![]() ![]() If you have to teach an electronics/Arduino class fully online, due to a situation like the COVID-19 pandemic.Having the students follow along with me in lecture keeps them much more engaged. This is a great way to introduce programming an Arduino and even basics like using a breadboard and a multimeter. Having 150 students cram laptops + breadboards + Arduinos on tiny lecture hall desks isn't feasible, but I can have them all bring laptops and use Tinkercad (note: check if your school's library or IT departments have loaner laptops for students who don't have them). I teach a 150-student class at Cornell, and traditionally we would have two lectures per week where students just watch the instructor build circuits/program the Arduino on a projector, then they'd go to one lab a week to do their own hands on activities. ![]() For active learning/flipped classroom format in large lectures.I've found Tinkercad Circuits useful in any of the following scenarios: ![]()
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