Features

Accessibility and prosperity: Prospero

Acting as an extra helping hand for lesson planning, online platform Prospero is providing educators with a quick way to create engaging sessions for their students. Hattie Fisk finds out more about what it offers, and its new project on embracing diversity
Adobe Stock / Virina Flora

When faced with online teaching, it can be hard for teachers to convey the energy and passion expressed in an in-person workshop or lesson over a virtual format. Similarly, teachers may struggle to use technology to its full capacity in the classroom, or ensure that its addition enhances lessons, rather than complicates them. Challenging the current use of technology in education (and by artists more widely) is Prospero – a new web-based system designed to help educators create accessible learning resources and share them with schools and colleges. Aesthetically bright and easy to navigate, the system gives users the option to make lessons, workshops, stories, drama games, training, interactive works, digital resource packs and video games.

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