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Creating Badges with Google Sheets - Teacher Tech. Thinking about adding badges to your class?

Creating Badges with Google Sheets - Teacher Tech

There are many ways to award students badges including using Class Badges. If you would like to organize your own badges here is a system you may want to try that uses Google Sheets. Create a new spreadsheet in Google Drive ( Create a list of badges. You may want to consider different categories for your badges. Create a folder in your Google Drive to hold your badges. Resize the canvas by using the File menu and choosing “Page setup.” You will want a custom canvas size and to change from inches to pixels. If you would like a round badge, hold down the shift key while drawing a circle on the canvas. Using the File menu of the Google Drawing, choose to “Publish to the web.”

Start publishing and copy the link. Paste this link in your spreadsheet column under “Badge Link.” =image(D2,3) The cell to reference is the cell that contains the image link. Click Here for a spreadsheet sample. Importrange =importrange(“URL”,”Sheet1! =if(Sheet1! Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 11. Exercise #11: A Woman's Ingenuity With some problems, a creative solution can only occur after the elements or parts of the problem have been reorganized into a different pattern.

Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 11

This requires that you juggle the parts in your mind's eye. With this in mind, see if you can solve this problem: A businessman brought back from Europe four pieces of chain in solid gold, each consisting of three links. He wanted to keep them as an investment, but his wife felt that—joined together—the pieces would make a lovely necklace. She went to a jeweler and said, "I want you to connect these pieces to make a necklace. He told the lady, "I charge $2.50 to break a link and $2.50 to melt it together again. As long as you think of the segments of chain as four sides of a square or as segments of a circle, you can't solve this problem. Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 9. Exercise #9: Concealed Colors This game is designed to increase your flexibility and your ability to overcome the restrictions of habit.

Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 9

The name of what color is concealed in each sentence? Newspaper editors decided to go on strike. (Red) The cab lacked proper brakes to stop at the intersection. (Black) Now try these: A big, old, hungry dog appeared at our door every morning. Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 8. Exercise #8: Joined Together Most people rush in to tackle a problem without considering the alternatives and without attempting to understand what is involved.

Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 8

As the result, they waste a lot of time and effort. To illustrate the importance of analysis, copy this design and keep track of how long it takes you. (Tracing is not allowed.) If it took anywhere from one to three minutes, try a different approach and copy it again to see if that new point of view helps you copy the design more quickly. The design can be copied easily and accurately in less than 15 seconds. Another imaginative solution occurs when you recognize the pattern as being made up of four identical parts. Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 7. Exercise #7: The Collected Works We are frequently hampered in creative problem solving by our habitual ways of looking at things.

Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 7

The more familiar a situation or an object is, the harder it is to see it differently. Creativity, however, requires a "fresh" pair of eyes. While this problem looks deceptively simple, it is actually quite diffficult. There are four volumes of Shakespeare's collected works on the shelf. Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 3. Exercise #3: Loose Ends Defining a problem too narrowly can inhibit and delay finding a solution.

Games That Stimulate Creativity: Exercise 3

The creative problem solver tries to state the requirements as broadly as possible at the beginning. If, after a reasonable time, no solution presents itself, he tries to restate it in such a way that a new avenue of approach becomes available. Less successful problem solvers, on the other hand, persist doggedly in the same direction, even when the difficulty does not yield to their efforts.

They are blocked from considering new directions by stubborn commitment to the old. Look at the first sketch and imagine that you are the person shown standing in the room. Most people will see the difficulty as a shortness of reach. If, however, you define the problem as "How can the string and I get together? " Report: Is it Game Over for Gamification?

Gamification has been around for several years.

Report: Is it Game Over for Gamification?

According to Merriam-Webster, the term's first known use was in 2010. But it's still being flagged by some spell-checkers as a typo. This may be fitting, because gamification was retired in the 2015 New Media Consortium (NMC) Horizon Report on emerging technology for K–12. What's Your Game Plan? About Us - Classroom Inc. Other Resources - ChangeGamer. ChangeGamer - Home. Playing History.