Tag-Archive for ◊ google apps ◊

Updating Google Apps
Saturday, May 07th, 2011 | Author:

Just a quick post about updates really. It’s weird, I spent two years training teachers to use the VLE in Hampshire and we had to test updates thoroughly, schedule them to happen during holidays just in case something went wrong. We also had to update all documentation and training guides to ensure people knew what was happening and what had been updated.

How things change.

I have lost count of the number of updates that have happened to Google Apps since we started using it (properly) at the end of February. How have I been informed about them? Almost by chance.

Updates have probably fallen into one of a few categories:

  • I saw a blog post about a feature coming soon (follow @gappsupdates on Twitter)
  • I noticed it on the calendar (which also tells you how to enable/disable it)
  • I accidentally found it
  • I missed it totally

How has this changed my experience? It’s mostly been very useful as the updates have been great improvements. This includes the ability to upload folders to Google Docs or have separate pages in a document. Generally you only find out about a new update a week or so before it goes live (if that!).

The nicest update recently? The ability to granulate the level of admin control. Once you have gone into Organization and Users, you can select a user and assign different privileges. Previously giving someone admin control meant that they had full admin control and could change anything and everything. Now, I can let me teachers change the password of the children in the school, but not change domain settings. Very useful. Especially as it means they don’t need to ask me to reset passwords!

I do like this way of managing updates but it does make me wonder how it would work across an entire authority. Training guides are also difficult as things change and update regularly. Children seem unaffected, but how would teachers cope with constant change? Should I update staff every now and again to tell them about the useful updates?

I’ve discussed my use of Google Apps a few times and my children really enjoy using the various tools that Google has to offer. We started using it (properly) just 2 months ago and already we have had 180 children creating websites about their topics, staff moving all planning onto Google Docs and the Calendar in use on our school website. I see that we will continue to grow and grow with ways that we use it.

With this, others started asking how to do this or how to do that, so I thought I’d make a guide.the idea is that this guide will take you from nothing to being setup in a few hours (taken at a leisurely pace with a cup of tea and some biscuits).

Someone joked that this would be on www.undertenminutes.com but there is no way. It is a biggie. It has taken most of today to plan, write, screenshot and edit. I am very happy with it though. However it doesn’t even begin to discuss how to use any of the tools, that can be for the second edition!

So here it is. Thanks to @kvnmcl and @primarypete_ for checking it and thanks to all of the people on the last page for helping me along the way. I really hope that this is useful and it starts you on the journey to using Google in your school.

If you do have any questions, please email them to me or comment below. I will add updates to a later edition of the guide.

The guide is embedded (and downloadable) below or can be found at http://www.bit.ly/googleappsguide

 

 

My Inset Morning
Monday, March 28th, 2011 | Author:

Today we had a teacher training day and the morning was given up to ICT. My plan was to show staff our ICT vision, how to use Google Apps and then give them time to play. My worry is that teachers never get play time and that they are expected to use new equipment, software and initiatives with little training.

Oh….7 children came in to help me too.

So we talked about Google Apps and the email and calendar environment. The calender is a little confusing as you need to add the ones you want rather than me deploying them all from the admin console. However children were on hand to help out with little problems. We also had a few issue slogging in to Google in the first place due to the ‘squashed letters’ captcha. As one of the children said, why don’t they just ask you what 2+2 is? That would do the ‘are you human?’ check easily enough!

After the playing with email and receiving invites to birthday parties, we moved on to the workshops and the children were fantastic. Unfortunately not many staff attended the child-led workshops but the children seemed to do well if they did have any customers. A lot of teachers stayed in the hall for my blogging talk and a few people went and loaded the whiteboards to play with ActivInspire on their own.

The children ran three workshops. One on Brainpop, another on Photopeach and one on flip cameras and visualisers. They seemed to do well and a few members of staff commented on how well the children had done.

All in all I am fairly pleased with the day. If I was going to change it, I wouldn’t have ran anything in the second workshop, it was a bit much, I should have given even more play time to teachers to let them blog and/or check Google Apps. But we shall see how it goes.

Two things that went well? Teachers enjoyed exploring. One was very happy with ActivInspire and another said she loved seeing Brainpop and having chance to fiddle. The other thing was the children. They worked well and I hope it is something I can do more of in the future. I think a couple of them could definitely come with me on training sessions elsewhere!

Another week, another challenge
Sunday, March 20th, 2011 | Author:

Google Apps is starting to challenge me in lots of different ways. I like it, but boy you have to be ready for it. This week? Sites.

Children have the ability to make their websites public, to the whole world. Now, I have said to the children that I don’t want them to do this without checking with me first and they have been good and asked. Today I had 3 requests to make sites public.

Site 1. A comic site where some Year 4 boys (8-9year olds) want to make and sell comic books with the money going to charity. Fantastic! Except on the order page, it includes the child’s name and address. Hmmm maybe not then. Also their prices were very low, business chat with them tomorrow.

Site 2. A topic site that a year 6 child has made. It’s the site based around their human body topic and I like the info on it, the colours are horrible, all red and black, but hey it’s not my site. The problem? Comments are enabled.May need to investigate comments bit further. I don’t want to approve all comments, but I don’t want children seeing potentially dodgy comments either.

Site 3. One about cats. Now this isn’t the most technical site and I haven’t verified the facts, but I like it, it’s sweet. She has put a lot of time into it and I think it is geniunely possible to make it public. So that led me to some conversations…

I asked fellow Google Teachers on Twitter for their thoughts and people said parents should provide permission or that I should check e-safety (I had) and then switch it on.After some great discussion I decided to turn it on.

Now I am left thinking how do we publicise these sites that the children make? Maybe they could enter them into a Google Form for me to collate? I think a site will need to meet certain rules before it can be made public.

Do we need parental permission? I think I do because the site will name the child, it would be impossible to contact her, but her name is visible. So do I do this on a site-by-site basis? Or do I do a blanket letter at the start of the year/Key Stage 2?

This is really challenging me, but it is an awful lot of fun. I can see some schools that will not touch this stuff with a bargepole but me? I won’t back away from a bit of fun and a huge learning opportunity for the children. If anything, this will firm up their e-safety lessons and make them more relevant. It has also backed up my need for a strong ICT policy and Acceptable Use Policy for the children. Let’s hope this week is a little quieter…

PS: Once my policy is approved, I will share it.

Category: General Thoughts  | Tags:  | One Comment
Google Apps – Week 2 #gct
Friday, March 11th, 2011 | Author:

Now I am not planning on writing a weekly diary on our Google Apps life at all, but I think week 2 (and possibly 3) will be a key milestone in our experience.

So, Monday we managed to get Mail working. It was my fault as I had some settings wrong in the Control Panel on our domain, but the excellent Carl at @csnewmedia (www.csnewmedia.co.uk) sorted it out. Mail worked. Now to check it properly.

I am busy making sites with the children this week so no time for ‘proper’ email lessons, so for now, children will have the ability to email each other but not anyone else. Makes it much safer. So I lauched Chrome, Firefox and IE and logged in with different accounts and began testing.

Firstly, could I email from one account to another? (Yes)

Could I email to an account outside of the school?(no)

Could I email into the school? (no)

Perfect. The settings were there. Children can only send emails to people from @stjohnsapps.co.uk which is what I want for now. Later on, after consultation with parents and proper email/esafety lessons, we will possibly open email up for Year 5/6. For now, email works as a notification system letting you know when someone has shared a document or a website with you.

So this week, in all 6 classes the lesson was the same. Here is the email system, here’s 10minutes on how it works and then let’s crack on and make a website.

Children love the email. I mean absolutely love it. It’s perfect because it auto-fills in the child’s name so you only need to know a few letters. I taught all of the children how to forward messages to me if they received an inappropriate message and then we were away. I have checked my mail at home, but Gmail is so quick it only takes a few minutes. I have had about 15messages all week. 10 or so saying ‘hi’ and another few asking how to do things like add calendar events and attach files to emails.

The weird thing is getting the message across that this is internal messaging only. The children can’t message outside of the school domain so in that way, it is exactly the same as a VLE, but it will let me give external access to teachers for example.Let’s hope parents see it as a useful tool too.

Once we got the email playing out of the way, we talked about how to use Sites. Now some had played a bit last week and at home too. One has made a cookery website, another a games-based website and one about football. Scary but exciting. So we made a bit of a plan and showed them how to create the basic site. The key is that one person makes the site, then shares ownership with their group (and their teacher). Then they crack on and add text, pictures and whatever they want really. With Year 5/6 I have used this as a chance to talk to them about copyright and providing a link back to the site they have taken information or pictures from. Some get this, some don’t. The sites are starting to come together and I think with another few sessions, we’ll be able to share them. I am looking forward to seeing what the Year 3/4 come up with when they make their local area websites! It’s been a fantastic week.

Oh and this afternoon, two weeks in, we included the first mention of the system on our weekly newsletter. A parent meeting will follow after Easter, but there really is no need at the moment. It’s all lovely and safe.

I will try and put together a guide of how to a school can get started in the next week or so as I know others want to play and try it, it really is a simple thing to use!

Next week? Showing it to the management team on Monday and then planning the Inset training for the end of March plus showing children how to include videos on to their sites… I will also be amending my new ICT policy to ensure it sits well with the Google Apps stuff I’m doing. I think it will, but I may need to make some amendments.

Also, I have had contact with photopeach who have now provided accounts for every child in my school so I will be sharing that soon. Not sure when yet though.

If you want to see what children do when let loose, give them Google Apps with some key tools turned on. I haven’t even started on Aviary, Picasa, Blogger, News, Books or Groups yet!

Category: Learning Platforms  | Tags:  | 3 Comments
Google Apps – one week in #GCT
Thursday, March 03rd, 2011 | Author:

So we launched our VLE cloudy thing this week and I thought I had better write about what I’ve done and how we’ve done it.

The proper how-to bit will come later, I know that sounds silly but I want to document it properly to give to other schools who want to start their Google Apps setup so that isn’t ready yet. I’ve been too busy playing (and feeling ill) to write down the boring technical bits.

But I will give a quick run through of setting up. First I got some domain hosting, being called St John the Baptist meant that we were limited on our choice of web name so I settled for St Johns Apps which seemed to be fine. Google apps plus others in one place. You then run through the Google Apps setup, prove you’re a real school and voila…Google Apps for Education. It starts as this behemoth with Docs, sites, Reader, Video, Chat, Groups…what do you want? What do you turn off? I start with the safe ones like doc, mail, sites and calendar. The idea is that  I’ll gradually turn others on as I get round to it and as I’ve played with them a bit more. The children see a site that looks like this when they log in.

Not very inspiring at all. I wanted something more icon-y and colourful. I spoke to the very helpful Mark Allen (@edintheclouds) and he sent me the icons which helped a lot. So I made the slightly better:

 

This is the third version we have had in 4 days. I added Education City and Google Reader yesterday and Classpet this evening. The vision is that I will keep adding tools and will maybe categorise them soon too if it gets too much. Ed City and Brainpop are auto-logins as the children need to login before they see this page. I will add Purple Mash and J2E on here soon too. The next step is putting tools like Zooburst, Photopeach, Voki etc on here as well. I think.

So, Monday started with showing the head teacher what it was going to do. I am very lucky in that I have a head teacher who will let me try things as long as he knows a little bit about it. He didn’t want to know any of the technical bits and trusts me with getting it right, so there wasn’t much convincing. I showed him how to log in and a bit of the calendar. He didn’t need to see more and was impressed that this was free. We’re currently paying just under £1,000 for a VLE and not using it yet this Google one does so much more for the price of a web address (about £6 a year)

The next step was to launch it with children. Now the sensible considered approach would be to try something with one class for a few weeks and see how they get on. Then maybe extend this trial to other classes and so on. I am not usually sensible and considered. So this week we launched it to 180 children across 6 classes in Key Stage 2 (7-11year olds).

There is a sort-of plan to this madness. Year 3-4 will be making websites based on their local area. This will cover photos, videos, sound and information about the village and the facilities available. While planning this, I thought that maybe Year 5-6 could do a similar thing on their topic, the human body.

Now I am not advocating teaching the same stuff to the 4 year groups at once, but it seemed like a sensible thing to do in this case. Along the way we’d look at other tools too and the children could explore and see what they come up with. For example using google spreadsheets to measure and collect data.

The first session involved calendar though. This was because it was nice and simple but also because lesson 1 involved typing in two Captcha codes, something the children did find tricky. However, we logged on as a whole class in anywhere from 8 to 15 minutes. Not bad for two captcha codes and a new login box. I emphasised working together, checking the Captcha text before pressing OK and generally it went well.

Then we played with calendar. I say ‘played’ because we really did mess about with it. From adding birthdays to sport fixtures to UK holidays to phases of the moon. Then I shared calendars and they loved it. They liked being able to see their friend’s birthdays. Simple, but effective.

This was generally enough for the year 3-4 children to deal with in one lesson. One child loved it so much they said ‘Oh my god, calendars rock’, which I liked!

Year 5-6 managed to have a bit of a play with Google Sites. This was a bit trickier and I think I was too keen to let them make a site without planning. They were happy sharing their site, but were too busy finding information to think about the referencing/copyright aspect. We will cover that more next week. They also found it difficult to work with a number of windows open at once and to know where to find information. We have covered this before, but I think it was a lot to do at once. They definitely got better as the lesson went on though.

We have found a few other uses for the cloud already. We have put some digital e-books into a shared document folder, the children can all see these but not edit them. This means they have a constant library available to them.

My head teacher uploaded a powerpoint and converted it to a Google presentation (well, I did that for him). He then went and presented at a head’s meeting. When asked if he needed to plug his memory stick in, he simply said, “I don’t need to, we have the cloud”. He then had to answer loads of questions about what it was, how much it cost and what it could do…I know that will lead to other schools contacting us to set them up too, but I’ll ignore that for now.

My favourite parts of the week have been the children though. We launched a pupil newsletter recently and this consisted of three girls using Publisher in school and trying to email stuff from home to school and vice versa. They would get 15minutes one lunchtime a week to work on it. Today they moved this newspaper to google docs and all worked on it together. This will then go live and be emailed to all students when it is ready and I will download it as a doc and embed it on the blog for the public to see.

Another highlight was a conversation with a boy this morning. He was talking to me and he asked me if I’d heard about ‘the cloud’. He said you could save work there and anyone could access it. His face was a picture when I said “heard about it? you’re going to be using it in an hour’s time”. I think he was impressed.

So what have been the downsides?

Mail still doesn’t work. I think this is me getting some settings wrong. I have checked them again and if it’s still not working tomorrow I’ll speak to our hosting company to get them sorted.

I mentioned moving to an online diary. Not instead of a paper one because I know people hold that dear to their heart, but as a backup. It could replace a paper agenda we have in school but I know this will be a hard fight to win and I am happy to let staff use the cloud thing in the way they want to. We will definitely be putting dates on for the children though as they seem so keen to use it.

And…er…that’s it so far. We have yet to mention it to parents, I am very much a believer of doing something and then telling people about it rather than telling parents what you are going to do. We will have staff training in a few weeks time and will run a parent session after Easter.

It’s been a fun week and I can’t wait til next week when the year 3-4 will start making their websites too…

Category: Learning Platforms  | Tags:  | 4 Comments
The Cloud – My Vision
Tuesday, January 25th, 2011 | Author:

I’m at the stage I need to make a decision. Admittedly, it’s not just my decision and will be shared with the rest of the staff and yes, children will have a say too, but primarily it is my decision.

The decision is where to go with our online learning. Currently we have a range of online tools (also known as a VLE in Becta language) and these include Purple Mash, J2E and Brainpop amongst others. I wrote about the decision to choose between Google and Live@edu here and I still haven’t started either. I have installed Google but just for the calendar. I have spent a term-and-a-half swaying between Google and Live. On one side I have many people on Twitter using Google and loving it, on the other I have Hampshire about to start their Live solution. It was due in October but there have been a few delays in getting it right but full credit to Hampshire for delaying it until it’s ready.

Then there’s also the VLE that I spent two years sharing with teachers, Studywiz, that we could use as well. So I have options. Lots of options. For those unsure about VLEs, I wrote about whether to VLE or Not to VLE here

As I wrote earlier, a VLE is a collection of online tools. I have that. But what I don’t have, is somewhere to put them all under one umbrella. I want to make it simple to access them all. So I thought I’d jot down what I want to achieve and then see where I end up…after this waffling about where we are so far.

So what would my VLE have in it? (I’m calling it VLE, you could call it online space, cloud, magical land of stuff, whatever)

Control

I want control over logins. I want it simple e.g. firstname.lastname. I want full control over what can and can’t be published. For example, children shouldn’t publish live unless I let them have that access right. When I say ‘I want power’ I mean the school has the control of course. I would like control over the tools available, so year 6 see more than year 1 for example.

Also, I want one login. They login once and it’s there. All of it. Just simple and easy. If they have to login again to access a certain tool, fine, but it needs to have the same structure as the other logins. Typing firstname.lastname twice is possible, I can live with that.

Email/Messaging/Discussions

I want to have emails for all staff and children. I’d want to be able to control who sends what, meaning that youger children, say up to year 3 can only send internal messages but older children can use this as an external system too. I’d also want the ability to archive messages and to keep them after children had gone. For example, if a child wanted to, they could still use parts of it in Year 7/8 whatever. Maybe. But I want that potential. I obviously want all messages to be stored and to be able to search and check them.

Discussion forums should be included too, this is a key thing in Studywiz and I would love to have discussion forums in certain areas of the cloud thing.

Blogs/Sites

I want children to be able to make websites and/or blogs. The blog could be used as a learning journal as they progress through the school and the sites could be used for personal use as well as for certain projects. We have a project in year 3/4 where children will be looking at the local area and the teacher talked about videos and a travel documentary. It’d be great to have a website containing embedded video, photo galleries, hyperlinks and good old writing too.Yes, we have blogs in our school, but the children don’t really use them yet and I think teachers would prefer it if children had their own separate ones.

Pictures

I would love an area like Picasa or Flickr where the children can upload pictures and share them with their friends. This could be photos of them out and about, playing football or scanned in pics of work. Then they could make an e-portfolio type thingy too.This should also include some kind of embedding (maybe on the sites mentioned above) that allows children to use animoto/photopeach/vimeo etc to embed their content.

Writing tools/docs

They should have access to Google docs/Office online as well as J2e-type tools that let them type, publish, make presentations, spreadsheets and all of those sorts of tools they’ll find useful to complete homework and to share their learning.

These would also be used for staff to share documents, reports, policies etc to make it easier for us to work collaboratively. You all know how amazing Google docs are, I want that functionality. Simple and easy sharing from an address book. I want to click a couple of times and the whole of Year 3 have the document or all staff etc.

Animation/video

I’d love a video sharing area. J2E has a great new animation tool that would be part of the package, so I wonder if they could create their video (or upload one) and save it into a video area online. A self-contained, personal (safe) youtube. They could send links to their friends and share their work.

Creation

This includes picture creation using some of the amazing Purple Mash tools and music creation using something like Aviary. These should be available to the children when they log in too. These tools should make it simple to create a piece of magic and then share it with others either by uploading it to a gallery or by sending a link to others.

Sharing/Giving work

Teachers should be able to create a page and share work/homework very easily. This could be a link to a document or a video or a discussion forum. They should be able to easily include hyperlinks and embed web2.0 tech as well. Similar to the blog, but private to just the children in their class/year group.

Cost

Apart from the extra bits like Brainpop or Mash, I’d like this to be as free as possible.

What have I missed? I look at the list above and it is a little biased towards things that I know are possible. I know that I can pretty much design that myself using Google tools and some clever people at 2Simple and J2e to help me make this work. But I’d love to know what else was possible.My current time scale is to get something in place by Easter, then spend the Summer playing with it and sharing it with some staff before launching it in September.

So please share your ideas, I really would love to hear them…

**Edit** It has been pointed out that this will just be a serious of tools under one umbrella, and that’s true, but what tools should be included?

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