What I learned from the Google Education On Air Conference...

Yesterday, Google facilitated the Education On Air Conference, a virtual conference for educators focused on and around Google Apps for Education, featuring their master teachers. I sat in on a few sessions - Managing Digital Portfolios w/ Google Tools from Kern Kelley, and The Paperless Classroom with Google Docs from Eric Curts. Both sessions were great, and both spelled out and reinforced a great process or workflow for teachers and students to easily and successfully use Google Docs for every day work, for group projects, and for digital portfolios.

I have a few teachers that have gone down this road of using Google Docs exclusively for student work, and their Docs/Drive inboxes have exploded with student work - and has been a struggle for them to manage. What I learned yesterday, and what I'll outline below will make their lives easier, and will help me make the lives of the teachers that will follow this path much easier from the start.

Here's the bullet points for success, and then I'll explain each in detail below:

  • Digitize student work, and store it all in Google Docs/Drive
  • Students create collections or folders for their work, and share that folder with their teachers.
  • Teachers create collections or folders for documents to share with students
  • Teachers create an 'Assignment Hand-In' Form for students to submit both information about the assignment as well as the link to the assignment. 

With this workflow in place, it's fast and seamless for students to turn in their work, and for teachers to manage and grade the mountain of student work. 

Now, let's see how it all works...

Digitize Student Work

No matter what a student does, it needs to end up in a digital form, and then saved in their Google Docs/Drive space. All of your students will obviously need a Gmail account - either directly from Google or through a school/district Google Apps domain.

Digitization is a breeze for any sort of document, presentation or spreadsheet by working directly in Google Docs, but what about math homework or artwork? Enter the cell phone camera or a web-cam connected to an accessible computer! Students snap a photo of the work, and save that file in Google Drive/Docs. If it's a skill in PE, acting in a play, or any other physical activity, capture a video and upload it to YouTube. Anyting that a student does can be quickly and easily digitized with the right tools.

Student Folders/Collections

With all of their work available in Google Docs, students will have a complete record of their own learning. Their best work can/should eventually end up in a Digital Portfolio, but let's just stick with the Paperless Classroom workflow for now. Students create a folder or collection for each of their subjects (which can be later organized by school year) with a standard naming scheme: Subject/Period - Last, First or something similar. Then, they share this folder with their teacher with edit rights. Now, when it comes time to 'hand in' their homework, all they need to do is to drag the file/document from their Google Docs list to the appropriate folder. Since the folder is shared, the file is automatically shared with the teacher!

On the teacher end, they can organize these shared folders in Google Docs however they'd like - by school year, subject, or period. Just create a folder, and drag the shared student folders into it - since you used a naming convention, it's all automatically organized alphabetically by the subject or student name. No more long, long, long list of student work!

Folders/Collections for Teachers

Obviously, teachers often need to hand out assignments or documents to students. To help make this instant and paperless, teachers should make two folders to share with their students.

The first is a 'Hand Out' folder with View Only rights. Here's where you'll put documents and/or assignment templates for students to access and view - and you don't need to share it with EVERY student EVERY time. If it's an assignment template, the students can use 'File --> Save a copy' to save the assignment outline to their own Google Docs to edit. Make sure that if you do share a document this way that students rename it from 'Copy of Assignment 1' to 'Last, First Assignment 1' to make viewing/grading easier later.

The other folder is a folder that will contain editible documents for collaborative papers and presentations that you'd like all of your students to be able to access and edit. Share it with your students with their email addresses, and give full Edit rights. Now, any document that is in that folder, students will automatically have access to!

Assignment Hand-In Form

This last step is an extra step for your students, but it is the last piece to really making management and grading easy for teachers. Create a new Form in Google Docs with the following items:

  • Class Period or Subject (You can make a new form for each class, or use a 'choose from a list' question type for this for all of your classes)
  • Quarter/Semester (optional)
  • Last Name
  • First Name (If you teach elementary, you may want to add all of your students in a 'choose from a list' question type)
  • Assignment Title/Name (Can be a text type, or a 'choose from a list' type if you are that organized)
  • Link/URL for the Assignment

Assignment link/URL? Students can publish their work with a copule of clicks so that anyone with the link can access the document. They do this by clicking on the big blue 'Share' button on the top right of every Google Doc. The document will list 'Private' for access, and the student below as the owner. Click the 'Change..' link next to Private, and choose 'Anyone with the link' and save.

Students will still need to 'turn in' the assignment by adding it to their shared class/subject folder with you, so why you need the assignment link in this form? The form will allow you to sort the contents by any of the fields or questions asked, and the link will allow you to quickly access that assignment right in the form spreadsheet - without needing to go to each students folder, finding the correct assignment, and opening it up. 

With the Assignment Hand-In spreadsheet, you can sort by name, assignment, class - whatever to group the work as you like, access the student's work with a single click to make your comments or edits, close the assignment and instantly access the next one. You can even add in your own information in the cells to the right with notes, grades or scores - as long as you don't add columns to the left or change the information gained from the form, you'll be fine.

This form/spreadsheet brings this whole process and workflow together and wraps it with a bow.

Student Digital Portfolios

With all student work digitized, available and easily shared in Google Docs/Drive, the creation or showcase of a student's best work is now a relatively simple task. Using free online tools such as Google Sites or Posterous, student can share and link to their very best work for this year and for the school years to come. This portfolio can not only serve as a showcase for students, parents, and teachers but could also be quite useful when student apply for a job or attempt to get into the college of their choosing. All of the hard work of collecting and organizing student work is done naturally in the process outlined above. All that is left is to identify the students best and linking to it on their own web site.

 

Again, I have to thank the fine folks who presented at the Google Education On Air Conference. Below are links to the resources and information that they shared with myself and the other conference attendees to help them both make Student Digital Portfolios something easy to accomplish and to get us to the promised land of the Paperless Classroom.

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2 Easy Paths to Web Site Nirvana for Teachers

Today we'll take a look at two super-simple tools to create and easily maintain a web page for your class. We'll go down the path to create both a site on Blogger or on Posterous (you'll probably need your Ironmail as well). Below is the presentation for our session today with all of the steps and instructions you'll need to get up and running!

Filed under  //  Blogger   Blogs   ISES   Posterous  
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Digital Video in the Classroom

Here's the agenda and resources for our Digital Video in the Classroom session today:


(download)

 

  • Importing Video and Images into your Project
    • The nice thing about iTunes & iPhoto...
  • Basic Edits
    • Trim vs. Crop
    • Splitting clips
    • Separating Audio from Video Tracks
    • Changing the direction of a clip
    • Speed up/slow down clips
  • Adding Still Images
  • Adding Titles, Transitions & Effects
  • Adding Audio & Sound Effects
  • Discussion of Copyright Issues
  • Sharing your work
  • Wrap Up

Some resources that you might find helpful:

Click here to download:
FilmProductionSteps.ppt (774 KB)
(download)

 

Click here to download:
iMovieHDTutorial.pdf (1.42 MB)
(download)

 

Click here to download:
storyboard1.pdf (20 KB)
(download)

 

Click here to download:
storyboard2.pdf (11 KB)
(download)

 

Click here to download:
storyboard3.pdf (26 KB)
(download)

Filed under  //  Digital Video   ICSD   MultiMedia   Posterous   Summer Sessions   TeacherTube   Video  
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Creating an Interactive, Easy to Maintain Web Presence

Filed under  //  Facebook Fan Pages   ICSD   PollEverywhere   Posterous   Summer Sessions   twitter  
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Things to do with Posterous today...

First off, let's change the theme:

  • From the Manage window, click the Settings button on the top right
  • Under the LOOK AND FEEL section, click the 'Edit Theme' button.
  • At the top, scroll through your over 40 theme options. Click the theme thumbnail to preview your site with this theme.
  • If you'd like, click the 'Customize' option on the top left to tweak the colors and other custom settings available with the theme you have chosen.
  • I'd skip the 'Advanced' option for now...
  • When you are happy, click the big green 'Save, I'm done!' button on the bottom right.
The Bookmarklet:
  • Posterous has a great tool for QUICKLY sharing a page on the Interent to your site - including a snippet of the page and your comments about it.
  • When you get back to your classroom, add the bookmarklet to your browser's quick-links bar by heading to this page: http://posterous.com/help/bookmarklet and dragging the 'Share on Posterous' button to your browser's bar.
Some Posterous Email Posting Tips:
  • Email anything to 'post@posterous.com', and it will be posted to your site.
  • Remember, attach anything you'd like to your email, and Posterous will figure out what to do with it.
  • If you are not ready for a post to be published, use 'private@posterous.com', and it will be marked as private invisible to your visitors until you change the post to public.
  • If you are using tags, you can add those to your post in the email by placing ((tags:Tag 1, Tag 2)) after the post title in the email subject line - this works with the Bookmarklet title as well!
  •  If you have an email signature, use #end when you want Posterous to finish paying attention to what's in the message. Anything after #end will not appear on your site.
  • If you are sending a particularly long post, use #more to create a page break - this keeps the important stuff visible on your main page and the details will be visible on the post page.
Autoposting:
  • What you post to your site is important to you, your students and their parents. 
  • Ideally, students and parents would visit your page daily to see what's new or what you've added.
  • In reality, this will not be the case. The solution to this is to use the Autopost feature of Posterous along with some other great services like Twitter or a Facebook Fan Page.
  • If you have a Twitter account or a Fan Page on Facebook, you can link your Posterous site to these services and when you post something to your Posterous site, links to your post will be pushed to your fans and followers.
  • In other words, they will get the information that you'd like them to have where they already spend a lot of time, making it a greater possibility for your information to reach your target audience.
  • Set up a Twitter account at twitter.com
  • Set up a Facebook Fan Page here.
  • Then, set up your Posterous Autoposting here.

 

Filed under  //  CVHS   Posterous  
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Speaking Web 2.0 - Presentation, Links & Resources

Here's the presentation for the session today:

The Topics of Discussion:

Other links & resources:

Poll Everywhere Questions:

Question 1

Question 2

Filed under  //  Facebook   Poll Everywhere   Qik   Twitter   UCET   URSA   Web 2.0   posterous  
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Posterous for Millard Teachers

Ever heard of email? That's how we'll be creating a classroom blog (or website - they are the same thing really...) today using a great service called Posterous. The training agenda, links and resources will follow the jump!
 

Read the rest of this post »

Filed under  //  Blogs   District Office   Millard   posterous  
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Can it really be that simple?

Let's see how posterous does with my first blog entry. I have not signed up for an account - all I have done is clicked a link on the site that opened up a new empty email with some instructions on what to do.
 
Let's put some images with this email and see what happens. I'll attach an image that I want to use in my new blog.
 
That's it. I am very curious to see what happens when I hit the send button. :D

Photo_87

Filed under  //  Posterous  
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