New Tools

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You know I’m not a fan of adopting new tech tools just for the sake of it, however I recognize that lots of new stuff is coming out each day that may make the good work that we do with students each day easier, more efficient etc. Below are a few bits worth checking out that perhaps can enhance learning within your class or your workflow in general.

Read&Write web: highlighting, text to speech, predictive text, converts pdfs and images to text (works well with gMath) on Google docs and now slides

Unroll.Me: Instantly see a list of all your subscription emails. Unsubscribe easily from whatever you don’t want.

Hypothes.is: Collaborative annotation

 

Tips for Using Classroom From Students

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It you have not done so already (in last weeks TT) please fill out this form. Below are some likes and dislikes as well as tips based on the results collected last week from students and teachers:

What students like and do not like about how teachers are using classroom part 1 (more to come including face to face forums w/ students):

  • Students LIKE:
    • When teachers ask them for input in how the space is being used
    • When teachers understand the implications of their choices (e.g. choosing to present information that is many many clicks away)
    • Being able to access assignments within two clicks or less
    • Having items that will be held to the Late Work Policy to be assigned within the stream with corresponding due dates down to the exact time (not just date)
    • When teachers present organized information consistently. They like getting used to being able to find their way around
  • Students DO NOT LIKE:
    • Having to click through multiple layers to find what is due when. They really really dislike when the only place they can find homework is within a SMART Notebook file that needs to be downloaded, opened and sifted through
    • When items are assigned to them after the class period has ended, but are due before the next class period
    • When items that are assigned are deleted even after they are due.
    • When items do not have a clear due date and time, or when this information is changed multiple times
    • Being assigned items in the stream that are reoccurring class routines (e.g. bring your tablet to class, bring your book etc.).  If you need to communicate this information outside of class, they would like it to be in the announcements. This information could also be created as long events in the class calendar directly within Google calendar: warning events created directly in Google calendar do not appear in Classroom

Tip: turn off email notifications

By default, you receive an email notification when either event occurs:

  • Someone adds a comment to your post
  • A private comment is posted on a student’s assignment or question submission

You can change whether you receive email notifications.

Scroll down and click Settings.

Click Settings

Tip: Understand the assignment workflow 

Classroom weaves together Google Docs, Drive, and Gmail so teachers can create and collect assignments paperlessly. Within Classroom, teachers can create an assignment, use it in multiple classes, and choose how students complete the assignment (for example, whether each student receives an individual copy or all students work in the same copy of the assignment). The teacher can track who has completed the assignment and who hasn’t, and provide feedback to individual students.

Here’s an example of the assignment flow between a teacher and a student:

Teacher

Student

Teacher creates an assignment with an attached Google Doc.

Student edits the copy of the homework and turns it in.

Teacher grades the assignment.

Student reviews and edits the copy of the homework.
  1. Teacher selects the option to create a copy of the Google Doc for each student and sends the assignment to the class.
  2. After turning in an assignment, the student loses edit access to the Doc but remains a viewer.
  3. The teacher edits the Doc to grade the assignment, returns it to the student, and editing access is again transferred to the student.

Both the teacher and students can see a list of pending and completed class assignments. The teacher can see all of the grades for an assignment, and students can see their own grades for completed assignments.

Chrome Extensions

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Here are my favorite extensions lately:

Classroom for sharing directly to your courses.
Scholar, lookup scholarly articles while you browse the web
SMART Amp (free trial) for sharing notebook style information directly to your students in Google Classroom
Goo.gl link shortener
Readablity for a simplified reading experience on the web
Balsamiq (free trial) to mock up a website or app (this is fantastic for student projects in the prototype phase if the end product will be a webspace)
PowToons animated videos and presentations
Datum Equation Editor

Quizlet Live

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Quizlet live is a collaborative, gamified tool that likely is a good fit for the revision happening at this time of year.  Ask Esther or Paul to see contextual examples. If you are looking for a gamification tool for review that is more individual check out Kahoot.

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Zaption

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Zaption is a means for making videos interactive and a strong tool for your mastery learning tool kit that will be available to us by the end of the week. Check it out and ask Cathleen D, Sean M or Jason W to see how they is using it with Science and Econ Videos. Also here is a great tips sheet from a techy science teacher at ASB, Rory Newcomb.

 

Speech to Text Worth Rethinking

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Voice tools are expanding and transforming access to learning in the auditory realm like never before.

The speech to text tool within Google Drive has dramatically improved.  Below are a few ways you might want to consider using it to enhance the ways you give students feedback, or student learning. Speech to text is also useful for students that are auditory learners.

  • Voice comments for feedback-Consider replacing your red pen or written comments for conversational style feedback
  • Voice comments for conversation- Get a thread going between you and your students within the actual document they are working on
  • Provide auditory input for students outside of class-For language learners, pronunciation and word choice is often tricky. By capturing your voice they can replace your voice as many times as necessary, something that in class would be quite awkward for you and the students:)

TRY IT and add your voice comments within this Google doc.

 

 

*Screencastify is a solid screencast tool that saves straight to Google drive.