Thursday, December 17, 2015

New Grading Options in Google Classroom

Google Classroom Grading
From Alice Keeler at Teacher Tech:
Google Classroom has added some new features this week that make grading in Google Classroom a little easier. While I always recommend you do NOT put grades in Google Classroom, if you do use Google Classroom for grades you may be interested in these updates.

Edit Points

After creating an assignment, you can click on the assignment title in the stream to edit the default of 100 points.
Default 100
Click on “100 points” to enter an integer value for your points.
New points value google classroom

Enter Scores

You can now use the arrow keys or the enter key to enter in scores for students.
Arrow Keys

Sort Students

By default, the students are sorted by done and not done status. Click on “Sort by status” to sort the students alphabetically.
Sort students
You can sort students by first or last name.
Sort by last name Google Classroom

Send Feedback

In the bottom left-hand corner of Google Classroom is a question mark icon. Choose the “Send feedback” option to tell the Classroom team what you love about Classroom or what suggestions you have.
My wish: A focus on feedback instead of a focus on grades. Feedback faster!

How to Create Video Entries on Blogger

From Richard Byrne at Free Technology 4 Teachers:
A couple of weeks ago I wrote a post about using Blogger's webcam recording option to create video entries on your classroom blog. Over the weekend someone asked if I could clarify that process a bit more. The easiest way to clarify is to create a short how-to video so that's what I did this evening. The video is embedded below.


Applications for Education
One of the things that I always mention in my workshops on classroom blogging is the idea that blog posts don't have to be limited to text. In fact, they don't need to have text at all if you are having students make video blog entries. Posting video blog entries can be a great way to have students share reflections on things they have learned and experience in your classroom during a week.

3 Ideas for Opening Your Classroom to Something Techtastic!

From:  Thoughts on All Things EduTechie,

Every day I see teachers all over the EdTech spectrum- hesitant teachers and teachers "all in" regarding educational technology. As in many areas of life, we are all in different places in regards to our comfort levels, our "belief" in the abilities of technology, and our time available to devote to learning something new. With that in mind, here is a small list of suggestions to broaden/deepen/start technology in your classroom:
  1. Pick one thing to try this year that is tech-based. Perhaps it's using the e-portfolio app, Seesaw to help your students keep a journal of their learning in your classroom this year. Perhaps it is allowing your students to create videos using Green Screen by DoInk to allow students to share their knowledge on a subject. Perhaps it's owning the collaborative value of using Google Docs/Drive and Notability for writing projects. The opportunities are endless, contact someone in your building that seems to be doing something interesting, or your friendly tech coach!
  2. Immerse your professional side in Twitter for educational purposes. It's fairly simple- create a twitter account- follow some hashtags that would benefit you as a professional and get to learning. When you see someone posting things that interest you, follow them. It isn't like Facebook- it isn't weird to follow people you don't know. Educators use Twitter to broaden their view on education, so the more people you follow from a variety of places, the stronger your ability to see various ideas! Hashtags can be specific to what you teach or what your current interests are- for instance, I enjoy participating in a variety of hashtag chats #edchat #gwinchat #BYOTchat #1to1techchat #edtech #edtechbridge and my personal favorite #TnTechChat but I can glean lots of information just catching up on the hashtags occasionally using Tweetdeck without adding into the conversation myself (we call that Twitter lurking but it isn't a bad thing). Not quite sure how to start? Download the Tweechme app to develop your PLN (personal learning network) created by Susan Bearden.
  3. Ask! Seems simple, right? Do you have a lesson plan that could use a little UMPH? Do you have students that struggle consistently in a certain area? If you have a curriculum coordinator, a tech coach, or a fellow teacher that seems to have a handle on tech in the classroom- ask them what they would suggest! I enjoy being asked into classrooms to just observe. Often, because of what I do, I can think of ways that technology might enhance a certain lesson plan or even aid a certain student. Perhaps, start with a lesson plan that feels like it's a bit lackluster and grow it with the support of technology. Technology doesn't always fit but ask around to see what might help.
Simply stated- start simple. Find support. Take a chance. Knock down the walls of your classroom. Engage. CONNECT. CONSUME. CREATE. CURATE. 

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Lumen Learning (Candela) Open Educational Resources (OER)

Open Educational Resources (OER) are high-quality, openly licensed, online educational materials that offer an extraordinary opportunity for people everywhere to share, use, and reuse knowledge.

Lumen Learning Catalog Page (See All Subject Areas Here)


Catalog, filtering by History [x]
book-cover

American Government

book-cover

US History I (American Yawp)

book-cover

US History I (OpenStax)

book-cover

US History II (American Yawp)

book-cover

US History II (OpenStax)

Google Docs: Use Snagit to Leave Audio/Visual Feedback

Great post from Alice Keeler at Teacher Tech.  The good news is that Snagit is already installed on our Chromebooks.  Try it out!
Snagit Feedback
One of my favorite EdTech tools is Snagit. I use both the desktop version and the free Chrome extension. The Chrome extension is a great way to leave students audio and visual feedback. Snagit allows you to screen record. Snagit records your voice along with what is on your screen. This allows students to see what you are talking about. Best of all, Snagit saves the feedback to Google Drive.

Install Snagit

You need to be using Google Chrome and have installed the Snagit Chrome extension.

Resize the Window

When you screen record you want to make sure the student can see what you are seeing. I try to resize the window so it is rectangular. Almost like you are viewing a YouTube video.
Resize

Zoom

If I really want to make sure the student can see what I am seeing I will zoom in on the screen. Use Control Plus to zoom in. Control Minus to zoom out and Control Zero to reset the zoom.
Control Plus

Snagit Chrome Extension

Click on the Snagit Chrome extension up next to the Omnibox.
This will launch a side panel.
Side Panel Snagit

Screen

The top options allow you to do screenshots. Underneath “VIDEO” is an option for “Screen.” Click on “Screen” to start the screen recording.
The first option is to record your entire screen. I usually only want to record the window with student work. Choose the 2nd option which is the active window you were looking at.
Second option snagit

Talk

Provide the student audio feedback. Since the screen is also being recorded you can highlight the particular element you are looking at.

Keep it Short

Keep the recording short, you can create multiple feedback comments if you wish.

Stop Sharing

At the bottom of the screen is a blue button to “Stop sharing.” Click this to end the recording.
Stop sharing snagit

Recording Window

A new window will pop up. It may take a minute for the recording to process, your bandwidth speed will matter. Keeping the recording short reduces processing time. Name the screen recording once it has processed.
Recording window

Google Drive Link

Click on the blue button in the bottom right-hand corner. Choose the option for “Google Drive link.” The video was automatically saved to Google Drive. You need the link to the video. Google Drive Link

Caution

By default items in your Google Drive are private. This means that the video you created for the student is private. The student will not be able to view or listen to the video if it is private.Change the viewing permissions on the TechSmith folder in Google Drive to anyone with the link can view. Snagit Chrome extension screen recordings are automatically saved to the TechSmith folder. If the sharing permissions on the folder are changed, then any screenshots or recordings will take on the sharing permissions of the folder. In other words, if you take the time to change the sharing permissions on the folder then all of your Snagit recordings will be visible with the link.

Insert Comment

In the Google Doc, insert a comment. I use the keyboard shortcut Control Alt M. You can also right click and choose “Comment” from the menu.
Control Alt M
Paste (Control V) the link to the feedback recording into the comment. Students can click on the link to view the video and hear your feedback.
Paste feedback comment

Google Classroom

Instead of pasting the link into a comment in a Google Doc, you can paste the feedback link into the private comment spot in Google Classroom.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

20 Ways to use Formative for Awesome Assessment

I posted about Formative earlier in the year.  Here is an expanded post on its multiple uses.
From Matt at Ditch That Textbook:
When I return graded homework to students, I sort of cringe on the inside. I’m never sure where all that hard work and meaningful feedback is going to end up.
Sometimes it’s in the trash (or recycle bin). Sometimes it’s on the floor of the hallway.
The worst for me: half-torn and sticking out of the bottom of a locker.
I can understand it from a student perspective. They’ve moved on to other things. Yesterday’s assignment is so … yesterday.
If we can deliver that feedback in the moment — while they’re still wrestling with a question or problem or assignment — it’s more likely to hit the mark.
That’s where Formative (goformative.com) — one of my favorite classroom tech tools right now — comes in. It’s a free assessment tool that lets you …
  • Create questions (multiple choice, true/false, short answer and drawn “show your work” questions) to deliver to students
  • Add other content to the questions (an image, text, a whiteboard doodle or a YouTube video)
  • Watch as students answer from the teacher side of the site
  • Leave real-time feedback in the form of a grade and a written comment
You can deliver the questions/content to students through a classroom you set up in Formative or just by giving students a quick code to the assessment that they can enter at goformative.com/join.
Once you jump into the site, you’ll find that creating an assessment and adding questions to it is pretty easy. But as I’ve used it, I’ve realized that I’m only scratching the surface when it comes to Formative. There’s so much you can do.
Here are 20 ways you can make assessment awesome using Formative, from basic to creative:
1. Create quizzes or assignments. This is Formative at its core. Add questions to the assessment, deliver it to students, watch as they complete questions, and give them comments/grades as feedback.
2. Ask quick questions on the fly. Are students struggling with a specific problem? Do you need to know what they know on a key concept? Pull up Formative, create a quick one-question assignment, hit “Assign” and create a quick code. Students can enter the quick code atgoformative.com/join and answer. It’s all set with minimal set-up time. (Once you get confident in this, you might be able to set all this up quickly during a class.)
3. Make your old assignments digital. If you’re not quite ready to create brand new, shiny digital activities, you can put a new spin on your old ones. If you have a document or PDF file of the assignment, upload it to an assessment in Formative. Then you can add interactive questions right on top of it that students can answer. It makes grading those old assignments faster, and the immediate responses means feedback is more meaningful.
Let students draw answers to questions with "Show Your Work" drawing questions.
Let students draw answers to questions with “Show Your Work” drawing questions.
4. Draw answers to reading comprehension questions. My favorite type of question on Formative is the “show your work” question. It gives students a digital whiteboard for drawing answers (instead of typing them). With students who struggle to write (i.e. younger students, students who struggle with English, some special needs students), they may have comprehended what they just read but can’t get it out easily in written words. A drawing can show you all the details that student comprehended.
5. Assign a Formative quiz through Google Classroom. If you use Google Apps in class and have access to Google Classroom, now Formative interacts directly with Google Classroom. After creating an assessment, click the Google Classroom button in Formative to send it directly to your Google Classroom.
6. Let students review feedback. If you assign your assessments through a class in Formative, students will be able to go back through their assessments later. They can see previous questions as well as the grades and comments left as feedback. This can provide a nice review/reteaching opportunity.
7. Make “circle the one that doesn’t fit” questions. When you add “show your work” drawing questions to Formative, you can let students answer by drawing on images that you’ve uploaded (click “add a background image” when you create the question). Also, when you give students a digital whiteboard for drawing answers. This is great for circling what matches or what doesn’t fit.
8. Make “finish the drawing” questions. When you use “show your work” drawing questions, you can start students’ work for them by drawing on their digital whiteboards. When they get the question, they’ll see what you drew and will be able to finish. For elementary classes, this could mean drawing the face on a person or drawing the second half of a body. For older students, it could mean drawing boxes for a comic strip and letting students make the comic in Formative.
9. Show understanding by creating a word web/semantic map. Use that same “show your work” drawing question to let students make connections between key concepts in a word web.
Hide student names and scores before showing the class.
Hide student names and scores before showing the class.
10. Discuss student work without showing names. After students finish their questions in a Formative assessment, teachers can see every student’s answer to a particular question. Teachers can display those answers to the class without showing names or grades assigned to them. Just click the blue buttons (one is a percent sign and the other is a group of three people) to stop displaying names or grades.
11. Leave better substitute teacher lesson plans. You don’t have to worry about how your directions are delivered by a substitute teacher if you’re gone if you create them in Formative. Assign an assessment through Formative, add instruction by clicking “Add Content” > “Text Block”, add questions and videos and more, and let students work. You can even create a YouTube video of yourself giving instructions and add it to the assessment!
12. Take a global poll. Has your class made contact with another class in another part of your state, a different state or a different country? (If not, find some great ways of connecting by clicking here!) If so, everyone can work on the same poll, assignment or discussion question together in the same Formative assessment. Create the assessment, click “assign” and create a quick code. Give the code to students and direct them to goformative.com/join.
13. Do an assignment across every class. Don’t want to take your Formative assessment global? You can have all classes in the same course or grade level do the same poll, activity or discussion question together as well.
Add videos for students to watch. Then ask question to show comprehension.
Add videos for students to watch. Then ask question to show comprehension.
14. Flip your classroom. Formative can help you deliver instruction to students while they’re home so you can practice while you and your students are together in the classroom. Create a short instructional YouTube video and add it to a Formative assessment (or find one on YouTube). Then create questions that make sure the students watched and understood the video. Once they’ve done the assignment outside of class, you’ll be ready to dig deeper in class!
15. Gather ideas at a staff meeting.Formative can be used with teachers as well! Create a couple quick questions for teachers at a meeting. Then give them a quick code and direct them to goformative.com/join. They can draw, choose or write in their answers. (Or, consider using Formative to eliminate staff meetings. Deliver the meeting through videos or text blocks and gather feedback through questions!)
16. Deliver digital map quizzes. Find a picture of a map online (or take a picture of one in your room using a camera). Upload it to a Formative assessment using the “Upload and Transform” button. Then click on the cities, states or geographical features you want students to identify to create questions there.
17. Analyze a historic/current events photo or work of art. Find a digital image of a photo or artwork you want students to analyze. Add it to a “Show Your Work” drawing question using the “add a background image” feature. Students can circle important parts or add text to explain features.
Give students an image of a passage to read. Then let them draw and write on it to show understanding.
Give students an image of a passage to read. Then let them draw and write on it to show understanding. (See my “student” response in green at right … click image to see full-size.)
18. Analyze a reading passage and/or identify evidence. Add a reading passage to a Formative assessment (by uploading a document or PDF of it OR taking a screenshot of it and adding the screenshot to a “Show Your Work” drawing question). Students can underline important parts or type text next to the passage to comment on specific parts.
19. Imagine and illustrate a scene. After discussing a historical event, story or concept in science (among other things), have students draw what they think it looks like in a “Show Your Work” drawing question using specific details from class or the reading.
20. Analyze a video visually. Add a YouTube video to a Formative assessment. While students watch it, they can take a screenshot of a specific part and add that image to a “Show Your Work” drawing question. (Or you can do this ahead of time by uploading the screenshot to a “Show Your Work” drawing question as a background image.) Students can draw on that screenshot or add text. Example: In a health/physical education class, students could watch a game or an athlete’s performance and then analyze it by marking up the screenshot.

Monday, December 14, 2015

9 Digital Tools for your Classroom Toolbelt

 From Matt at Ditch That Textbook:
The digital tool doesn’t make the class, but it does help to have some good ones handy.
Sometimes, just finding a new digital tool can open up new opportunities for you and your students.
I collect new tools from interactions on Twitter, from reading blog posts and from face-to-face interactions with other educators. When I hear something I like, I put it in a note in my Google Keep. (Don’t know about Google Keep? It’s a great organizational tool.)
Here are nine of them I’ve run across recently that could make a difference in your classroom:
1. ClipChamp (clipchamp.com) — Video projects can be great learning experiences. (In fact, this post I wrote about video projects is one of my most popular all-time.) Turning in those video projects can be a hassle. If you don’t have an idea established, consider ClipChamp. It lets you upload video quickly and easily to share. Students can upload their video projects, make video files smaller and share them to YouTube, Facebook, Vimeo or Google Drive.
2. OrangeSlice: Teacher Rubric (Google Docs add-on) — This add-on makes creating rubrics in Google Docs easy and fast. Once you install the add-on in your document, use OrangeSlice to write the rubric (or choose a pre-made one) and then start grading. It also shows student progress from the initial grading.
3. BoomWriter (boomwriter.com) — BoomWriter makes the writing process visual and engaging. It has three sections: StoryWriter, ProjectWriter and WordWriter. In StoryWriter, students write a story in an illustrated digital book. They can later order real published copies of their books. ProjectWriter is a platform for non-fiction group writing projects. WordWriter makes vocabulary fun and interactive.
4. Nearpodize this! (Chrome extension) – Presentation slides are good for delivering content, but interactive slides are great! Nearpodize this! lets you make a Google Slides presentation interactive, just like Nearpod makes slides interactive. The teacher controls how quickly to advance through slides, and Nearpod provides interactive elements that students can use on their own devices.
5. StoryJumper (storyjumper.com) — StoryJumper is a bit like BoomWriter’s StoryWriter tool. StoryJumper is a simple story-writing platform that even the youngest writers can use. Add scenes and photos to your text to make an eye-catching picture book. Books can be shared with others, and published copies can be ordered.
6. Hemingway App (hemingwayapp.com) — If students do any writing for you, Hemingway App may become your first line of defense against poor grammar. When students write, they can copy and paste the text from their writing into the page at Hemingway App. The site instantly analyzes their writing for wordy sentences, passive voice, complicated words and more. It even shows what grade level the student is writing on!
7. Storyboard That (storyboardthat.com) — Storytelling can be fun, but creating a story without a plan can be complicating — and confusing for the reader! StoryboardThat lets students create storyboards to organize their stories or their thinking. It taps into Creative Commosn photos and lets students use posable characters. Students drag and drop elements into their layouts.
8. LEGO Movie Maker (iTunes) — Stop motion animation can be a fun, creative way to express ideas. Students can use this app as well as their LEGOs (or anything else) to create videos easily. Shoot images, edit them in the app, add music and produce your movie. A new feature lets students shoot a new frame of the movie by simply snapping their fingers.
9. Quizizz (quizizz.com) – I’ve used and loved Kahoot! for a while (and still do), but I like Quizizz’s take on multiplayer gamified assessment. (By the way, have you seen my 10 ways to electrify class with Kahoot!?) Create multiple-choice questions (or choose a set of questions from Quizizz) and give students the game code so they can join. Students work at their own pace through questions and watch themselves move up and down the leaderboard as they answer questions. It’s a lot of fun!

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Google Drive: Shift T

Shift t
From Alice Keeler at Teacher Tech:
 Go to Google Drive and skip the “New” button. Instead, hold down the Shift key and press T. Like magic, a Google Doc will be launched in a new tab.
Shift T