Create and Publish a Quiz in Google Docs

April 4th, 2011 by admin

Below I’ve embedded a slideshow with directions for creating and embedding quizzes using Google Forms, but here are a few points that should be emphasized.

1. Make sure the first question is “student name.” Otherwise you won’t know who submitted which answers.
2. You can mix question types (multiple choice, short answer, paragraph) but if you have too many types and too many students, the spreadsheet can become difficult to navigate.
3. When embedding the form into a blog, make sure you edit the width to fit within your blog’s main column. You can use the same principles of editing the size of a YouTube video for editing the width of a spreadsheet.

This post was copied and used by permission from: http://www.freetech4teachers.com/p/google-tools-tutorials.html

It’s gonna be a great day!

February 2nd, 2011 by admin

Last Monday, January 24, 2011, I started my day by “tweeting” this:

On this day I was privileged to work with 22 Middle School Social Studies teachers, 5 building Technologists, 5 Media Specialists, an Instructional Coach and an Instructional Technologist on what would be their first day of using and seeing their class set of iPads for instructional practice. I was very thankful to have the help of our Apple representatives, Patrick Benko and Frank Vretos as they led the bulk of the hands-on training that day, while I navigated the questions about set up, synching and district implementation, policy and planning.

As you can image, this was not the first day of working with the iPads for me! That day began many months before, when our Director of Curriculum and Instruction, Diane Lauer, proposed to the Social Studies Task Force that they think about integrating and investing in technology for their classrooms when the new Core Standards rolled out, and not necessarily in textbooks. This idea was discussed and debated for several months before it was finally agreed that not only was this a direction the group wanted to take, but they wanted to focus on the two grade levels that would see the most significant change in their curriculum standards: sixth and seventh grade. In addition, they wanted to invest in iPads.

From this point on, I spent as much time as possible in learning the educational application of iPads. I attended several webinars, trainings, followed blogs, followed Twitter and engaged in as much discussion as possible about our venture. Our district Apple technician, Don Cochran, was also a great help to me when I had questions or encountered problems that I couldn’t solve by myself.

In early December, our Board of Education approved the Curriculum plan for Social Studies, and things really began to move quickly. We ordered 315 iPads before we left for Christmas vacation. They arrived in my office the day we returned. Before this three week flurry of activity that involved: unpacking, assigning asset tags, dividing into teacher groups, placing in cases and synching; a few other steps had to be completed.

  • We assigned an iPad to each of the 5 Middle School Social Studies teachers on the Task Force, along with a MacBook, and asked them to explore apps and give us feedback about positives and negatives.
  • We set up an Apple Volume Purchasing account and purchased vouchers through Apple for the apps we wanted to buy.
  • We decided on a total of 41 apps to initially synch to each set of iPads. 30 of those were free apps. We used Volume Purchasing for the remaining 11.
  • We tested 4 different cases, hoping to find a better and less expensive case than the one that Apple sells for $39. After seeing iPads literally fall out of each one, we went back to the originally Apple case.
  • We decided that each teacher that was receiving a set of iPads would also receive an LCD projector, an iPevo document camera and a MacBook to use as a “synching station”.
  • We also bought 1 or 2 iPod Touches for each classroom, mainly to give a camera to each teacher.
  • Separate iTunes accounts were set up for each school and grade level before the synching began.

Then…. the synching began. Each Macbook was pre-loaded with the apps, and 15 iPads were synched to each station. I enlisted the help of a good friend, to help me do all this synching. Each iPad took about 10 minutes to synch, and she had multiple stations synching at the same time. I couldn’t have finished without her assistance! Thanks Nan! I also enlisted the help of anyone I could to get the iPads into cases, count cords and label boxes during the last week. Many thanks to the SSC staff, especially Reyne, Susan, Lynn, Glenna, Andy and Mary. My last step was to get the warehouse drivers to deliver the 50 plus boxes to our training site.

I set an ambitious agenda for the day of the training. We talked about synching, about purchasing and basic care and handling. Patrick and Frank amazed everyone by with the ease of creating an e-pub in “Pages” and sending it directly to the iPad where students could engage the iBooks features of highlighting, bookmarking and using a dictionary. We spent a lot of time on basic iPad 101 questions, settings and applications and even experimented with some of the apps. We also spent time on helping some teachers get a basic understanding of the MacBook, since some teachers did not have any experience with the Mac OS platform.

So, what’s next? I’ve been out visiting the classrooms where the iPads have been deployed. I’ve managed to touch base with 16 teachers to offer support and answer questions. I had some amazing conversations about teaching, learning and the tools that we now can use. Most teachers are feeling excited and a little overwhelmed. They tell me they’ve never experienced anything like this.

Overall, I’d say it really was a great day!

Mobile Year in Review Video

January 8th, 2011 by admin

Video: The anti-creativity checklist

December 27th, 2010 by admin

Tools Available for Check Out

November 12th, 2010 by admin

Many people have been asking what kind of tools are available for check out from the Technology Integration Department. Here is a list of the items that are available for teachers and administrators.

  • iPods (5 sets of 5)
  • Clickers (2 sets)
  • Kindle e-readers (2 sets of 6)
  • Netbooks (2)
  • Laptops (6-10)
  • Document Cameras (2)
  • Mimio System (1)
  • Flip Cameras (5)
  • WebCams (3)
  • Digital Cameras (6)
  • USB midi Keyboard (1)

Most items can be checked out for six weeks at a time. To reserve an item, contact Val Downing on our district email system.

Bitstrips!

September 9th, 2010 by admin

Have you tried this FREE resource yet?

Did I mention, if you like it, the district will continue to pay for your membership!

True Love

August 26th, 2010 by admin

Tonight I was skimming through some Twitter updates when I came upon one by Bud Hunt (@budtheteacher), a fellow educator in the St. Vrain School District. Bud tweeted about his daughter’s first library book checkout today, and shared a picture of the cover of her choice:  “Ella Sets the Stage”. The post made me smile and I realized that I was thinking about it off and on for several hours. That simple sharing of her first library experience, transported me back to my own first memory of visiting my school’s library. I remember feeling that I was somehow in a truly magical place. I couldn’t believe we could actually leave the classroom and be given time to sift through so many exciting books, one of which we could even take home! I remember excitedly crawling around on the floor, sitting between the shelves and comparing books and covers and pictures and words I could read “all by myself” with my classmates and friends. For me, this was a start of a true love.

Around the same time, I also remember learning how to read. We sat in circle on a rug in front a giant, 3 foot copy of “Dick and Jane” or “See Spot Run”, and tried to crack this mysterious code that would make us readers! I couldn’t wait. I couldn’t get enough. On some of our reading days, we would even don a pair of very large, very brown and very uncomfortable headphones to have our turn at using the latest technology (I think they were cassette tapes, but I really can’t remember for sure) to listen to the stories as we learned to read along. As it often goes, the new technology hardly ever worked right, but we didn’t care– It was a special thing and we were still getting to read, and be cool with the large, brown, uncomfortable headphones.

My love affair with books and reading continued throughout my childhood, adolescence and adulthood. I remember going to the public library occasionally with my mother and spending so much time picking out a book that she would often leave me and come back to get me later. When we couldn’t get to the library, my best friend and I would wait for the one day a week that the “book mobile” would  park in our neighborhood. We would walk the two blocks to the grocery store parking lot and bring back as many books as we could carry to read and share until the next week when the “book mobile” would show up again. No matter the weather, we loved that big ol’ bus with all those books.

Today, I still love to read. I have a Kindle and must have read almost 20 books this past summer. I share an Amazon Kindle account with a friend so that we can share the “books” and our reading experiences as much as possible. Like many of us in education, I read many, many items: fiction and non-fiction, in many forms throughout the day.

I still love libraries, whether they are in a school or in a city. I can still get lost in them, as well as a bookstore, for hours on end. And, I’ll still smile when I watch (or remember) the excitement of child with their very first library checkout.

(Image downloaded via Twitter @budtheteacher. August 25, 2010)

Murphy’s Law?

August 18th, 2010 by admin

Things always happen when you least expect or when you really need them to function properly, don’t they? This week is the first week of school for our students in TSD. Many of our administrators have begun to blog; as have most of our new teachers, in accordance with their Tech Boot Camp assignments. Well, as Murphy would have it, our Thompsonblogs site decided to have some serious issues and was not working for a few days. As you can see now, it looks like we are back in business! My thanks to all of you for your patience as I worked through the problems. I can’t promise that it will always be working at 100%, but I can promise that my intentions are to keep it as close to that as possible. I hope all of you had a wonderful, and Murphy-free start to the school year!

What’s your sentence?

August 2nd, 2010 by admin

Need a simple way to connect to students and/or staff the first week? This may provide some inspiration.

Two questions that can change your life from Daniel Pink on Vimeo.

Welcome iLead Participants

July 20th, 2010 by admin

I just wanted to extend a warm welcome to all the principals and administrators that are participating in the iLead class and hosting their blogs on this site. It was so wonderful to work with all of you as you received your iPads and started your blogs yesterday. I know that your commitment and excitement will effect everyone you work with, from other administrators to teachers and support staff. What a great opportunity for learning together in Thompson we have!