Sunday, September 14, 2014

New Position and New Helpful Calendar Tools

This school year I have started a new adventure.  After teaching at Carlmont High School for the last twelve years, I am now our districts new Instructional Technology Specialist.  I spend one day a week at each of the district schools helping teachers integrate technology into their curriculum.

People keep asking me if I miss being in the classroom.  Honestly, after four weeks, I am still not sure.  I miss my AVID students.  I left them after their sophomore year.  And I missing talking with my students and having them hang out in my classroom at lunch.  But there are some things that I definitely don't miss - grading, spending hours setting up biology labs, and getting emails about grades. 

Also, I have had to get used to traveling around to different schools, learning all the different bell schedules, finding my way across new campuses and learning names to so many different people.  

So far, most of what I have been doing is helping teachers and other staff get to know two new programs our district has adopted - School Loop and GAFE.  It feels great to see teachers excited about what these tools can do, but I can't wait to start helping teachers actually plan lessons and integrate technology into their classes for students to use.  We have so many great teachers in our district, and I look forward to working with them and their students.

In this new position, I have found that I rely on my Google calendar immensely.   Last week I had appointments with twenty different teachers, and that doesn't include the meetings I had at the district office.  I have found two tools that work with my Google calendar that have saved my sanity.  One is Schedule Once, and the other is the Google calendar text notifications.

The first few weeks of this position, teachers were emailing me asking to meet, but they didn't tell me what school they were at, or would ask to meet fourth period, but forget to tell me that they had an assembly schedule that day.  I ended up spending a ton of time emailing back and forth to set up meetings.  I started to explore different ways to book appointments - GAFE's appt slots (not great for varied schedules), youcanbook.me (didn't put the calendar event on the appt. booker's calendar) and then found and loved Schedule Once.  Schedule Once allows me to set up 5 booking calendars, one for each school I visit.  I can then set my availability and give out the website to my booking calendar.  Teachers can choose their school, pick an amount of time they would like to meet, and then find an open slot.  When they book an appointment it goes to my Google calendar as well as theirs.  I even have it set up to send a reminder email to the teacher the morning before the meeting.  It is the greatest tool ever!  I don't have to worry about anything, their is no emailing back and forth, and the appointments just show up in my calendar.



Now that I had all these appointments set up, I would get really involved with helping the teachers I was meeting with, that I didn't watch the clock as carefully as I should.  So I played around with my phone notification settings.  I didn't want to get event notifications for every one of my Google calendars.  So I checked out the settings on the Google calendar.  I set it up so my work appointment calendar would send me a text message 10 minutes before the start of each meeting.  Now, I get a text, and I know I need to get moving to my next appointment.  



I look forward to a great year, and know that I will be able to have an impact on so many more student's learning.  I met a lot of other teachers who are starting working in educational technology TOSA positions this year, so I know I will be collaborating with some great teachers this year as I figure out this new job.  

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Shorten URLs with goo.gl

When using the class sets of Chromebooks or iPads it can be hard to get links out to your students.  You can send them a document using Doctopus or post links on a webpage, but sometimes you find something in the middle of class and you need a quick way to send out a link.  

Goo.gl is the answer.  You can go to the goo.gl website and paste in a link to the web address you want to shorten.  



To make things even simpler, you can download the goo.gl shortener Chrome Extension which will show up right next to your Omnibox.  Then, all you have to do is be on whatever website you want to share, click the extension, and it will give you the short URL.  This short URL is much easier to write up on the board to share with students.  (Just be careful with some characters such as a capital i and lowercase l.  You can always click the link again to get a different short URL that is easier to read.)

Or, you can get a QR code which you can project or you can copy (Control C) and paste (Control V) it onto a document.

This should help you share links with students and get students to the right spot much quicker.




Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Sound the Alert!

Alerts is not one of Google's most well known tools, but I have found it very useful.  

Google Alerts allow you to automatically receive email alerts for search queries that you set up.  

As a teacher, I use Alerts to notify me of current events that relate to the topic I am currently teaching.  For example, during my last unit, evolution, I set up an alert using the keyword speciation.  I wanted to find current and relevant news articles that I could share with my students, but I didn't want to spend the time to keep searching the web.  Anytime google found this keyword, it sent me an email with a link to the website.

If your students are doing a research project, you can teach them how to set up alerts to get new information about their topic.

I think that Alerts would be a useful tool for school administrators to get emails each time their school is mentioned on the web or in the news.  Here is an example of a Google Alert email that I received about my school.  




It is pretty easy and quick to set up.  Just go to http://www.google.com/alerts and fill out the form with your search query.  You can change the settings to customize the search and the amount of emails you receive.  You can even set it to search blogs, news, videos, other websites!


I would love to hear other creative ideas on how you would use Google Alerts.  Please share in the comments below.