- Tap open the Notability App.
- Tap on the Gear icon in the lower left corner.
- Tap Auto-backup on the left side of the pop up screen.
- Tap the Google Drive icon.
- Sign into your Google account (@spsdme.org)
- Tap Allow.
- Tap OK.
- Tap Close.
Digital Melting Pot
Friday, November 6, 2015
Back Up Notability to Google Drive Automatically!
Notability is a fantastic note-taking tool because of all the ways you can add information to it and because of the notebook-style organization. But...What if your iPad crashes, gets lost, or broken, and you lose everything on it? Here's how to make sure that everything you keep in Notability is not lost:
Back Up Notability to Google Drive Automatically!
Notability is a fantastic note-taking tool because of all the ways you can add information to it and because of the notebook-style organization. But...What if your iPad crashes, gets lost, or broken, and you lose everything on it? Here's how to make sure that everything you keep in Notability is not lost:
- Tap open the Notability App.
- Tap on the Gear icon in the lower left corner.
- Tap Auto-backup on the left side of the pop up screen.
- Tap the Google Drive icon.
- Sign into your Google account (@spsdme.org)
- Tap Allow.
- Tap OK.
- Tap Close.
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Email Manners, Please!
I care a lot about email etiquette. By following a few very simple guidelines, we could all save ourselves numerous emails and significant time reading, responding to, sorting, and searching them.
I first became passionate about this topic a long time ago, after a presentation by Leslie O'Flahavan, owner of E-WRITE, at a conference in Connecticut. She made a great impact on me, not just with her points, but with her examples. She showed us examples of terrible, emails that mirrored ones that I was seeing at the office every day.
The conference was well over ten years ago and I no longer have the notes I took that day, but some of her messages still resonate with me. Below are the guidelines I've either kept with me since then or added to the list because they matter to me.
The Object of Email
Everyone receives more email than he or she could possibly read carefully. So, most emails are skimmed or even ignored. The object of sending email is to get your message across while making it unnecessary for people to actually read it all.
Subject up Front
Always put your subject first. Quite often, I get halfway thought composing an email before remembering this rule and as jarring as it sometimes seems to put it right out there - "I need twenty-five hundred dollars for a conference", it is good advice. Put the subject up front and then supporting details next. Nobody wants to read eight paragraphs before you get to the point.
Short and Direct
Get your point across in as few words as possible.
White Space and Bullets
Use white space and bullets to make your email look uncluttered. Nobody likes to read a long, thick paragraph. Use numbered lists for things that need to be ordered and use bullets for general lists.
Subject Line
Use a relevant subject line. Make sure your subject accurately reflects what the email is about. When forwarding, or responding on a different subject, change the subject, if necessary, to maintain accuracy. This also helps everyone on the thread when searching for the email by topic.
Reply vs. Reply to All
Use Reply to All sparingly. Consider if everyone on the thread needs to see your response. Try to reply only to the sender, or to as few people as necessary, whenever possible.
Use bcc
When addressing a large group, address the email to yourself and put everyone else in the bcc field. Using bcc prevents the readers from having to scroll through a long list of recipients before getting to the meat of the message. Outside of work, using bcc will protect the privacy of the recipients by hiding email addresses from other recipients.
Spelling and Punctuation
Use spell check and proofread.
Angry? Don't Send!
Never send email when you are angry or upset. Always save as draft and make the send decision later. More often than not, the decision to send will change when you're calm.
Details
Are all details included? Try to predict any further questions the reader will have and include them in the first email. You can reduce additional email volume by being thorough.
I first became passionate about this topic a long time ago, after a presentation by Leslie O'Flahavan, owner of E-WRITE, at a conference in Connecticut. She made a great impact on me, not just with her points, but with her examples. She showed us examples of terrible, emails that mirrored ones that I was seeing at the office every day.
The conference was well over ten years ago and I no longer have the notes I took that day, but some of her messages still resonate with me. Below are the guidelines I've either kept with me since then or added to the list because they matter to me.
The Object of Email
Everyone receives more email than he or she could possibly read carefully. So, most emails are skimmed or even ignored. The object of sending email is to get your message across while making it unnecessary for people to actually read it all.
Subject up Front
Always put your subject first. Quite often, I get halfway thought composing an email before remembering this rule and as jarring as it sometimes seems to put it right out there - "I need twenty-five hundred dollars for a conference", it is good advice. Put the subject up front and then supporting details next. Nobody wants to read eight paragraphs before you get to the point.
Short and Direct
Get your point across in as few words as possible.
White Space and Bullets
Use white space and bullets to make your email look uncluttered. Nobody likes to read a long, thick paragraph. Use numbered lists for things that need to be ordered and use bullets for general lists.
Subject Line
Use a relevant subject line. Make sure your subject accurately reflects what the email is about. When forwarding, or responding on a different subject, change the subject, if necessary, to maintain accuracy. This also helps everyone on the thread when searching for the email by topic.
Reply vs. Reply to All
Use Reply to All sparingly. Consider if everyone on the thread needs to see your response. Try to reply only to the sender, or to as few people as necessary, whenever possible.
Use bcc
When addressing a large group, address the email to yourself and put everyone else in the bcc field. Using bcc prevents the readers from having to scroll through a long list of recipients before getting to the meat of the message. Outside of work, using bcc will protect the privacy of the recipients by hiding email addresses from other recipients.
Spelling and Punctuation
Use spell check and proofread.
Angry? Don't Send!
Never send email when you are angry or upset. Always save as draft and make the send decision later. More often than not, the decision to send will change when you're calm.
Details
Are all details included? Try to predict any further questions the reader will have and include them in the first email. You can reduce additional email volume by being thorough.
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Redirect Your Outlook to Gmail!
Why should you redirect your email from Outlook to Google?
- Get all your mail in one place
- Student emails auto-populate in Gmail
- Gmail is connected to all your Google for Education Apps - Drive, Calendar, Sites, Blogger
- Gmail works in all browsers
- Redirecting ensures that you will get ALL of your mail no matter which inbox is comes into
- Gmail inbox has a chat feature so you can communicate with other teachers without leaving the room
How to redirect mail from Outlook (@spsd.org ) to Google (@spsdme.org):
- Click on the Options menu just under your name in the upper right corner of the screen.
- Select Create an Inbox Rule…
- Click the New button.
- Click the More Options link on the first pop up screen.
- Select [Apply to All Messages] under When the message arrives, and:
- Under Do the following: Hover over the forward, redirect, or send option and then select Redirect the message to…
- Type your Google address in the To: field at the bottom of the screen and press ENTER. (example: glatzsa@spsdme.org)
- Click OK.
- OPTIONAL: Type a name for the rule in the Name of rule: field.
- Click Save.
END
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Evernote vs. eBackpack for Student Portfolios
Student Portfolios - Evernote vs. eBackpack
Evernote
|
eBackpack
| |
Account Setup
|
Manual by email
|
District setup
|
Web and iPad
|
Yes & Mac/PC App
|
Yes
|
Sharing Portfolio
|
Weblink, email, share folder
|
Teacher only (act as…)
|
Viewing Portfolio
|
Folder Items or Presentation Mode
|
Folder Items
|
Collaboration
|
Can share folders collaboratively
|
No
|
Annotation
|
Web Version Only
|
iPad Version Only
|
Life of Account
|
Forever
|
Graduation or until district stops paying for app
|
Cost
|
Free
|
MLTI 7-12, Gr.6 $?
|
Ease of Use
|
Fair
|
Excellent
|
Max Space
|
Unlimited, but 60MB/Month upload limit
|
Unlimited
|
Input Methods
|
Camera
Camera Roll
Type directly
Audio File - Mic
Built in checklists
Built in reminders
Other Apps
From Web (directly)
Email
|
Camera
Camera Roll
Audio File - Mic
Other Apps
|
Organization
|
Hierarchical:
Tags
Notes
Notebooks
Stacks
|
Folders in Folders
|
External Service Accounts
|
Not needed, everything jives
|
Drive, Dropbox
|
Spell Check
|
No
|
Yes
|
iOS Auto Correct
|
Yes
|
No
|
Notificaitons
|
Can set reminders
|
Teacher sets due dates
|
Privacy
|
Web based, private, user is the only viewer unless deliberately shared
|
Web based, but closed system. Student accounts can be viewed by teachers
|
Procedure to Input From Other App
|
|
Ends in eBackpack
Drive is a pull from within eBackpack
|
Compatability
|
Could not find an incompatible productivity app. Works with web browsers.
|
Compatible with all apps, sometimes in the “more” area.
Not compatable with web browsers.
|
Summary
|
Pros: Extremely Versatile, works as a first choice with all other apps, including browsers. Presentation mode, sharing and collaboration lend themselves well to student portfolios. Easy to add a huge variety of media.
Cons: No spell check, students manage their accounts.
|
Pros: Closed system, privacy. Ease of use. Teacher can reset passwords. No account creation needed. Built in spell check. iPad annotation feature. Simple to use.
Cons; No sharing and presenting is basically rifling through a folder.
|
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Where am I on my Mac?
When you search for a file on your computer and it shows up in Finder, do you struggle to figure out where it lives on your computer?
With this quick fix, you can have Finder always display the full path of your file as shown below:

This short document will walk you through a quick console command to make the path visible in Finder:
1. Click Applications folder and open Utilities.
2. Double click Terminal to open the terminal.
3. At the prompt (assetID-computername: ~username$) type (or cut and paste) the following command:
defaults write com.apple.finder _FXShowPosixPathInTitle -bool YES
4. Press the ENTER key.
5. Go back to Finder so that it can be restarted.
6. Click on the Apple in the upper left corner of the screen.
7. Select Force Quit.
8. Click on the Finder application in the list of applications that pops up.
9. Click on the Relaunch button.
Open Finder and it will be displaying the path!
With this quick fix, you can have Finder always display the full path of your file as shown below:

This short document will walk you through a quick console command to make the path visible in Finder:
1. Click Applications folder and open Utilities.
2. Double click Terminal to open the terminal.
3. At the prompt (assetID-computername: ~username$) type (or cut and paste) the following command:
defaults write com.apple.finder _FXShowPosixPathInTitle -bool YES
4. Press the ENTER key.
5. Go back to Finder so that it can be restarted.
6. Click on the Apple in the upper left corner of the screen.
7. Select Force Quit.
8. Click on the Finder application in the list of applications that pops up.
9. Click on the Relaunch button.
Open Finder and it will be displaying the path!
Thursday, June 12, 2014
Customize Your Chrome Google Apps Launcher
![]() |
Figure 1 Apps Launcher Menu |
<--- When you use the little grid in the Chrome browser to switch between Gmail, Drive or other Google Apps, is the Apps Launcher menu meaningful to you? Are the resulting choices apps you don't need? Do you have to go searching for the ones you do need?
Well, here is a quick way to customize your Apps Launcher with Google Apps and other links that you use frequently.
- Click this link to locate and install the App Launcher Customizer Tool.
- Re-open or reload your Chrome browser.
- Click on the App Launcher grid again, scroll down to the bottom and click on "Configure".
- Now you can drag apps to and from the right pane to add or remove them from your App Launcher menu.
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