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Tasks | Worlds of Learning @ New Milford High School Digital Badges in Professional Learning Tasks Filter: Search: Turn Any Image Into an Interactive Graphic Using ThingLink ThingLink is a free and user friendly digital tool that provides users with the ability to turn any image into an interactive graphic. Read more → Instantly Collaborate With Padlet A free application to create an online bulletin board that you can use to display information for any topic. Read more → Chart the Course for Your Own Professional Learning Digital Learning Day is a chance to make a difference with digital learning in America’s schools. Read more → Access Documents and Data From Anywhere Using Classlink ClassLink allows teachers and students to access their documents and data from anywhere and on any device. Read more → This work, unless otherwise expressly stated, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

כלים קטנים גדולים. מציאות מרובדת. How to Add Recipients to a Gmail Group Fast. That list of email addresses in the To: (or maybe the Cc:) line is not pretty; it is not sensitive or gentle; sensible or recommended; it is quite helpful as, well, a list of email addresses, though, for setting up a group in Gmail that will let you address all those same people fast. Of course, you need not pick up the list of names and addresses from an email — or anywhere. The same process that turns recipient lists from messages into Gmail groups also lets you enter them manually in as fast a fashion as you can type (without any clicking or navigating to interrupt).

Add Recipients to a Gmail Group Fast To add email addresses to a group in Gmail contacts as a list (from a received message's To: or Cc: line, for instance): Go to Contacts in Gmail. Type g followed immediately by c with Gmail keyboard shortcuts enabled. Select the desired group on the left. Now, you can mail the newly grown group fast.

5 Great Mapping Tools to Use in the Classroom. Finding Free Images for Your Classroom. The Internet has made a myriad of material readily available to a vast audience. Along with these seemingly infinite resources has come a lot of confusion about how images and other content published online should be legally recognized, protected or used. As educators, we often struggle in navigating that road. I recently read an amusing but instructive article entitled “PSA: Don’t Let Salami and Google Images Get You In Hot Water.” It tells the story of an eleven-year-old boy who posted an image he found online of Salami on a class blog. In my classroom, we use a lot of image-based content. One thing we have learned to look for is material with a Creative Commons License.

“A Creative Commons license is used when an author wants to give people the right to share, use, and even build upon a work that they have created. Finding Creative Commons & license-free material CreativeCommons.org - Just what the site says, it focuses on purely Creative Commons Licensed products. Always give credit! OER Images. 7 Awesome Visual Alternatives to Google Docs. You don't need a degree in rocket science to know that visually organized data appeals more to students than plain text-based scribble. The visual stimulus is quickly captured by the brain and requires way less processing to understand and code it than written text.

As teachers, we need to capitalize on this and try to include as many relevant visuals as possible. One way to do this is to use these visual alternatives to Google Docs. The web tools below have almost the same collaborative features Google Docs provide and they also have an added feature which is that of capturing and organizing data visually. 1- Padlet Padlet is an Internet application that allows people to express their thoughts on a common topic easily.

Stixy is another great tool that lets users create their own notes and stick them to a clipboard and also share them with others. PrimaryWall is a web-based sticky note tool designed for schools that allows pupils and teachers to work together in real-time. 6- Museum Box.