education
Building a Community
“We are longing for a community,” said a session participant at one of my Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) workshops. “Most of us have adopted Office 365 tools, but we don’t see ourselves in the numerous edcamps and workshops offered. Each of us is struggling to connect.” As instructional coach and author of The Art of Coaching, Elena Aguilar says, “With a powerful community I can do so much more. I am happier. I learn and expand and, possibly, I can transform.” The strategies below seek to answer the challenge of community building.
Five Strategies for Community Building
A few strategies that have worked include the following:
#1 – Connect
“Involve and connect with stakeholders,” I shared in a recent Skype call with USA MIE trainers. As I look at pictures from TCEA Area 1 and Area 8 participants attending the one-day MIE Teacher Academy, the connections with campus principals, regional service center staff, and library coordinators jump out at me. Some specific ways to connect include the following:
a) Amplify Their Voices
Each person has a story to tell. Here are three conversations that capture the heart of MIE events. I recorded them using the free Voxer app on my smartphone:
- Voxercast: Listen to Crystal Just, Instructional Technology Specialist in Navarro ISD, share her insights in a spur-of-the-moment conversation about helping principals embrace technology.
- Voxercast: Listen to Mireya Galvan, Coordinator of Library Services in Harlingen ISD, on using OneNote Class Notebook for Professional Development
- Voxercast: Listen to Cris Chonka, Campus Technology Specialist in San Marcos Consolidated ISD, sharing her insights. Both Cris and Joanne Priest, an Austin ISD high school teacher, had just attended TCEA’s Creative Coding through Games and Apps (CCGA) workshop in December, 2016.
In addition to amplifying the voices of session participants, crafting solutions to common challenges remains important. For example, the TCEA TechNotes blog entry, Top 10 OneNote FAQs responds to specific questions that participants have asked.
b) Create an Online Sharing Space
“I appreciate the info you post,” said a technology director on the TCEA MIE Facebook Group. Creating an online space with shared learning opportunities stimulates dialogue. This dialogue also provides just-in-time support. When a critical service stopped working, TCEA MIE Community members shared their insights and knowledge to resolve the problem. In another situation, after sharing Amplifying Creativity: Minecraft Fairytales, Javier Aguilar wrote, “Awesome!!”
#2 – Engage
“Excellence is possible without perfection,” I read one day. The quote captures the essence of my rough-hewn videos about Microsoft Classroom and OneNote Class Notebook. Videos can engage others in a wide variety of ways, making complex topics approachable. Another way to engage others is to curate content relevant to your community. For example, I rely on ReadItLater’s Pocket to capture content relevant to my community and then share it using IFTTT.com to Twitter and Facebook. Re-tweeting old content that is still helpful helps latecomers to the community or those who missed it the first go-around.
#3 – Model
“We have to be able to share resources with everyone, as well as only with those who are TCEA members.” Some people get access to workshop resources; others do not. Microsoft’s OneNote 2016 makes it easy to create notebooks with unlocked and locked sections. Locked sections require a password to open. Then the notebook can be published online with non-passworded and passworded sections.
To encourage the use of OneNote for these purposes, I proposed sharing TCEA’s session resources with Academy participants. These actions helped expand internal understanding of OneNote’s functionality, as well as garnered positive praise from participants. We have to “dream the possible” so others can see and experience it.
Some examples include TCEA Connect!, Campus Technology Specialist Academy, and TCEA Area 20’s Tech-a-palooza Conference. Now that OneNote Online has shown itself as usable in this way, new initiatives such as the Technology Leadership Summit: Security are relying on OneNote’s passworded section feature.
#4 – Partner
“When can we have a Minecraft: Education Edition workshop in our area?” asked TCEA board member David Luna. “We definitely want to have one!” As a Microsoft Training partner, TCEA worked to seek out professional learning opportunities to better be able to facilitate training for Minecraft: Education Edition and Creative Coding through Games and Apps (CCGA). Then, TCEA’s Microsoft Certified Trainers/Experts reached out to collaborate with regional education service centers and TCEA area directors. This outreach program enables both TCEA members and non-members to take advantage of these two new initiatives from Microsoft.
#5 – Learn
Set time aside to tap into the stream of ideas, insights, and information available via social media. TCEA has built online social communities via the TCEA.org website, but also reached out to non-members via Facebook, Voxer (a mobile technology that makes audio-based chats possible, rather than text-based a la Twitter), and others. National and global communities of MIE Trainers and Experts employ Group.me, Twitter chats like #OneNoteQ, #msftedu, and Facebook to problem solve and get fresh information. These connections have a positive effect on learning and professional development worldwide.
Consider examining the TCEA MIE Facebook Group (open to all Texas educators using Microsoft tools; now with 200+ members) and the TCEA Campus Technology Specialist Voxer group as two examples.
Conclusion
“He who learns from one who is learning, drinks from a flowing river.” Never before have we had such easy access to “people in our lives,” as Matthew Kelly points out, “who raise our standards, remind us of our essential purpose, and challenge us to become the best version of ourselves.” Join us at TCEA in helping you find your essential purpose and allow us to provide you with the assistance you need to become the best version of who you can be!
This guest post was contributed by Jessica Thiefels, the editor of Whooo’s Reading and an education blogger who’s been featured in publications such as PBS.org, EdTech Digest, and Daily Genius.
Taking classroom tech offline can have the same benefits as making classroom activities online. It increases engagement, makes lessons more memorable, and ultimately gets students excited about learning. There’s still value in powering devices down and putting pen to paper, talking as a class, and learning offline.
Luckily, there are plenty of ways to combine both online and offline activities, often referred to as blended learning, to create a more effective culture of learning and technology in your classroom. Use these ideas to support teach-based learning and reinforce the lesson offline.
Introduce Students to Social Media Offline
Social media can be a great tool for learning, and there are some awesome ideas out there about how students can use Facebook and Twitter to engage in educational activities. However, not all students are ready for this jump. Parents of younger students may not even be comfortable with their kids using these websites.
Avoid this issue altogether, while still bringing social media into the classroom, by taking the social media part offline. For example, a simple Google search for “Facebook profile templates” will give you a variety to choose from. Find the best one, and print off copies for your students, who will then create the profile of an author, celebrity, or someone else you’re learning about in class, like Abraham Lincoln. They each research their person online and then put what they’ve learned into the “Facebook profile,” including, interests, information, friends, and more. Students will especially love taking historic figures and bringing them into the real world in this fun activity.
Put Coding in the Hands of Students
A valuable skill for students to have, even at a young age, is coding: the process of building video games, apps, websites—basically anything that lives online or on an electronic device. While this learning is done almost entirely online, there are ways to take it offline, helping students truly grasp the tenants of coding.
One fun idea is to have students “write” lines of code on their desk. You tell students, “Build the code for a three paragraph blog post with two images.” Then they use the cards that you’ll make, or the class can make together (see below), to show you what that would look like online.
All you need is paper, cut into small rectangles, a black pen or marker, and scissors. Write coding symbols on the papers, laminate (if possible), and cut them into 2 in. x 1 in. rectangles so that each symbol is now a small card. Do this by yourself, or use it as an activity to help students memorize their coding terminology. If you want to avoid all of the cutting and laminating, give students mini-white boards to use, which will accomplish a similar goal.
Create and Hang Internet Safety Posters
Whether your students are browsing the Internet in class or not, they’re likely talking with one another online, researching, and using other digital tools that could put them at risk for cyber bullying, computer viruses, and more. Support their tech use with important Internet safety rules in the form of posters.
Create these posters as a class and write your list of rules with the help of student suggestions. When the rule list has been created, have students craft a few posters to be placed around the room as friendly reminders. Be sure to put one near the computers or device station if you have one. If you’re in a 1:1 classroom, create mini-posters that students tape to their desks. This makes it easy for them to have access to the rules at all times, without getting up and walking around. Use these fun posters as inspiration for yours.
Bring Games into the Real-World with Non-Fiction Reading
Games are a smart way of engaging students while learning new material. However, games put students in “online mode” where they tend to be more worried about getting points, beating their teammates, and leveling up than what they’re actually learning about. Make the lesson relevant to their lives here on earth, not in cyberspace, with related magazine articles, which serve as great non-fiction texts.
As a teacher, you can get a variety of subscriptions for your classroom for free, including various trade magazines, Computer Graphics World, and more. USA Test Prep offers an exhaustive list. Purchase a few subscriptions and keep them in the classroom to be accessed easily by your young learners. Or talk with your campus librarian to see if you can have a few older magazine issues to have on hand.
When planning your gamified lesson, read through the magazines to find a relevant article, or let students dig through the pile it find it for themselves. They’ll remember the article, and it’s very likely, they’ll remember the lesson that went along with it too.
Invent a Blended, Educational Scavenger Hunt
This is a fun way for students to go from online to offline in a way that’s both engaging and fun. Create all of your clues online, making them as intricate or simple as you want. One fun way to do this would be to create a Google Doc with links to clues. The links could point to videos, articles, images, puzzles, etc. Students have to interpret what the link means and find the clue in the resource, and then head into the classroom, or even school hallways, to find the secret items.
Create your list as a checklist, so students can check each item off as they find it. Break them into teams to gamify the already exciting lesson activity and encourage a little friendly competition. This idea can be used with most young to middle age groups.
Learning online is a fun way to keep students engaged and excited about learning, but that doesn’t mean there’s no value for offline learning as well. Find ways to support learning on devices with offline materials that will make lessons relevant, help students better grasp concepts and much more. What offline lessons work best for your students?
Enhancing Learning with Microsoft
Microsoft continues to delight educators with updates and changes to its suite of learner-centered offerings. TCEA makes it possible for you to learn how to use these tools (watch the MS Classroom: Explore! video series) to maximize teaching, learning, and leading in your school and/or district. Whether you are an Office 365 expert or just beginning your learning adventure with Microsoft Education tools, you will want to take a quick look at these powerful updates.
Did you know that you can get Office 365 Online tools and one terabyte (TB) of cloud storage for free as an educator? This includes Word Online, PowerPoint Online, Excel Online, and Outlook Online. Visit this website to claim your free storage space and access. Or, if you prefer, pay $69.99/year ($6.99 per month) for Office 365 Personal. Not sure how to get started with Office 365? Check out these free online videos and Join TCEA MIE Facebook Group.
Powerful Microsoft Enhancements for Your Classroom
- Microsoft Classroom boasts a rich feature list. Be sure to read the Classroom Smackdown blog entry for a complete list with videos and tutorials.
- OneNote has been enhanced. Add-ins include Learning Tools and Class Notebook. The latter provides learning management system integration. Watch Become a OneNote Ninja! to find out more. From typing to digital ink, video embedding, audio recording, and capturing web content with the OneNote Clipper add-on, OneNote makes collaborative learning easier.
- Microsoft Forms powers formative assessments and surveys (Source). Use Forms to assess students with built-in quiz features,real-time feedback, and branching. Send the form to students via a link or QR code or embed the form in a web page or OneNote notebook page.
- Docs.com provides a great space to share and track what you’re creating in your classroom. You are now able to publish your documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. Once published, you can track access analytics for free. Find out more.
- Sway, an alternative, mobile-friendly, and responsive web design presentation tool, recently added an Accessibility Checker. This is the darling of presentation resources for teachers and students.
Improvements to the Office Suite
- Edge Internet Browser now supports extensions, such as the Office Online extension (e.g. Chrome or Edge). This extension provides direct access to your Office files and enables you to create and open Word, Excel, Powerpoint, OneNote, and Sway documents right from the browser.
- PowerPoint now has an automatic navigation link creation tool known as Zoom, as well as a new text highlighter tool. PowerPoint and Excel also take advantage of shape recognition, allowing you to convert drawings into shapes.
- MS Word now features Researcher, a tool that helps you find relevant quotes and citable sources and images without leaving the app.
- Boost your curriculum and lessons with Office 365 lessons available at the Microsoft Educator Community.
The future is bright, and options exist. Why not explore?
Earlier this summer, I received an email from Port Arthur ISD teacher, Hope Scott. Hope shared the following:
Our campus uses Cornell Notes, and I’d love to see/share what it looks like in OneNote.
Looking for a Cornell Note-taking template to use in OneNote? Take a look at this short video tutorial (scroll to Relevant Links section at blog’s end and click on link #3) on how to get them. There are various Cornell Notes templates online, as well as note-taking templates you can use that are built into OneNote. Let’s take a quick look, shall we?
OneNote Page Templates
You can find templates in OneNote 2016. These are located in OneNote 2016 under the Insert menu as Page Templates. In the screenshot, you can see more Page Templates, including some decorative ones. This is well-worth exploring.
If you switch to View menu, you can also make further adjustments that affect page color and/or Rule Lines. You can also decide what kind of paper you want to see appear in your OneNote Notebook, whether it will just be a blank white sheet of paper or include ruled lines.
Other Sources for OneNote Templates
In the video linked at the bottom of this blog entry, I’ll be showing you some of those templates, as well as where you can find some templates that I’ve pulled off the web. I hope these tips will save you some time. Before going much further, I definitely want to credit the awesome work the OneNoteGem.com folks have done in preparing this and many other formats. You definitely need to pay them a visit and see what else they have. To save educators effort and confusion (that’s good, right?), I’ve taken the liberty of placing a variety of templates online.
When you go there, you will see a OneDrive space where you can right click and save files to your computer. For the purposes of this video, I’ll be using OneNote 2016. Right-click and save the template you want (for example, Cornell Note-Taking) to your Windows device. Then double-click on it and choose to open it with OneNote 2016. It will open as a loose section.
From this point, you can copy and paste it into another OneNote 2016 Notebook, including a Class Notebook. Once there, you can also choose to distribute it to your students. That’s pretty much all there is to it! Have questions? Don’t hesitate to leave them as a comment below and I’ll get back to you with an answer.
Relevant Links
- What Is Cornell Note-Taking? Video and here’s a link to a “paper copy” of a Cornell Note-Taking template used for AVID. For fun, I’ve cooked up my own template based on the paper version and it appears at the link below.
- Where to Find Note-Taking Templates Also be sure to check OneNoteGem.com for a plethora of tools and resources relevant to OneNote.
- How to Get Templates? Video
When I wrote a blog post yesterday about my foray into the Pokemon GO world and how excited this new game has made me and millions of others, I did not realize that it might be controversial. But suddenly, I was in the middle of a big discussion. Two clear sides seem to have emerged: those who believe that something like this game can help us do an even better job of educating students and those who believe that we are just fad-jumping onto another useless, corporate, money-making trick. Wow!
I can see how some people out there are promoting Pokemon GO as a means to increase their likes, follows, and readers. Honestly, that really wasn’t my intent. I was simply so blown away by the social, health, and learning aspects of the app that I just had to share my excitement. Of course, I am thrilled that the blog post has generated so much interest. But even if no one had read it, I would still be a huge fan of something that gets kids (and adults) walking around outside, talking to their neighbors, and having fun while learning both alone and separately.
This has obviously struck a nerve and merits further discussion in the education world. David Jakes compares Pokemon Go to a new ping pong ball in education, something that leaves the main game unchanged. David Theriault created a great list of “14 Reasons Why Pokemon GO Is the Future of Education.” Tony Gurr, in his blog post on this topic, asks a tremendous question: “Are we doing what is best for our students or are we doing what is most convenient for us?” And ed tech leader George Couros added a strong article called “#PokemonGo, Being Observant, and Innovation to the discussion in which he urges educators to “pay attention and be observant to our world. The next big idea for your classroom could already exist; you might just need to find it and tweak it.” (my paraphrasing)
Thank you to each of these innovators (and others that I am not aware of on this topic) who are adding to the discussion. They’re all right, in one way or another. Yes, Pokemon GO could be just another flash in the educational pan. Yes, it could divert time and energy and resources away from real learning. Yes, it could cause dedicated but confused teachers to create Pokemon math worksheets and include monster names in long vocabulary lists. But it could also provide a starting point for the conversation we’re all wanting to have about how to really make teaching and learning better. And isn’t that enough?
Technologies change, but the underlying reasons we explore technologies remains: to stimulate learning conversations that extend how we interact with the world. In fact, Pokemon GO is child’s play, a game that teaches us new ideas (mapping reality with virtual information) that we may soon apply to more complex work. “The supreme accomplishment,” says Arnold J. Toynbee, “is to blur the line between work and play.” At TCEA, that’s how we can achieve our vision “Learning without Limits.”
Note: This is part 2 of a two-part series on Ten Steps to a Tech-Powered Classroom with Microsoft. Read Part 1 here.
6. Digitize your print documents.
Tired of dealing with paper? Your students are as well! Take advantage of MS Office Lens app (available on Android, iOS, and later this summer, Windows) to digitize documents and go paperless with OneNote. You simply start the app, take pictures of the paper, and it organizes it into pictures or a PDF file or enables you to save it to OneNote for easy sharing with students. Or alternatively, use the built-in capture of OneNote app on your mobile device of choice. Make it a goal to digitize your documents during the summer and avoid the time sink during the school year. Once you have a digital copy, you can easily annotate (draw/write on it) in OneNote.
7. Convert your multiple choice assessments to paperless Microsoft Forms or Excel Online Surveys.
Did you know that Microsoft Forms features an assessment component? Students submit responses to an online assessment and Forms takes care of scoring it for you. Watch this video for a quick introduction to Microsoft Forms.
8. Explore MIE Expert videos to fuel your learning and spur classroom innovation.
You have access to a global cadre of Microsoft Innovative Educators and Experts, all eager to coach you on how to transform teaching and learning in your classroom. This means you are not alone in blazing a trail in your teaching, learning, and leading environment. Our children are learning directly from YouTube, so why not get inspired in the same way to make your classroom learning environment even more engaging than it is now? For example, you can see tutorial videos for MS Sway, Office 365 in the Classroom, OneNote Class Notebook, and many more.
9. Manipulate Portable Document Format (PDF) files to save paper.
Are you accessing materials from Lead4ward and other online PDF documents? Instead of printing everything, you can quickly split PDFs, printing only what you need. Use the no-cost PDFSAM Basic.
After you split PDF files, you can insert them into your OneNote Class Notebook’s Content Library as a file printout. This means you can then distribute those PDFs to students, and then they can use their Surface or iOS tablet device to fill things in by interacting with the PDF.
10. Create Podcasts with OneNote audio recordings on your mobile device.
Are you doing awesome things in your classroom? If you and your students are learning, then the answer is “YES!” Why not record audio into a OneNote, describing a picture or screenshot of a student artifact?Then,students, parents, and others can access that OneNote Online to listen to student reflections about that artifact.
Teaching in a Microsoft-empowered classroom can be much more than just being about the technology. It really is about the transformations your students can accomplish with information, converting it into knowledge that is useful and meaningful to them.
Note: This blog entry was inspired by Tom Mullaney’s blog entry at Sustainable Teaching, Ten Things You Can Do This Summer To Prepare for Teaching in a 1:1 Classroom with Chromebooks. Thanks, Tom!
“What’s Office 365?” asked a second grade teacher last week at a casual meeting. “My district is moving from what we have now to that.” The transition, of course, was from MS Exchange and web-based email to Office 365. For the school district, moving to Office 365 will result in much greater efficiency and functionality than they have ever enjoyed. But that means this large urban school district has a lot of professional learning to engage in.
If you are a teacher in a district that is launching Office 365 in August, you have some time to get ready. Take these ten steps (five in this blog entry, five more in the sequel) to ensure you are successful in supporting blended learning opportunities that the new federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) requires.
1. Ask your administration for a MS Surface tablet or Windows 10 computer to use this summer.
The Windows 10 operating system boasts many powerful features, among them access for educators to a free Office 365 account. That means you can start learning how to use Microsoft Classroom, OneNote 2016, and Class Notebook tools, which are easy ways to blend learning in your classroom. You can find a wealth of resources online, and, of course, TCEA is offering one-day Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) professional development sessions around the state of Texas at no charge.
2. Become a Microsoft Innovative Educator.
If you want to successfully use blended technology into classroom learning, the TCEA Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) training sets you up with the tools and skills you will need. This process (watch this overview video of how to become an MIE Expert) involves you getting a free Office 365 account, which comes with free copies of MS Office 365 Online and OneNote 2016 for Windows (OneNote works on all mobile devices as a program you install or via the web with OneNote Online). You will also get access to Microsoft Education, a website with free professional learning activities that are 100% online. Register for this free training today!
Listen to this podcast by Jeffrey Bradbury (@TeacherCast).
3. Create a OneDrive and Docs.com account.
When working with students and colleagues, you will need to be able to create and share content online. Office 365 grants you free access to Word Online, Powerpoint Online, and Excel Online, as well as OneNote Online and one terabyte of cloud storage in OneDrive. This enables you to share and collaborate with students and colleagues (e.g. teachers working on lesson plans). Once you have completed the MIE training, you will be able to easily interact with content online for creation and sharing.
What’s more, with Docs.com, you can easily share documents (e.g. books, newsletters, presentations) you create (e.g. Word, Powerpoint, OneNote, Excel, Newsletters) with others. Listen to this podcast featuring Dr. Tom Grissom on using Docs.com (http://docs.com/mguhlin).
4. Get to know Microsoft Classroom.
Need a quick overview of Microsoft Classroom? Watch this short video about how a school in Spain is using Microsoft Classroom. Then ask yourself how are you doing this in your classroom?
As you can see, MS Classroom provides an actual environment where you can interact with your students online. What’s more, through the use of tools like OneNote Class Notebook, you can create a Content Library to which you can add class learning resources. Students can then copy items from the Content Library to their OneNote notebook, where they can begin interacting with documents. Microsoft Classroom comes with a Class Notebook built-in, and you can see the main components of a Class Notebook in the image below.
5. Learn from the experts.
“An expert is someone who isn’t afraid to share how they mess things up while they are learning.” That’s my personal definition of what an expert is. While there are many people you can learn from online, consider adding these individuals to your professional learning network (PLN). What’s more, take advantage of TCEA resources listed below. In addition to following the Twitter hashtag, which does not require a Twitter account, #MIEExpert, you can also add these folks to your PLN:
Robyn Hrivnatz @RobynHrivnatz
Mike Tholfsen @mtholfsen
OneNote Central @OneNoteC
@OneNoteEDU @OneNoteEDU
Pip Cleaves @pipcleaves
Anne Mirtschin @murcha
Jennifer Mitchell @jenemitchell
And, of course, follow @mguhlin on Twitter, as well as check out the TCEA Connect! OneNote Online notebook where I share my learning experiences. You will also want to follow the #tceamie hashtag online.
Be sure to come back to read the second part of this blog entry, sharing five more steps you can take!
Note: This blog entry was inspired by Tom Mullaney’s blog entry at Sustainable Teaching, Ten Things You Can Do This Summer To Prepare for Teaching in a 1:1 Classroom with Chromebooks. Thanks, Tom!
Have you heard about these Microsoft tools? When I first heard about them, I was shocked. I had spent so much time looking in one direction that I failed to realize the rich ecosystem of tools that Microsoft has built that can enhance teaching, learning, and leading.
Tool #1 – Docs.com
Docs.com enables you to keep organize and share your creations with others. Those creations can include Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and Office Mix, as well as Sways, PDFs, and OneNote notebooks. Once you publish them, anyone can see them and get them. Docs.com also allows you to create “journal” entries that are actually Sways, featuring images, videos, and text.
You can organize anything you publish on Docs.com, as well as stuff from other people, as “collections” and make those available. And after publishing a certain amount of documents, you can get your own web address. What’s more, Docs.com also includes analytics that track how many views/visitors you have had to your content. For an example, check out mine.
Learning application: Publish templates for OneNote notebooks or Sways for students/staff to get and modify, then re-publish those via Docs.com for others. Or publish a Sway as a newsletter that anyone can read online.
Tool #2 – Microsoft Snip
While video reigns supreme for screencasting, there are times when you simply want to capture a screenshot, annotate it, and record audio about that annotation. If that is the case, then MS Snip may be what works best for you.
Learning Application: As students turn in more work in digital format, use Snip to annotate (write on, highlight in various colors) and record your reflections. And invite students to do the same with each other’s work.
Tool #3 – Skype Translator
With Skype Translator, the world becomes more understandable. Skype’s online translator can “help you communicate in 7 languages for voice calls, and in more than 50 languages while instant messaging.” It works on Windows 7 and above. With it, you also have access to Skype, which enables you to contact others around the world at no cost. You can also have group calls with a maximum of 25 people, although the Skype for Business/Education version allows for more.
Learning Application: In a second language class, encourage students to use Skype Translator for multi-language interactions with other classrooms around the world. You can rely on Mystery Skype to make connections with diverse cultures in distant locales.
Tool #4 – Microsoft Edge Browser
Looking for uncluttered, white space-friendly web pages? Or maybe you want to save items for reading later or annotate the site, highlighting key ideas? While today’s web pages often pack a ton of content into each pixel your students look at on their devices, the MS Edge browser makes it easy to turn off superfluous content, save it for later reading, and annotate it. In addition to reading view, you can also save web pages for later reading, which are synchronized across all Windows 10 devices like MS Surface tablets and computers.
Need to take notes on a web page? Not a problem! Whatever annotations you make can be saved directly to your OneNote notebook (such as a Class Notebook you are using with your students), Favorites, or Reading List!
Learning Application: Encourage students to publish their creations online, then interact with the content other students have created, adding their feedback and annotations.
Tool #5 – OneNote’s Digital Ink to Text Conversion
At a conference earlier this year, I experimented with handwriting my notes directly on my Surface tablet, then converted the notes to text using the “Ink to Text” option in OneNote. What an incredible feeling to see my hastily scrawled notes find expression as typed text!
Across multiple experiments, students who wrote out their notes by hand had a stronger conceptual understanding and were more successful in applying and integrating the material than those who took notes with their laptops.
Tool #6 – Get Office 365 Free for Teachers and Students
Are you a…learner? Teacher? Leader? Innovator? Take advantage of the no-cost TCEA Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) academies taking place throughout Texas over the next few months. TCEA and Microsoft have partnered to make these professional learning opportunities available to anyone, member or non-member, FREE! Find a location near you at the list appearing at the bottom of this blog entry.
What is the TCEA Microsoft Innovative Educator Academy?
The newly re-designed TCEA MIE one-day academies provide participants with specific instructions and suggestions for blending technology into the classroom curriculum. Some of the topics include:
- Create narrated slideshows, digital stories, and information-rich slideshows that enhance teaching, learning, and leading.
- Organize classroom lessons for students that allow them anytime, anywhere access to embedded videos and content, great for flipped learning opportunities.
- Develop web-based forms to capture real data from respondents and then aggregate data for analysis.
- Connect with educators, students, and others via international connections using tools like Skype.
- Explore a wealth of lesson plans and ideas that help you meet ESSA expectations for blended learning using technology.
- Learn how to create resources and easily share them with others via the web.
Attendees will have the opportunity to craft powerful conversations about learning in a hyper-connected world, as well as receive hands-on practice and modeling with Office 365 for Education tools like OneNote, Docs.com, Sway, Office Mix, and Office Forms.
Note: Did you know that when you attend the TCEA MIE one-day academy, you receive access to a OneNote Notebook, which you can read on any device, chock-full of curated content, video tutorials, articles, and more?
But wait, there’s even more! AFTER the TCEA MIE session, you will have the opportunity to join the TCEA MIE Diigo Community, an online group open to all regardless of whether you are a TCEA member or not.
And, if that wasn’t enough, you are also invited to participate in the upcoming TCEA MIE SkypeChats that will begin in August 2016 with special guests. In the meantime, join the TCEA MIE SkypeChat and get access to sneak previews of audio interviews with MIE practitioners.
Opportunities to Take Your MIE Innovation to a Whole New Level
Session Date |
City |
Location |
Registration Link |
7/18/2016 |
Abilene |
Region 14 Education Service Center |
|
8/2/2016 |
Killeen |
Killeen ISD Career Center |
|
8/4/2016 |
Lumberton |
Lumberton Performing Arts Center |
|
8/8/2016 |
Austin |
TCEA Conference Center |
|
8/19/2016 |
Kilgore |
Region 7 Educational Service Center |
|
9/9/2016 |
Arlington |
University of Texas at Arlington, College of Education |
|
9/19/2016 |
Pittsburg |
Region 8 Educational Service Center |
|
9/23/2016 |
Edinburg |
Region 1 Educational Service Center |
|
9/28/2016 |
Victoria |
Region 3 Educational Service Center |