Flip Your Classroom Today. Own Your Course Tomorrow.
Everything you need to record high-quality lessons (without the Hollywood budget).
The biggest mistake teachers make is over-complicating the tech. You don’t need a studio; you need a system. If you’re still trying to draw a coordinate plane with a laptop trackpad at 11:00 PM, we need to talk.
You don't need to be a tech wizard. You just need a "lean" stack that lets you show up, record, and get back to your life. Here is the exact setup I use to power my courses.
1. The "Writing Surface" (The Essentials)
Let’s be honest: trying to teach complex concepts with a mouse is a nightmare. To make your digital handwriting look like it belongs on a chalkboard, you need digital ink.
The Budget Play: Wacom Intuos Tablet. It’s the industry standard for a reason. Plug it in, grab the pen, and stop fighting your computer.
The Pro Move: iPad Pro + Apple Pencil. Use Sidecar or AirPlay to turn your tablet into a secondary monitor. It’s seamless.
The "Feel": Look for pressure sensitivity. You want your notations to look natural and fluid, not like a jagged 1990s arcade game.
2. The "Whiteboard" Software
This is where the magic happens. You need a canvas that doesn't run out of room mid-explanation.
Microsoft OneNote: The king of "infinite scrolling." It’s built for organization.
Concepts or GoodNotes: If you want your exports to look like a work of art, go here.
BitPaper: If you’re doing 1-on-1 "flipped" tutoring, this is your shared digital workspace.
3. The "Voice" (The Most Important Part)
Students will forgive a blurry screen, but they will tune out in seconds if your audio sounds like you're underwater. The mic is where you don't skimp.
The Gear: Blue Snowball or Audio-Technica AT2020 (USB). * Pro Tip: Get a Pop Filter. It stops those "P" and "B" sounds from clipping the audio, ensuring your explanations are crisp and professional.
4. Screen Recording & Editing
Forget the fancy editing suites. The most natural way to create a lesson is to record yourself "writing on the board" in real-time. This captures the "flow" of a concept—the pauses, the emphasis, and the logic—better than any static slide deck ever could.
5. The "Delivery Room" (Your Digital Classroom)
You need a home for your brain.
Maths Advice on Your Device: This is my central hub. It’s the "home base" where resources live, organized so teachers and students can find what they need without the clutter.
ScreenPal: This is the engine. It hosts the videos and delivers high-quality instruction to students globally at any hour. This allows the learning to happen even while you’re asleep.
The Tools are only 10% of the battle...
Knowing which microphone to buy won’t save you if your students aren't watching the videos or if you’re still drowning in daily prep.
Now that you have the gear, you need the methodology. I am currently finalizing a complete roadmap specifically for Calculus teachers. It’s designed to help you reclaim your classroom headspace today, while building the digital assets for your own professional course tomorrow.
Got questions about flipping your room?
Ask me anything here, and I'll notify you when the full guide is live