Presented by Samsung
PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT - Can Interactive Displays Improve Student Engagement and Teacher Workflows?
Built for Samsung Interactive Displays, Samsung AI Assistant and Samsung Account Management Solution help teachers personalize shared displays and use classroom tools from the screen
Samsung Interactive Displays are built for the way classroom technology is used across schools, where teachers share rooms, move between materials and shift between apps, files and class discussion throughout the day.
For its Interactive Displays running Android OS, Samsung brings together two tools that address this shared-use model. Samsung AI Assistant adds classroom features that can support live instruction, lesson review and comprehension checks from the screen. Samsung Account Management Solution (AMS) helps teachers sign in to compatible displays and access their own settings.
So how do these tools work, and where do they fit into a teacher’s day?
Moving Through Live Instruction With On-Screen Support
A productive lesson needs room for questions, clarification and review. Teachers need tools that make those steps easier without pulling attention away from instruction. Available on supported Samsung Interactive Displays, Samsung AI Assistant gives teachers access to classroom tools directly from the display. It helps educators instantly create more engaging learning experiences by looking up information, preparing quizzes and providing visual support for students. Through Samsung AMS Single Sign-on (SSO), teachers can use Samsung AI Assistant directly after signing in.
Live Transcript turns spoken instruction into real-time text on the display, helping students follow along in larger classrooms or when they need additional learning support. Teachers can adjust the transcript banner by font size, language and screen position so key points are easier to track during the lesson. Then, by pairing with the broadcast feature in the Samsung screen sharing app, teachers can send the live transcript to students’ personal devices, ensuring they have a front row seat to the lesson regardless of where they are sitting in the classroom.
Circle to Search gives teachers and students a quick way to follow up on a lesson in real time. By circling on-screen text or images, they can pull up related information, images, videos and web links directly on the display. Teachers can also press and hold search results to add helpful content to Samsung Whiteboard, from text to visuals like graphs or diagrams. This feature can be useful when a concept needs more explanation, a student asks an unexpected question or the class needs reference material tied to what they are viewing.
When class ends, teachers have a record they can work from instead of starting the follow-up from memory. My Lessons keeps the lesson content and transcript available, so teachers can turn the material into an AI Quiz for a comprehension check. The quiz can point students back to details they may have missed and help teachers identify what needs to be covered again. To help reduce the risk of AI hallucinations, AI Quiz generates questions from the transcript and source materials the teacher selects, keeping the quiz tied to the actual lesson content.
Starting Instruction Without the Setup Slowdown
Many classroom displays serve more than one educator. A single screen might support math in the morning, science before lunch and reading later in the day. Each teacher needs quick access to different files, apps, display settings and classroom resources.
Samsung AMS helps reduce the sign-in burden on shared classroom displays by giving teachers a simpler path into their own display environment on compatible devices. For schools, that means one display can support multiple teachers, subjects and class periods while still giving each educator a more consistent setup.
Teachers can easily sign in to Samsung AMS with a QR code or an NFC-enabled ID card to access their own display environment, without needing to type a confidential password in front of the class. With the Home Personalization feature, a teacher’s layout, wallpaper, files and settings are connected to their cloud-based profile on compatible displays. This allows educators who move between rooms to access familiar settings and tools without rebuilding their display environment each time.
AMS also supports screen lock when a teacher needs to step away, helping protect personal information, lesson materials and classroom resources. For IT teams and administrators, AMS gives shared displays a more practical account structure, making them easier to oversee without treating every screen as a single-user device.
Samsung AI Assistant and Samsung AMS show how interactive displays can support the practical flow of a school day, from shared device access to live instruction and follow-up after class.
Learn more about Samsung Interactive Displays and classroom solutions here
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