Category Archives: Tech

AASL Recommended Apps: Recap

In June, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their Best Apps for Teaching and Learning 2018. The apps encourage qualities such as creativity and collaboration and encourage discovery and curiosity.

***NOTE: this app is scheduled to shut down on June 30th, 2019. However, it was included on the list of Best Apps 2018 so we wanted to share it with you anyway. Synth is the app that is the next step for this company. Synth provides “interactive podcasts in byte-size increments.”

“Recap is a free student video response and reflection app that gives teachers and parents insight into students’ learning and progress. Recap provides evidence of student thinking, improves formative assessment, and supports personalized learning.”

Platform: iOS, Android
Grades: All
Cost: FREE

Hear from this teacher who uses Recap in her ESL classroom as a way to encourage participation from quiet or shy students. Ed Tech Teacher has this post explaining how the app works well with Chromebooks and also offers some suggestions for classroom activities.

Here’s a quick video to see how the app works:

Training Tips: Password security

Yay: online security!!

We are big fans of this – and hope that you are too.

I know: when I hear about online security I start sighing and thinking about how busy I am, and how long this going to take, and how hard it will be to look up all this information.

SIGH.

We all know it’s important. We all know we have accounts that have been hacked. We know we have passwords and user names floating around on the dark web (even when we aren’t really sure what that means).

I’m entirely with you.

BUT!

We talked about password managers a couple of weeks ago. (Check it out right here.)  Hopefully you have gone ahead and installed one.

Yay!!

(I’m still cheering for you if you haven’t quite done it yet, but are mentally getting ready. Go! Do it! You’ve got this!!)

I use Password Boss, and it’s just great. (For me. You can choose one that is great for you!) Right there you can see how many of your passwords have been compromised, how much of your information has been found on the dark web, how many duplicate passwords you have, how many are weak, and how many are old.

Guys: it’s a pretty daunting report each time you turn on your computer. It’s right there, and it looks scary.

However, it’s just so easy to fix! All you do is click on an account where you have a password (join me in being stunned by the number of passwords you have that you have totally forgotten!), and hit “Update.”

Your browser opens and takes you there. Then you do not need to know or remember your sign-in info – just click on the little owl icon of Password Boss and it will fill in your info, and sign you in.

This is the harder part – and it’s all due to Poor Web Design. You have to hunt around each website to find the “Change Password” or similar link. You do not need to be clever and think of something new – just hit Password Boss’s “generate a new password” and you will get a big number of random letters (capital and small), numbers, and symbols. Every website will have its own password now – and Password Boss will remember them all!

It’s sadly surprising how often there are no chances to do this. The easiest thing is to log out, then click “forgot my password” and reset it there. It’s still easy.

I had hundreds of compromised passwords, so set a goal to update at least five every day. I’m down now to the final few that have really challenging websites, and I feel much safer!

Whew!

Even better – I’m TERRIBLE at remembering passwords! Messing up passwords over and over again has resulted in my being locked out of a staggering number of really important websites (Yes: I’ve been locked out of every retirement account I have, every bank account I have, every credit card I’ve ever had, my HSA – you see where this is going.) Now, I NEVER HAVE TO REMEMBER ANOTHER PASSWORD!

The joy I feel over this is staggering!! I even have it on my phone, and it works there too!

We’ve all got plenty of problems and hassles in life. Find a password manager that works for you, and get ready to make your online life safer and easier.

 

And of course, it goes without saying: Your library needs this!!!!

You may think you are just a little library with nothing to offer a hacker. But they love the practice of taking over websites and accounts that people are leaving unsecured.  Let’s not let your library be the sad disaster story we all tell each other as we shake our heads sadly over your misfortune.

Get a password manager. Keep your passwords fresh and new.

Go be safe today!!!

AASL Recommended Apps: Procreate

In June, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their Best Apps for Teaching and Learning 2018. The apps encourage qualities such as creativity and collaboration and encourage discovery and curiosity.

The app Procreate is a powerful tool for the iPad that allows users to make really impressive digital artwork.

Procreate is an intuitive drawing, painting, and illustration application specifically designed for the iPad. It has hundreds of brushes, layering capabilities, multi-touch gestures, Apple Pencil support, and a time-lapse video export feature. Procreate, especially in combination with a stylus, allows you to create digital artwork that looks like it was created on paper or a canvas. This art can then be exported in multiple file types, including PSD (Adobe Photoshop) retaining all layer functionality. 

Visit the Procreate website for extras like FAQs and a downloadable Artist’s Handbook.

Platform: iOS
Cost:
 $9.99
Grades: High School – Adult

Common Sense Education has this review of the app and it includes feedback from teachers as well as suggestions for incorporating the app into simple classroom projects. Procreate is included in this article from Digital Debris of the top 3 apps for sketch notes and is described by the author as “the most powerful creative app I have ever used on a mobile device.” And the site Educator’s Technology gives some quick examples of the capabilities of Procreate in this article.

Check out this video to see what you can make with Procreate!

AASL Recommended Apps: Science Journal

In June, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their Best Apps for Teaching and Learning 2018. The apps encourage qualities such as creativity and collaboration and encourage discovery and curiosity.

The app Science Journal is an easy-to-use app that helps students with their science experiments!

Turn your phone into a light, sound, and motion sensor. Measure these experimental variables with greater accuracy and create detailed data displays. Use photos and text to record observations within the app. Teachers can connect external sensors and search Science Journal’s website for possible experiments.

Platform: iOS, Android
Grades: 5th +
Cost: FREE

Science Buddies has this detailed article that shows all the different sensors available on the app and includes several informative videos. Check out this page of lesson plans for STEM classroom activities that incorporate the app. And check out this review of the app from School Library Journal!

Watch this video to see Science Journal in action:

AASL Recommended Apps: RelationShapes

In June, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their Best Apps for Teaching and Learning 2018. The apps encourage qualities such as creativity and collaboration and encourage discovery and curiosity.

The app Relationshapes makes it fun and easy for young kids to work on their visual-spatial skills. The brightly-colored app has eight levels of progressively more challenging activities and a multi-touch interface for teachers or parents to join students in activities.

“Open-ended play gives young children opportunities to practice problem-solving and experience visual-spatial reasoning. Geared towards early childhood, RelationShapes allows young users to move and resize shapes on one side of an axis, then create a matching image on the other side. After each level, new shapes and stickers are unlocked to create fun pictures.”

Platform: iOS, Android
Grades: Preschool – Elementary School
Cost: FREE

Teachers With Apps has this very detailed article about Relationshapes that explores several activities and explains the benefits for young students. In this article about spatial learning and STEM, Relationshapes is mentioned as well as several other apps that provide students with a good foundation knowledge that will help them understand STEM concepts in the future.