Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son generally uses the voice to text built into his iPad. He's been offered and tested others, but the simplicity of the built-in one seems to win over. He has dyslexia.
how does he transfer his work from ipad to something he can turn in?
The school is an 1:1 iPad school, so all work is on the iPad already and then he emails it from the iPad. So if he pulls up PowerPoint on the iPad he can use the little mic button on the keypad to dictate. Same with any other program or app. He then emails his work to the teacher or uploads it to the website where they turn in work. He could also send the work to a printer, or turn it into a PDF, or whatever.
Got it. Thank you so much.
There are also apps for worksheets. I forget what it is called, but you take a photo of the worksheet in the app and it gives you text boxes for the answers. You can then dictate answers into those text boxes, and then email/upload/print the completed worksheet. My did never wanted to go to that trouble for worksheets and I often scribed for him in those situations, so we never did use that app.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son generally uses the voice to text built into his iPad. He's been offered and tested others, but the simplicity of the built-in one seems to win over. He has dyslexia.
how does he transfer his work from ipad to something he can turn in?
The school is an 1:1 iPad school, so all work is on the iPad already and then he emails it from the iPad. So if he pulls up PowerPoint on the iPad he can use the little mic button on the keypad to dictate. Same with any other program or app. He then emails his work to the teacher or uploads it to the website where they turn in work. He could also send the work to a printer, or turn it into a PDF, or whatever.
Got it. Thank you so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son generally uses the voice to text built into his iPad. He's been offered and tested others, but the simplicity of the built-in one seems to win over. He has dyslexia.
how does he transfer his work from ipad to something he can turn in?
The school is an 1:1 iPad school, so all work is on the iPad already and then he emails it from the iPad. So if he pulls up PowerPoint on the iPad he can use the little mic button on the keypad to dictate. Same with any other program or app. He then emails his work to the teacher or uploads it to the website where they turn in work. He could also send the work to a printer, or turn it into a PDF, or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son generally uses the voice to text built into his iPad. He's been offered and tested others, but the simplicity of the built-in one seems to win over. He has dyslexia.
how does he transfer his work from ipad to something he can turn in?
Anonymous wrote:My son generally uses the voice to text built into his iPad. He's been offered and tested others, but the simplicity of the built-in one seems to win over. He has dyslexia.