What Students and Faculty Expect Now
There’s almost always a screen within viewing distance of students and faculty in educational spaces. It’s the main feature of any room. People use these screens constantly, and they expect to know how to use them instinctively.
So when they walk into a classroom and can’t share their screen without asking for help or hunting for an adapter, it breaks that expectation. It’s frustrating. The more comfortable people are with screens, the less patient they are when one doesn’t work.
Faculty shouldn’t need a cheat sheet to teach. Students shouldn’t feel anxiety about presenting. If connecting to a display feels like a puzzle, they’ll eventually stop using it.
That’s when AV goes unused — not always because it’s broken, but because it’s unfamiliar, complicated and lackluster.
You’re Not Innovating. You’re Catching Up.
Just like all those screens, wireless screen sharing isn’t a new frontier. It’s expected.
Universities and schools aren’t leading the curve on this — your users are. They’ve already formed expectations based on how every other screen in their life works. When a classroom doesn’t deliver that experience, it doesn’t feel normal. It feels behind and outdated.
Your faculty members expect it. Your students definitely expect it. Wireless screen sharing is no longer a cutting-edge innovation. It’s the new standard.
What “Standard” Should Look Like in 2025
Let’s reset the baseline for classroom AV tech:
That’s what a modern classroom needs to function. Fortunately, you don’t need a luxury AV stack to get there.
Where Ditto Fits
Ditto makes this standard easy to reach. It works with the hardware you already have—displays, projectors, whatever’s in the room.
It gives your users one simple, consistent way to share wirelessly, no matter their device, and it removes the confusion that comes from mixing modern users with legacy workflows.
Wireless screen sharing is no longer a nice-to-have. It’s what your users assume you already support.
With Ditto, you can meet and exceed that expectation.
See how Ditto sets the new standard for campus AV →