarasota, FL., likes the app’s video chat and group chat features, which she uses on her laptop or iPhone (via a mobile app). "I can use Hangouts to videoconference with several people at once,” said Ross, “and because it’s mobile, I use it a lot while traveling."
  4. Join Me. A free screen sharing tool that instructors like Ross use to share their computer desktop with students and colleagues. The free version of the app accommodates up to 10 meeting participants and includes screen sharing, Internet calling, chat, and other features. "It’s useful if a student is struggling with an assignment,” said Ross, “or if I need to collaborate with a colleague on a project."
  5. OpenClass. This is a free and open learning environment that helps stimulate social learning and the free exchange of content. OpenClass integrates with Google Apps for education and serves as a learning management system (LMS) for instructors who want to organize their scheduling, course management, gradebooks, social learning environments, and educational content.
  6. Citrix Podio. Free to users who have a verified university email address, this app provides a collaborative platform that can be used on a computer or through the iOS, Android, and Blackberry mobile operating systems. Students can work in real-time with classmates to coordinate student groups, complete class projects, and organize research. A student at Fordham University RETC in New York used Podio to create custom apps that help the school track and monitor its technology assets. (Read more about the student’s use of Citrix Podio here.)
  7. ResearchGate. Developed by a scientist who had a hard time collaborating with fellow researchers, this free social network allows scientists, professors, and students to share and collaborate on research projects, build their reputations, and advance scientific progress.
  8. SocialFolders.me. Calling itself a “Dropbox for social,” this free tool helps students manage their content across various social networks. The app connects to the user’s favorite social sites and allows him or her to manage, back-up and sync photos, videos, docs, and other items in a centralized place.

About the Author

Bridget McCrea is a business and technology writer in Clearwater, FL. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • digital classroom interface with virtual hand icons raised, representing students participating in an online poll

    Boosting Student Engagement with Interactive and Practical Teaching Methods

    Traditional teaching methods like slide-to-slide PowerPoint presentations no longer engage students in the way they used to. Here's how one educator developed engaging, interactive methods to help students grasp complex concepts.

  • Global AI vibrancy ranking

    United States Leads in Stanford HAI Global AI Ranking

    A new ranking tool from the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI (HAI) AI Index puts the United States in the No. 1 spot for global AI leadership.

  • interconnected cloud icons with glowing lines on a gradient blue backdrop

    Report: Cloud Certifications Bring Biggest Salary Payoff

    It pays to be conversant in cloud, according to a new study from Skillsoft The company's annual IT skills and salary survey report found that the top three certifications resulting in the highest payoffs salarywise are for skills in the cloud, specifically related to Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud, and Nutanix.

  • a glowing gaming controller, a digital tree structure, and an open book

    Report: Use of Game Engines Expands Beyond Gaming

    Game development technology is increasingly being utilized beyond its traditional gaming roots, according to the recently released annual "State of Game Development" report from development and DevOps solutions provider Perforce Software.