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Recurring to-dos Capture your daily, weekly and monthly to-dos. Subtasks Break big tasks intosmaller achievable goals. Share Share your lists with colleagues and friends. Notes Add Notes to make sure all your ideas are captured. Due dates Set Due Dates to guarantee that no deadline is missed. Reminders Add a Reminder to make sure no to-do is forgotten. Notifications Updates via push, email and in-app notifications. Print Print your to-dos and lists with just one click. Add to Wunderlist Easily add web content straight from your browser. Cloud sync Sync your lists seamlessly across all your devices. Mail to Wunderlist Turn emails into actions by simply forwarding them. All your devices Free on iOS, Mac, Android, Windows and Web.

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42Tasks Tasks Made Easy Sign up for free and manage your everyday business and personal tasks from anywhere. 42tasks revolutionizes the way tasks are managed. Manage and Share Projects A real collaboration with new "Projects" feature. Create, manage and share your projects and tasks. Collaborate in a group and share your tasks to others. Mockups Take a second. Let it sink in. The first impression might be disorienting. There are very few interface elements on the screen. 46 Tools To Make Infographics In The Classroom Infographics are interesting–a mash of (hopefully) easily-consumed visuals (so, symbols, shapes, and images) and added relevant character-based data (so, numbers, words, and brief sentences). The learning application for them is clear, with many academic standards–including the Common Core standards–requiring teachers to use a variety of media forms, charts, and other data for both information reading as well as general fluency. It’s curious they haven’t really “caught on” in schools considering how well they bridge both the old-form textbook habit of cramming tons of information into a small space, while also neatly overlapping with the dynamic and digital world. So if you want to try to make infographics–or better yet have students make them–where do you start? The 46 tools below, curated by Faisal Khan, are a good place to start.

Spatial infographics Design Elements 9 libraries, 387 vector stencils for drawing spatial infographics. Examples The spatial infographic samples you see on this page were created in ConceptDraw PRO, by simply filling in templates provided with the “Spatial Infographics” solution. These documents demonstrate some of the solution's capabilities, and the results you can achieve. All source documents are vector graphic documents. Edge New web 2.0 tools appear each day. Many of these tools were not originally intended for classroom use, but they can be powerful learning tools for today's techno-savvy students and their more adventurous teachers. These sites appear (and frequently disappear) very quickly, launched by creative techno-geeks out there in the world. Many of these tools require a higher-than-average set of teacher tech skills or some extra monitoring to assure student "safety." TeachersFirst Edge reviews these "tools on the Edge" carefully, and with specific ideas for using them safely and effectively in teaching and learning.

Is Your Message Clear? Have Someone Else Animate or Illustrate It This is a problem we all face at times; we think that we've created a great presentation or developed a great story yet it just doesn't resonate with our audience. This happens to our students too. One way to avoid this situation is to have someone else illustrate or animate what they think are the important aspects of your presentation.

7 Ways to Create and Deliver Online Quizzes Creating and delivering quizzes and tests online offers a number of advantages over paper-based quizzes and tests. Many online quiz services allow you to create quizzes that give your students instant feedback. Some of the services provide the option to include picture and video prompts in your quizzes. And all of these services save you the hassle of printing your quizzes. 100 Incredibly Useful YouTube Channels for Teachers YouTube has earned a reputation for featuring brain cell-slaughtering fare such as the truly abysmal Fred and playing host to the some of the most depressingly stupid comments this side of Yahoo! News. But for every participant liberally dishing out misspelled racist, sexist and homophobic talking points, there is at least one whose channel genuinely offers something provocative and educational. For teachers hoping to infuse multimedia into their classrooms, YouTube makes for an excellent starting point. Plenty of universities, nonprofits, organizations, museums and more post videos for the cause of education both in and out of schools. The following list compiles some of the ones most worthy of attention, as they feature plenty of solid content appealing to their respective audiences and actively try to make viewers smarter.

7 Ways to Create and Deliver Online Quizzes Creating and delivering quizzes and tests online offers a number of advantages over paper-based quizzes and tests. Many online quiz services allow you to create quizzes that give your students instant feedback. Some of the services provide the option to include picture and video prompts in your quizzes. And all of these services save you the hassle of printing your quizzes. Here are seven ways that you can create and deliver quizzes online. Blubbr is a neat quiz creation service that you can use to create video-based quizzes. 15 Things You Can Do With Edmodo & How To Get Started This morning on Twitter Steven Anderson shared a link to Edmodo's getting started guide. That guide provides a short run-down of the steps to creating your Edmodo account with your students. Included in the guide are links to additional resources like Edmodo's archived instructional webinars. Shortly after ReTweeting Steven's link I received a text message from a friend who was wondering what she can do with Edmodo and why she might want to try it this year. That request got me to pull up the following list of things that teachers and students can do with Edmodo. Here are fifteen things teachers and students can do with Edmodo. 1.

Overview - Welcome to Flubaroo The grades created by Flubaroo will be located in an adjacent worksheet called "Grades", as shown: For each submission, Flubaroo will show which questions were answered correctly ("1" point"), which incorrectly ("0" points), and which were not graded. If less than 60% of students got a question correct, the question will be highlighted in orange to alert you. Additionally, students who scored less than 70% on the assignment will be highlighted in red. The Flubaroo menu will now offer you the ability to email each student their grades, view a summary report, or regrade the assignment. You might want to regrade the assignment if more students submitted answers, or if you want to throw out a question that most students got wrong.

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