Showing posts with label google docs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google docs. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2014

Writing in my Classroom



With the change in my classroom this year, I've really changed how I teach writing.  I've always been a big proponent of Google Docs, but they've become the core of writing workflow in the classroom.  I started the year, by organizing myself.  I created folders for all my students, and shared them with their individual Google Docs accounts.  Whenever they create a document, spreadsheet or presentation they put it in that folder, that way I have access to all their work, and they never have to share it with me, it's automatic!

A typical writing piece begins with some instruction by myself or an instructional assistant and many times they create their first draft in Draftbuilder from Don Johnston.  We are lucky enough to have a district license to the Solo Suite and I find it invaluable to help organize students writing.  I have several students in 2nd grade, and they are very comfortable with using Draftbuilder.  I also encourage them to use CoWriter (word prediction software) to help as they write.  It could be any word prediction software (ReadWrite Gold or Wynn), but since we have Solo, we use CoWriter.  For my students using something with an audio preview is essential in making them successful in writing.

Once they have created a first draft we transfer the text to a Google Doc.  Draftbuilder is great for a first draft, but then it gets a little clunky to edit the text.  Google Docs gives us a lot of flexibility and options for feedback.  Once in Google Docs, students can use the Google Contextual Spell Check which is really amazing.  Check out this video of how it corrected one students writing.



We always recommend that students read their writing out loud to see if it makes sense.  For students who struggle with reading, this may be a challenge.  Enter the Read & Write for Google Docs Extension from Read & Write Gold!  Once installed in your Google Chrome browser, it sits at the top of your Google Docs, and when you want to hear what you've written, just tap play and you can hear it!  Students have some options for slowing down and speeding up the voice as needed.  I just have my students listen to their writing and circle things they want to check on a copy they've printed out.

One piece I'm just starting to add to our writing is Kaizena.  You can read my most recent post about using, but I am really excited to use it more consistently with students and leave them audio feedback about their work.  We do conference about their writing and when they print out a draft, we will review it for capitalizations, word usage, and punctuation together.

When we have finished all the drafts, incorporated all the comments and gotten ourselves a good final draft, then they put it up on their blog.  They will look for a picture that goes with the story, and we copy and paste it into their KidBlog.  We are still working out the best way to get images into the posts.  Right now I'm trying to use the Research feature in Google Docs, but need to streamline the process a little more.  We also need to learn about leaving and responding to comments on our blogs (but that's a post for another day).

I'll admit, I had no idea how long this post was going to be when I started writing, but it really feels good to put it all down.  I think that the potential for writing utilizing some very basic technology supports it huge.  Hopefully, you'll find these ideas helpful as well!



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Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Kaizena - Voice Comments for Google Docs


Last year, I posted about a Google Doc extension called Voice Comments.  You installed it in your Google Drive and you could hight light portions of the text and record voice comments.  There were some bugs like the fact that your formatting would disappear, but that seemed like a minor inconvenience compared to the awesomeness of leaving these voice comments.

Well this year at ICE 2014, I was introduced to the NEW Voice Comments - Kaizena!  Kaizena is be the same folks who did Voice Comments, but it is upgraded!  Just head to Kaizena and click on the link to connect your Google Drive account.  Then all you have to do is find a document (does not work with spreadsheets or presentations) and then you can start leaving voice comments, written comments and even links to resources like videos or articles.  It really have a ton of potential.

One note I overlooked is that you have to share a link back to the document after you are done leaving your comments.  It shows under "Comments" button near the share button in your student's document. Or you could send them an email letting them know they have comments to listen to.

I've always looked for ways to increase my students independence and Kaizena is a great way to give feedback that they are able to use.  I can't wait to fully integrate it into my classroom writing process!



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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Voice Comments in Google Docs

Here's an interesting Google Chrome extension/Drive App that has been all over Twitter this week - Voice Comments.  Once installed, the app from Learn.ly lets you leave voice comments on a Google Doc.  There are some great screencasts of how to install and use Voice Comments.



The one drawback at this point is that the doc loses all formatting while leaving the comment, but they are working on fixing that bug.  The comments can be linked directly to specific points in the doc or just as a general comment.  This would certainly be a great way to leave feedback to students on their writing!  Try it out!

Voice Comments - Google Chrome App



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Monday, February 11, 2013

Slide Rocket & Google Docs


Sliderocket, an online presentation tool, has announced integration with Google Drive.  This is not a new collaboration, but I just heard about it on the Mobile Reach #41 (Yes, I'm a little behind).  Using the presentation tool is great, but Sliderocket has some good features that make it useful to try.  You can try out the integration with full features for free for 14 days, or you can sign up for a free Educator account.  If you have Google Apps at your district you can ask your administrator to add it to your apps account.

I think the one feature I am very interested in using with Sliderocket is the audio narration.  Since Slidrocket/Google Docs store files online your presentations are available on most devices (iOS, full Android support not yet available) or computer.  If you use it to create books like these - Stories in a New York Minute - you'll have a large eBook library in no time!



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Friday, June 29, 2012

Special Ed Students in the Cloud


Wade Wingler (@INDataProject) of the INData Project at Easter Seals Crossroads asked me to present at their one day conference today - Assistive Technology and Cloud-Based Computing.  I agreed and presented on what I called - Special Ed Students in the Cloud.  You can view the entire day's presentations from the INData website - Full Day Trainings, click the link near the bottom to view the archive.

During the presentation I asked the participants to come up with more ideas to use with each of the tools I presented on.  You can find all those great ideas on this Google Doc - Special Ed Students in the Cloud Ideas.  Please feel free to add to the list and share away!



Photo courtesy of Flickr Creative Commons - Kevin Dooley


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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Google's New Spell Check


Google announced recently that they will be updating their Spell Checker in Google Docs.  Google describes the update this way:
The neat thing about that system is that it’s adaptive: our suggestions get smarter and smarter based on the words Googlebot sees as it explores the web.
What's even cooler about having an adaptive Spell Checker is that it's also contextual.  If you look closely at the image above you'll see that I've used the wrong form of "meat" and it suggested the correct one to me.  I'm not sure how crazy you can misspell things, but it is a good option for many students.  

The other very cool point is that it looks like to Google Team is working to integrate it into the Chrome Web Browser which would help in all parts of using the web.  You can find some more information here at Lifehacker - Google's New Spell Check is Crazy Awesome.



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Friday, March 2, 2012

Google Docs for Special Education


I'd like to take a moment and share with you my latest presentation - Google Docs for Special Education.  This presentation covers the ways Google Docs can be used to Collaborate, Collect and Communicate with students, related service professionals and parents.

Presentation - http://bit.ly/spedgoogledocs

Wiki - http://bit.ly/spedgoogledocswiki



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Monday, February 27, 2012

ICE Conference 2012 - #ice12


I have been very hard at work preparing for the upcoming ICE conference, here in St. Charles, IL.  What that means is that I've neglected this blog a little.  I am currently getting ready to help run the UDL Playground at ICE to show off the concepts of UDL and some of the great tools there are to support it.  It also means I get to meet a ton of great educators, and let them play with all sorts of gadgets!

One of the resources my collaborators and I have put together is this wiki - http://udlplayground.wikispaces.com.  This wiki is full of great resources for anyone to learn about and implement the ideas of UDL.  We've also included a slideshow with a few examples of UDL to show off during the conference.  If you think a resources is missing, please take a moment and fill out this short form - http://udlplayground.wikispaces.com/addresource.

I've also been working on a presentation for ICE - Google Docs for Special Education.  This presentation focuses on using Google Docs to Collaborate with students and other professionals, Collect data, and Communicate with all stakeholders.  More information on that in an upcoming post!

If you are at ICE, please take a moment to stop by the Marsalis Room (it's near the continental breakfast setup, by the pool!), check out our tools and say Hi!  I'll be doing my best to tweet from the conference, but I encourage you to check out the ICE conference Wiki (live coverage of sessions, including keynotes, and presenter handouts) and Ning for the latest information.



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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Check out my latest post for the EdReach Network, Google Docs for Communication.



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Friday, December 10, 2010

Googling for Communicating


Way back in April of 2009, I shared how I had started using Google Docs to increase collaboration between myself, my related service providers, outside therapists & parents.  A year and a half later it's going gangbusters!  It's been a huge success for me, and my parents.  It is a great way to track student progress, it's a wonderful record of student behavior.

Since I started this project I have added some parts.  For instance, I created a second page just for parents & outside therapists to share information about a student.  One parent even keeps all their child's information about medication changes and seizure activity, which makes it extremely easy for the school nurse to be kept updated!

I've created a Prezi that details the steps I've taken to create the documents, modify them so they are shared correctly, protected them, & added notifications.  You can see it here - Googling for Communicating.

Recently, I've had to make a new portion to the communication logs - translation.  I've had a new student start in my room, whose parents do not speak English, but I wanted to continue to have the opportunity to share information.  Google has thought of this and has created a formula to automatically translate cells.  IT uses the Google Translate engine and I can't verify how accurate the translation is (since I don't speak any other languages), but I figure it's better than not communicating.  I've posted some directions for using the formula at my wiki - Googling for Communicating - Translation.  You can see a sample here - Patrick's Communication Log - Sample.

Patrick


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Monday, January 25, 2010

Googling for Communicating with Parents

So last year I started sharing daily communication with the parents in my room via a Google Docs spreadsheet. It was a huge success! The reason I bring this us is I've been asked by my district to teach a workshop on some of the ways I communicate with parents, i.e. - Googling for Communicating with Parents! So while I'm spending some time with colleagues, please enjoy a repost (slightly edited) of the thought that started this all off!

Patrick

Collaboration (slightly edited) - Originally posted 4/16/2009

One area that is something that I find myself struggling with from time to time is collaboration. Between IEP meetings, lesson planning, actual teaching, and whatever else teachers are required to do, collaboration can take a backseat. Since the team approach is the best way to help students with disabilities how do we make sure that we share as much information as possible? One possible solution is Google Docs.

Google Docs is a online word processor, spreadsheet and presentation creator. Using this tool I've created a spreadsheet that allows me to share with parents specific information about what activities their child does during the day, as well as the ability to share what related service providers are doing at the same time. You can actually check out the template here. Since access is global (as long as you can get to Google), and it is private (you choose who you want to share with), it is a great forum for sharing information. Not only does it allow you to share with parents, related services can see what the classroom teacher or other service providers are working on in the classroom. Collaboration on a massive scale.

Is anyone else using Google Docs in a unique way to connect with parents or professionals? Share your stories here!

You can find the original post here - Collaboration

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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

OCR on Google Docs

While not an official feature, Google Docs is busy adding great stuff to their offerings. Lifehacker share this morning that Google Docs is adding OCR (Optical Character Recognition) to their list of features. Again, this is not a an official offering, but still in the test stages. I tried two different photos (they have to be in .jpg, .png, or .gif) and one worked and one didn't. So it's still has some work, but this is exciting news for accessibility!!!! Having a free OCR option would open so many doors for out students. You can try out the demo here:

Google Doc OCR

Hopefully if it's gets a good response, it will become a feature much quicker!!

Patrick

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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Google Docs Updates


Google has slowly been adding features to Google Docs. One of the best features is the integration of translation services. When I first read about it there were 42 languages, recently they've added up to 51 languages. It's really so easy to use, and adds a great amount of functionality to Google Docs. This feature would be really useful for classrooms where English is not the primary language language spoken at home.

They've also added a readability feature to Google Docs. If you go to tools and select word count you get a nice pop up. It includes a basic count of words, characters, etc... as well as Flesch Reading Ease, Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level, & Automated Readbility Index. While I've not used this feature, it does seem really useful. Here's an example of what the pop up looks like:


Thanks to Robert Byrne over at Freetech4teachers for these tips!

Patrick

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Blogs Worth Reading


Recently another poster on the QIAT forum asked for ideas of blogs that everyone thought was worth reading. I thought that I'd take that idea a step further. I have created a Google Spreadsheet of blogs I read, and think are helpful to those in education. I would like anyone else who reads or sees this to contribute also. You can submit a blog, podcast, or other resource using this Google Form. I would encourage you to send this out so we can get a really good list. Any topic related to teaching students, parental help, AT, education, etc... is welcome. Please help so we can create a resource to be used by many different people.

Patrick

Photo courtesy of Flickr Creative Commons: MichelleM_

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Saturday, June 6, 2009

Google Documents


I've been a user of Google Documents for quite a while now and have always found it to be a great way to share ideas, as well as for Data Collection. You can import many types of Microsoft Word and Excel documents into Google Docs, but up until today none that ended in .docx. Today Google has added an option to import Word and Excel 2007 documents into Google Docs. Happy importing!

Patrick

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Monday, April 6, 2009

Collarboartion

One area that is something that I find myself struggling with from time to time is collaboration. Between IEP meetings, lesson planning, actual teaching, and whatever else teachers are required to do, collaboration can take a backseat. Since the team approach is the best way to help students with disabilities how do we make sure that we share as much information as possible? One possible solution is Google Docs.

Google Docs is a online word processor, spreadsheet and presentation creator. Using this tool I've created a spreadsheet that allows me to share with parents specific information about what activities their child does during the day, as well as the ability to share what related service providers are doing at the same time. You can actually check out the template here. Since access is global (as long as you can get to Google), and it is private (you choose who you want to share with), it is a great forum for sharing information. Not only does it allow you to share with parents, related services can see what the classroom teacher or other service providers are working on in the classroom. Collaboration on a massive scale.

Is anyone else using Google Docs in a unique way to connect with parents or professionals? Share your stories here!

Patrick

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Sunday, March 22, 2009

Ways to Use Flip Cameras in the Classroom

Flip video cameras are cheap, easy to use, and taking education by storm. There are many great ways to use a Flip in the classroom. I myself have used them to create videos of the students doing simple tasks, and used as a video modeling tool. Take a look here at one persons ways to use Flip cameras in the classroom.

Patrick

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