- Types of Video Content Teachers Create with Screen Recording
- Recording a Google Slides Presentation
- Recording Feedback Videos for Student Work
- Recording Worked Math and Science Problems
- Optimal Video Length for Student Engagement
- Sharing Video Lessons with Students
- Building a Reusable Video Library
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Types of Video Content Teachers Create with Screen Recording
- Recording a Google Slides Presentation
- Recording Feedback Videos for Student Work
- Recording Worked Math and Science Problems
- Optimal Video Length for Student Engagement
- Sharing Video Lessons with Students
- Building a Reusable Video Library
- Frequently Asked Questions
Screen recording has transformed how teachers create instructional content. Whether building a flipped classroom, providing remote instruction, creating makeup content for absent students, or building a reusable library of explanations — video lessons created with a screen recorder are now a core part of modern teaching practice. This guide covers the workflow for K–12 and higher education teachers using Chrome-based tools.
Record Lessons Directly in Chrome
Screen Recorder Pro captures Google Slides, Google Docs, online textbooks, and any browser-based content — with your voice and optionally your face. Free, no download required.
Add to Chrome — FreeTypes of Video Content Teachers Create with Screen Recording
| Video Type | What to Record | Typical Length | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lecture capture | Google Slides + narration | 10–20 min | Flipped classroom, remote learning |
| Skill tutorial | Step-by-step in browser or app | 3–8 min | Software skills, research skills |
| Reading walkthrough | Online article or document | 5–10 min | Annotation, comprehension modeling |
| Worked example | Document or calculator | 5–15 min | Math, science, writing problems |
| Assignment demo | Assignment page in Canvas/Classroom | 2–5 min | Clarifying expectations before due dates |
| Feedback on student work | Student submission + your narration | 2–5 min | Personalized written assignment feedback |
| Review/recap | Slides or document summary | 5–10 min | Before exams, after complex units |
Recording a Google Slides Presentation
The most common teacher use case: recording a presentation with voice narration synchronized to slides. This creates a lecture video students can watch asynchronously.
Unit3-Lesson2-FractionDivision.mp4.
Recording Feedback Videos for Student Work
Video feedback is one of the most high-impact uses of screen recording in education. Research shows video feedback is perceived as more personal, more detailed, and more actionable than written comments by students.
How to Record Personalized Feedback
Recording Worked Math and Science Problems
For quantitative subjects, screen recording while working through a problem step by step is extremely effective. Tools to use:
- Google Jamboard: Digital whiteboard in browser — draw, write, add sticky notes while narrating
- Desmos: Graphing calculator in browser — demonstrate graphing functions step by step
- GeoGebra: Dynamic geometry and algebra tool in browser
- Google Docs: For showing worked algebraic steps in a document (use equation editor)
- A drawing tablet: Connect a Wacom or Huion tablet to write naturally on screen while recording
Record Any Web-Based Teaching Tool
Screen Recorder Pro captures Jamboard, Desmos, GeoGebra, Khan Academy, Nearpod, and any other browser-based educational tool — with your voice synchronized to every action.
Add to Chrome — FreeOptimal Video Length for Student Engagement
The most researched finding in educational video is the relationship between length and engagement. MIT and edX data from MOOCs shows:
- Under 6 minutes: Very high engagement — most students watch to completion
- 6–9 minutes: High engagement — the sweet spot for most instructional content
- 9–12 minutes: Moderate engagement — students often pause and resume, completion rate drops
- Over 12 minutes: Completion rates fall significantly; students often abandon or skip to perceived key moments
For a 50-minute lesson, this means splitting into 5–8 videos of 6–10 minutes each. This also has pedagogical benefits: each video becomes a discrete learning objective, and students can find the specific segment they need to review.
Sharing Video Lessons with Students
Option 1: Google Drive (Most School-Friendly)
- Upload MP4 to Google Drive
- Right-click → "Share" → set to "Anyone with the link can view"
- Copy and paste the link into Google Classroom assignment or announcement
Option 2: YouTube (Unlisted)
- Upload to YouTube, set visibility to "Unlisted"
- Only people with the link can watch — it won't appear in YouTube search
- Post the link in Classroom or your LMS
- YouTube's player includes speed control and auto-captions — useful for students
Option 3: Canvas or Blackboard (LMS Embed)
- Upload to your school's learning management system directly
- Many LMS platforms accept MP4 uploads natively
- Access is restricted to enrolled students automatically
Building a Reusable Video Library
One of the long-term benefits of video lessons is that they're reusable. A well-made video on fraction division serves students for years. To build a sustainable library:
- Focus on evergreen content first: Foundational concepts that don't change year to year are highest priority for recording. Current events, class-specific announcements, and timely examples are less worth the investment.
- Use a consistent naming system:
Subject-Unit-Topic-Date.mp4makes videos findable. Example:Math-Unit3-FractionDivision-2026.mp4 - Create a spreadsheet index: Track which topics are covered, when recorded, and the link. This is invaluable when you want to update a specific video or when a colleague asks to share your library.
- Re-record outdated videos: Technology content, standards-based content, and anything referencing dated examples should be re-recorded when it no longer accurately represents current practice.
Start Building Your Video Library
Screen Recorder Pro is free and works in every Chrome browser — on school Chromebooks, teacher laptops, and home computers. No admin permissions required, no software to install.
Install Screen Recorder ProFrequently Asked Questions
What screen recorder should teachers use?
For teachers working in a browser (Google Classroom, Canvas, Slides), Screen Recorder Pro is ideal — free, no installation required, and captures tab audio, webcam, and microphone simultaneously. For recording desktop applications like PowerPoint, full-screen capture provides more flexibility.
How long should a video lesson be?
Research consistently shows 6–9 minute videos have the highest engagement and completion rates. For complex topics, multiple 5–10 minute videos outperform a single 45-minute recording. If you have a 50-minute lesson to record, split it into 5–8 focused segments, each covering one learning objective.
Should I use webcam in video lessons?
Yes, when possible. Students find video lessons with visible instructor presence more engaging. A small webcam window in the corner adds personal connection without obscuring content. Screen Recorder Pro supports webcam overlay while capturing your screen and voice simultaneously.
How do I share screen recordings with students on Google Classroom?
Upload your video to Google Drive and share the link in a Classroom assignment or announcement. Alternatively, upload to YouTube as Unlisted and post the YouTube link. YouTube's player includes auto-captions and speed control, which many students find helpful.
Can I record a Google Slides presentation with audio narration?
Yes. Open your Google Slides in Chrome, start Screen Recorder Pro with tab capture and microphone enabled, then present as normal. The recording captures your narration synchronized with the slides, creating a self-contained video students can watch asynchronously at their own pace.