 My students use Seesaw to demonstrate and share their learning. We use it on our Chromebooks every day. It's really the best app I found for unlocking creative thinking and giving my students so many options to show what they know. In science, we are working on a group project about the water cycle. We used a picture that I took last week at the beach to label eight main steps of the water cycle. My favorite example of figurative language on this page is shimmering veil of heat, which is imagery. Shimmering veil gives me a better picture of the kind of heat of that day, and it sounds cool. So three times two equals six. Okay, so my answer is two over six, or two-sixths. Oh, I can simplify that. Kunal has one-third of his flower left. Seesaw really helps with classroom engagement because they're the ones showing their thinking and their learning. They're getting a chance to draw or take pictures and then go a step further and explain their thinking, and it really cements the learning.