This link has been bookmarked by 34 people and liked by 1 people. It was first bookmarked on 09 Jan 2017, by Matt Miller.
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03 Sep 17Fiona Beal
". Lab reports — Students could take pictures of what they’re doing in a science lab (or in any class that does labs). With the Google Photos app installed (see above), students take images of their various steps with a smartphone/tablet/iPad. (Be sure the device is connected to WiFi.) When finished, they move the images they want into a folder and run DriveSlides from there.
2. Field trips — Take the lab reports idea above beyond the school! Have students take images of a field trip. When they return, they can run DriveSlides from a folder with the photos to put them all on slides in a slide presentation. Then, they can add text and annotate the images to explain what they learned.
3. Reflection on work — Students can use the SlideShot extension to take a screenshot of their work every minute and put them on a slide presentation. They can then go back over their work for the day, reflecting on what they did and what they created/shared.
4. Quick photo-based reports — Students can easily create a quick text-and-images report in a slide presentation with DriveSlides. They gather images (see the DriveSlides steps above). Then they create a slide presentation using DriveSlides. In the presentation, they can add text and annotate the images to explain the concept of the day.
5. Take photos of student work for peer review — Take photos of student work (projects, written activities, anything in the real, non-digital world). With the Google Photos app installed, those images are automatically uploaded to Google Drive. Use DriveSlides to create a slide presentation of all of those images of student work.
Pro tip: Share that presentation with students in an announcement or assignment in Google Classroom. In the presentation, click the blue “Share” button and “Advanced,” then choose “Anyone with the link can edit” or “Anyone with the link can comment.” By giving anyone the ability to comment, students can jump to each other’s slides and peer edit by adding comments. By giving them the ability to edit, students can jump to each other’s slides and add text, images and other elements to work collaboratively.
6. Step-by-step directions with screenshots or photos — Give a step-by-step explanation of how to do something online. Use the Awesome Screenshot extension (above) to take pictures of each step. Add those screenshots to slides with DriveSlides to provide a step-by-step tutorial.
7. Photos of math problem step by step — Let students take a deep dive into a math problem. By adding screenshots or pictures of each step of a math problem, they can explain each step in detail in a DriveSlides presentation.
8. Storytelling — Let students create a story, finding images to illustrate it with one of the image sources listed above (i.e. Creative Commons search, Photos For Class, Google Images). They save the images, then use DriveSlides to put them all on individual slides. They can then write the story by adding text boxes to each slide.
9. Finding example images of a concept from class — A picture is worth a thousand words. When students find example images of what you’re studying in class, they see that subject in a different light. Have them find six, 10, 15 … any number of images that are relevant.
10. Bell ringer activity — If you’re about to dig into a new topic in class, have students do a little research of their own first. Have them find some images and and important facts about that topic on their own. Students can save those images and create a slide presentation with DriveSlides. Then, they can add the facts with text boxes." -
01 May 17
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17 Feb 17
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29 Jan 17Doug Peterson
2 BRAND NEW tools to help students display work, reflect https://t.co/CcTwHKPoNB
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) January 29, 2017 -
24 Jan 17
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16 Jan 17
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13 Jan 17
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Innovative Educator
Check out our DriveSlides chrome extension https://t.co/Xd9BTtMi2v #googleEDU https://t.co/Q0o2V0y9Py
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Aaron Maurer
Check out our DriveSlides chrome extension https://t.co/Xd9BTtMi2v #googleEDU https://t.co/Q0o2V0y9Py
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revansant1
Using DriveSlides and SlideShot, two new Chrome extensions, students can use images to display work and reflect.
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12 Jan 17
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10 Jan 17
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Michael Richards
Google Slides is such a versatile tool in G Suite (Google Apps). It goes much further than creating a slide presentation to show on the screen to the entire class. Mix in images — the visual tools that make instant connections in our brains — and yo…
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09 Jan 17
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Matt Miller
Google Slides is such a versatile tool in G Suite (Google Apps). It goes much further than creating a slide presentation to show on the screen to the entire class. Mix in images — the visual tools that make instant connections in our brains — and yo…
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