Empowering Active Learning with Intentional Technology Use in the Classroom Learning with purpose that impacts student outcomes Seesaw is guided by the belief that technology should support meaningful learning experiences that help students create, reflect, communicate, and demonstrate understanding in authentic ways.
District Conversations Around Technology Matter It is crucial that technology use in the classroom is intentional, purposeful, and designed to deepen learning. It is what students are doing with that time that matters most. When learners use multimodal tools to record themselves explaining a math problem or a science observation, they are prompted to reflect on their own logic. Their learning isn’t reflected in the end result. It’s captured in the words they use to explain their thinking. Seesaw was built so student time on devices is spent thinking, explaining, creating, and showing what they know. The student who explains is the student who learns. This window into thinking gives the teacher authentic insight to drive instructional decision-making.
In a Seesaw Classroom Learning happens when thinking is visible and focuses on the ‘why,’ not just the ‘what.’ In a Seesaw classroom, real learning is captured and seen:
Students externalize thinking
Families join the learning loop
A student records a 45-second voice note explaining how they solved 47 + 38. To narrate the steps, they must make their reasoning explicit — strengthening metacognitive reflection and learner agency.
A family member listens to a recording of their child reading and shares words of celebration. They do more than just offer praise; they extend the audience for student thinking beyond the classroom walls.
Teachers see learning, not just answers
Time on a device is short and purposeful
A student draws a cause-and-effect diagram while recording an explanation of how one action led to another. Teachers can hear student thinking, identify misconceptions and provide more targeted and differentiated instruction.
A student captures a photo of their science notebook and shares what they have learned in a 2-5 minute exit ticket, providing their teacher with immediate insights into the student’s conceptual grasp and scientific reasoning.