You can also see 7 More Ways To Explore With Google
It shouldn’t be a surprise that the company that is synonymous making the whole world searchable and gave us the ability to explore everything at our fingertips is also a great platform for students to explore a number of learning opportunities. Here are five ways Google allows students to explore the world.
“…so one day my mother sat me down and explained that I couldn’t become an explorer because everything in the world had already been discovered. I’d been born in the wrong century, and I felt cheated.”
― Ransom Riggs, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
Exploring the Earth
My Maps
- Find an area of a Google Map you want to modify
- Drop pins (you choose the style/color) at key locations either manually, via search, or by importing
- You can add info to pins (title, description, additional images, etc.)
- Zoom to the preferred view and make it the default
- Draw connection lines or shapes between or around your locations
- Organize your pins into layers/sections
- You can share the maps or embed them on a Google Site
You and students can create your own maps or explore what others have made. You can map out literary locations along with important details from the story. Have students map out historical event locations, world biomes, animal ranges, or class field trips. Feel free to check out the London of Sherlock Homes or information on California’s wildfires.
Tour Builder
What the My Maps software does for Google Maps, Google Tour Builder does for Google Earth. You’re able to add even more details to the journey through photos, text, and videos. It’s all accessible from a browser without having to load Google Earth separately. Check out some famous US landmarks, the life of Jane Goodall, or one soldier’s experience in Vietnam.
Lit Trips
Earth Picker
If instead of touring around the world you would rather assess how well students know it, Earth Picker is a game where students are dropped into a Google Street View location and they have to use context to clues to see how close to the actual location they can pin it on the map. You get five locations to see how close you can get. Can you beat your best score?
Google Expeditions
Google recommends that it is only used with students in 2nd grade and above both because of the content, but also because it can cause eye strain and affect depth perception in developing children. It’s not as intense of an experience as the higher VR systems which recommend it only for children above 12 or 13. Because they’re not attached, students (and adults) can take them off easily if they begin to feel uncomfortable either due to nausea or because the sharks are too scary up close. Personally, my students have found it to be one of the most engaging experiences they’ve had in the classroom and it has led to many wonderful discussions.
While Google Expeditions was still being tested, teachers, like me, could bring it to their school free of charge through their pioneer program. They are now offering the same opportunity with the new Expeditions AR Pioneer Program, and it wouldn’t even require a viewer. You can bring the world to your students in ways that may be limited (or impractical) through physical models.

