Saturday, October 26, 2013

UDMC and Avatars

I was very fortunate to have the opportunity to present at the University of Dallas Ministry Conference on Oct. 25th. I was a part of two very different presentations- one tech, one not. The non-tech presentation was done with my very dear friend and colleague, Beth Belcher. Beth and I spent nine years encouraging children to have reverence and familiarity with Church devotions and Mass. If you might be here and looking for "The Catholic School Mass- Better and Better" there is a QR code to the right. If you scan it or click it you will find the shared Google folder. If there is an error please be sure to let me know. You can also find Beth's site in my Blog list.

The other presentation I was involved with another dear friend and my "partner in crime" Carol Mayo,  was "Encouraging Writing with Weebly". A great session but our tech was less than desirable. It was pretty sad. The laptop we had access to was XP, no flash installed, not hard wired to the internet, Office not registered and who knows what else. My mac and the projector wouldn't talk to one another so we were left with static images (and not enough of those!) and our enthusiastic speech. Despite the tech glitches we had a nice sized group that stayed, asked good questions, and were most kind about our tech problems which we had absolutely no control over. I thought it still went well. It was just so disappointing to not be able to demonstrate how easy Weebly is to use. You can find some of the information we use to present Weebly by following this link.

I think I mentioned before about my elective at school where I introduce some fun tech for my class. I am always looking for things that don't  require you to create an account and you don't see a gallery of inappropriate items. I have found my students love to create things online. Recently I showed them two different sites for creating "avatars". They had a lot of fun with them. The first is DoppleMe . You can make a fun avatar for free. To save it you would need an account but we just snipped it and saved it.

The other site I showed them was Build Your Wild Self. I was afraid they would think this site was more for little kids but they spent more time here than the other. This site comes from the New York Zoos and Aquarium so you can imagine that it is very kid friendly. Again free. You start with creating a "normal" looking avatar and then begin to add animal parts. When you complete your new wild self it gives you a name based on the parts you chose. It also explains what each part is, from what animal and some information about it. (When I created this one what I clicked on was not what I was getting so I don't know about the glitch.) You can send to a friend or snip it and save or print it out. I really enjoy this site also.
"After" the animal parts!
My normal avatar before the animal parts.



Saturday, October 12, 2013

Quick fun Tech

The middle school students where I teach get to choose an "exploratory" or elective type class once a week. It can vary from sign language to drama. They go to this class for one quarter and then get to pick another class. I usually do a Tech Tools for School topic. I try to pick fun, easy tools the kids can pick up quickly since our class time is only 30 minutes. Sometimes we find a way to use them for school work and sometimes they are just for fun. I thought I would share some of their favorite fun links.

GeoGreeting
It's amazing how they could spend 30 minutes looking at every letter of the alphabet. The cool thing is that it tells you the location of the building (city) and then they want to either try and find it themselves or they go off and do some independent research on the place where the building is. Well look at that- self motivated learning at it's finest!

Spell with Flickr 
Another fun site, although today the letter N was not working on my computer. I tried all the browsers but nothing. When things like that happen with my students I remind them that it is a web based tool and sometimes things don't work perfectly. So we go to plan B! What I really like about this one is there are different letters to choose from. When you click on a letter it cycles through about 5 or so letters and you can pick the one you like. You are not stuck with one choice as in GeoGreeting.

CoolText
Another pretty cool text creator with some really neat fonts. You have many controls like color, size, gradient, the list is long. Some you can download the image in a variety of formats. One word of caution- this site does have ads so use it carefully.

So there you have it- Three fun tools to create your headings, use on powerpoints, anywhere you can use an image.