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Gayle Cole

Google Drive versus Dropbox and the rest: cloud storage compared | Technology | guardia... - 0 views

  • Why has Dropbox been winning in this space? Fantastic convenience
  • It has attracted huge numbers of free users though, raising questions about its business model, and its security record is not the best.
  • many will never pay to upgrade.
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  • Documents in Google Apps appear there, with extensions like .gdoc and .gsheet, and if you double-click them they open in your web browser. Offline editing is not supported. Still, you do not have to use Google Apps with Google Drive. Another issue is that Google may trawl your data to personalise your advertising and so on, which is uncomfortable – though when it comes to paid-for or educational services, Google says:Note that there is no ad-related scanning or processing in Google Apps for Education or Business with ads disabledGoogle Drive can be upgraded to 16TB, which is a factor if you want huge capacity online; but by this stage you should be looking at specialist services such as Amazon S3 and others as well.
Gayle Cole

Don't Let Google Drive Leave Tire Marks on Your Lesson Plans - 0 views

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    Don't Let Google Drive Leave Tire Marks on Your Lesson Plans http://t.co/isiwkWFBtt via @plpnetwork Other tips for #GAFE paperless classrms?
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    Don't Let Google Drive Leave Tire Marks on Your Lesson Plans http://t.co/isiwkWFBtt via @plpnetwork Other tips for #GAFE paperless classrms?
Jill Bergeron

5 Google Drive Tips Everyone Should Know - 1 views

  • 1. Publish your Google Document to the web.
  • 2. Search for Images Without Leaving Google Docs.
  • 3. Editing Images in Docs and Slides
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  •  4. Use Google Drive Offline.
  • 5. Edit Microsoft Office Files in Google Drive
Gayle Cole

3 Good Tools to Easily Create and Save Mind Maps in Your Google Drive ~ ... - 0 views

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    3 Good Tools to Easily Create and Save Mind Maps in Your #Google Drive http://t.co/msspqXpSsX via @zite #edtech
Jill Bergeron

3 Excellent Google Drive Apps to Remotely Present to Your Students ~ Educational Techno... - 0 views

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    These tools integrate with Google slides and other presentation tools.
Jill Bergeron

Plagiarism vs. Collaboration on Education's Digital Frontier - 0 views

  • It’s an open secret in the education community. As we go about integrating technology into our schools, we are increasing the risk and potential for plagiarism in our tradition-minded classrooms.
  • But when does collaboration cross the line into plagiarism, out in the digital frontier of education?
  • At the same time, many of us want to put up barriers and halt any collaboration at other times (during assessments, for example). When collaboration takes place during assessment, we deem it plagiarism or cheating, and technology is often identified as the instrument that tempts students into such behavior.
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  • hould we ever stymie collaboration among our students? We live in a collaborative world. It is rare in a job, let alone life, that individuals work in complete isolation – with lack of assistance or contributions from anyone else. Perhaps as educators, it’s time to reassess how we want students to work.
  • what if we incorporated collaboration into our lessons and our assessments?
  • Using tools such as Google Drive, students can more easily collaborate across distances and with conflicting schedules. Better yet for me as their teacher, I can actually view their collaborative efforts using the “revision history” function of Google Drive (Go to File → See Revision History). This allows me to see who contributed what and when. This way, I can track not only quality, but quantity.
  • We have all heard students complain that a member of the group has “contributed nothing.” Now there is a method to verify and follow up this complaint.
  • If you can Google the answer, how good is the question?
  • Perhaps instead of focusing our concerns on technology as a wonderful aid to plagiarizers, we should focus on its ability to foster creativity and collaboration, and then ask ourselves (we are the clever adults here) how we can incorporate those elements into our formalized assessments.
  • Unfortunately, yes, there will always be those students who want to cut corners, find the easy way, and cheat to get out of having to do the hard work. (See my post on combating plagiarism.) But a significant majority of students are inherently inquisitive: they want to learn and do better by engaging and thinking, not memorizing and fact checking. It’s up to us to appeal to that inquisitiveness.
Jill Bergeron

11 Powerful Google Sheets Add-ons for Teachers ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Lear... - 0 views

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    Tools to use on sheets, from rubrics to self-grading quiz add-ons.
Jill Bergeron

Google Drive Add-ons for Teachers - 1 views

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    Explanations of add-ons for the purposes of evaluation.
Jill Bergeron

Gamification Template: Google Drive Level Up Challenge - - 0 views

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    This post contains a gamification template that can be copied and used with students if you want to gamify an activity in class.
Jill Bergeron

Copy of Gamification & GBL- An Overview.pdf - Google Drive - 0 views

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    PD presentation on gameification and game based learning.
Gayle Cole

What ipad apps do what: Collaborative guide - Google Drive - 0 views

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    @malynmawby @courosa @quistb - - - > https://t.co/yOqewz3zFP #ipad #apps
Jill Bergeron

How to Run an AWESOME After-school Maker Club | Renovated Learning - 0 views

  • I find that students really benefit from being given guidelines and then making something within those guidelines.
  • Find a way to have students reflect on what they’ve created and document it.
  • I recently created a design process worksheet that I’ve started using with my students.  They write a few brief sentences or draw some sketches for each step of the design process.
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  • Designate a sharing day or time when everyone gets to talk with the group about their projects.  Set up a Skype or Google Hangout with another school and have your students share their projects with them (hello joint design challenges!).
  •  Plan a school-wide Maker Fair where students can showcase projects they’ve created.
  • Come up with a name for your club together.  Design t-shirts.
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    Practical ideas on how to launch a maker club and keep students engaged.
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