Thursday, August 18, 2016

Google Classroom Login Cards

As everyone is getting organized for the new school year, teachers are creating their new classes in Google Classroom.  Here's a few documents I made to help you in the process. Keeping a handy list to assist elementary students with logins at the beginning of school can sometimes be very helpful.  Click here or the image below to create a copy of this Google Doc template for your logins.
Secondly, logins go much easier in the elementary classroom if you have a login card ready for students.  They can use this card until they have memorized their logins.  Click here or the image below to make a copy of this Google Doc template for your student logins.
I hope these items will be helpful for you and your students!

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Creating a New Class in Google Classroom

Are you ready to setup this year's Google Classroom? Watch the clip below to see how.

Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Archiving Google Classroom

As you begin to create your new Google Classroom for this school year, make sure you take a moment to archive your class from last year.  Watch below to see the steps.


Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Book Creator + Classroom (Saving & Turning In)

Are you using Book Creator and Google Classroom?  We have been creating books in Kindergarten and submitting them to classroom.  Yes!  It's easy enough for a kindergartner!  The teacher is then able to view students completed work in her classroom and share great examples on the Promethean Board with the class.  Here's a Google Slide with the steps to walk your class through the process.

Friday, October 30, 2015

Spook-tacular Tech Ideas

Here's a couple Halloween themed iPad lessons I've had the opportunity to help third grade teachers with this month.  These teachers began their 1:1 journey at the beginning of October, so these lessons were the introductory lessons with these apps.

Multiplication arrays in Doodle Buddy

With the free Doodle Buddy app, students made pictorial representations of multiplication problems.

With this activity we did also see some wrong answers.  An extension to this lesson would be to take some of the student made examples, correct and incorrect, to revisit the following day.  Have the students review the multiplication arrays with the equations and explain if they are correct or incorrect and why.  

Spook-tacular Stories with Carve a Pumpkin & ChatterPix Kids App Smash

The students began with the free Carve a Pumpkin app.  With this app, they created their pumpkins and "carved" the faces.  
Then students imported the pumpkins into the free ChatterPix Kids app to record their "spook"-tacular stories!





Sunday, October 25, 2015

Readbox Bulletin Board

I love QR codes, especially when they are mixed with great bulletin board displays.  QR codes are a great way to bring student work displays to life.  They can also provide your community an interactive view of student projects.

Ashley Landreth (@mrslandreth3)  a third grade teacher in Greenwood, SC had this awesome bulletin board.  I first saw this idea from her tweet as she was getting ready for open house:
I loved the display so much, I asked her permission to feature it on my blog.  Third grade students at her school created book recommendations using the ChatterPix Kids app.  Now students can scan the QR codes to hear a little book preview before they check out books in the library.

Click the ChatterPix video clips below to see two student samples.

What a great way to get students excited about books!  A book recommendation from a peer can go a long way to encouraging reluctant readers in your class.   I love how this display encourages a community of readers in the school.

Monday, September 21, 2015

iPad Basics: Camera Introduction Lesson

I recently introduced the camera app in several kindergarten classes.  Teaching students how to work the camera lays the groundwork for using content creation apps throughout the year.  Students will be able to take pictures to document skills we are practicing or what they are learning.

I taught several mini lessons, over the span three days, on the basic features of the iPad camera.   I would model each of these skills, then the students would practice.  I would take good and not good photos for each item so we could talk about the difference.

Camera Basics:
  • take a photo
  • delete a photo
  • delete multiple photos at the same time
  • focus the camera while taking a photo
    • double tap for the yellow square
    • hold the iPad steady (you may need to prop up on your elbows)
  • zoom in with a two finger pinch
    • zoom in by moving closer to the object is best
  • change from front to back cameras
  • switch to video
  • crop a photo

After our intro to the camera mini-lessons, the students completed a short activity to practice using the camera the following day.  Since kindergarteners were practicing counting to 10, we had the students count groups of objects and practice taking photos.

Materials: number cards and math manipulatives






With this activity we could quickly see where students were on their counting skills.  After looking at the photos, we had the students recount pictures where we saw an error.