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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. Educational and Student Success Center
  3. tech tools

tech tools

Why Use a Contract and Calendar in Group Projects

Disorganized group projects usually result in a lot of needless drama and a low-quality product.   Therefore, it is best to organize information and define expectations for every group member. Two weeks ago, I recommended using Google Drive to increase the quality of your group projects. This week, I want to recommend that you reduce the drama from the start with two elements: a group contract and a Google calendar.

Organize with a Group Contract

A group contract clearly defines the roles, responsibilities, and expectations of every member of the group. There are a lot of options for creating a group contract, and what you choose to include depends on your project, your instructor, and the makeup of your group, but there are some elements I consider essentials. These include:

  • Contact Information: Include everyone’s contact information. Decide as a group, how much information to share,  but include your email addresses, since that’s the how you share documents in Google Drive. Cell phone numbers help communicate quickly, but not everyone feels comfortable sharing personal information.  Group members should never be pressured to include more information than they are comfortable sharing.
  • Roles and Responsibilities: Misunderstandings and misplaced expectations are two of the biggest hurdles in successful group work. Avoid them by  listing the roles and responsibilities for each group member in detail. Stating things clearly helps avoid conflicts due to procrastination and last-minute scrambling to get work finished. Don’t forget to include writing an introduction and conclusion, formatting, and proofreading in your responsibilities. These tend to get overlooked and can result in a lot of last minute drama.
  • Project Description: Include a brief description of your project. This will help maintain focus on the big picture while group members work on their individual parts.
  • Questions/Notes/Suggestions: Include an area for miscellaneous questions, ideas, and suggestions. You will be glad you did.

As I said before, these are the elements I consider essential. There are other elements your group could add if you need them. Just remember that your goal is  efficient, effective, and drama-free group collaboration that results in a successful product.

Organize with the Google Calendar

Using a calendar improves your group’s time management and helps avoid missed deadlines. Create a Google Calendar for the project. Then make sure you post the following:

  • Due dates: Include due dates for outlines, rough drafts, bibliographies, etc. When you add the due dates, add notifications to serve as reminders. You can add more than one notification to an event and elect to have alerts sent as an email, so figure out with your group members how you will set this up.
  • Class meetings: Group work is often led by what you are learning in class. Post all your class meeting dates so you stay on top of your workload.
  • Group meetings: Whether you are meeting online or face to face, get meeting times on the calendar so everyone is aware of them. Take advantage of the calendar notifications to make sure everyone gets a reminder.
  • Status checks: How often will group members need to check to see that everyone is accomplishing things on time and on deadline? Use the notifications settings to send out reminders.

Share the completed calendar with the group. Use the notification features for each event. Let the technology do some of the work. Reminders get sent automatically once they are set, which means that nobody has to remember to remind everyone else.

A contract and calendar define expectations and keep group members on track. Set your group up for success. Use them to reduce the drama and increase your product quality.

Filed Under: Academic Success, collaboration, tech tools Tagged With: collaboration, group work, productivity, student success

Group Projects with Google Drive

Group projects always have challenges, but managing one doesn’t have to be stressful. What you need is a platform that keeps all the work in one place, shows the latest drafts, and offers enough flexibility so that group members can work on their own time schedules.  Google Drive incorporates all these features and makes organization, communication, and collaboration much less frustrating and time consuming.

Google Drive is designed for collaboration. The documents you create and share are designed to be worked on by multiple people. It’s easy to create a Google account. In fact, anyone who already has a Gmail address has access to Google Drive. And, you don’t need a Gmail address if you don’t want one. You can create an account with your UAMS or personal email address. Go to https://www.google.com/drive and click on Go to Google Drive.

The strength behind collaborating in Google Drive comes through the ability to create and share files. Create a folder for your project and share it with the group members.  You can create new folders and files or upload files from your laptop into the drive. Share photos, documents, presentations, PDFs, designs, drawings, recordings, videos – almost anything you need for your project can be stored and shared in Google Drive.

Group Projects with Google Apps

The Google apps make Drive a great platform for group projects. Students can work together, on the same document, in real time, and save their work in Drive. Here’s a quick overview of four apps that make working on group projects, papers, and presentations easy and efficient.

Docs: Docs is Google’s word processing app. Think of it as a lite version of Microsoft Word. Use docs for brainstorming, outlining, drafting, and polishing any type of document.

Slides: Slides is like PowerPoint lite. Gather all your content and create your slideshow in Slides. Multiple authors can add to, change, or edit the slideshow as needed, and Slides will always display the most recent version. You can track changes too, and revert to earlier versions if necessary.

Sheets: Sheets is Google’s spreadsheet app, sort of an Excel lite. You can use it for anything from data collection to keeping a project journal.

Calendar: Google Calendar is a great way of putting your project on a timeline. Create a project calendar and then set all your deadlines, due dates, status checks, meetings, and class sessions so that everyone in your group stays on track.

Google makes group projects much less frustrating and time consuming. Use Google for your next project and have greater success.

You can find more information about some of the Google apps on Google Tools.

Filed Under: collaboration, Student Success Center, tech tools Tagged With: collaboration, communication, Google, group work

Create with Adobe Spark

Adobe has come out with a product for people who want to share ideas in a way that will change the way people think and feel. It’s called Spark, and allows people to create social graphics, web stories, and videos in a matter of minutes. Adobe Spark is designed for people who aren’t artists, photographers, or movie makers, but who want to create beautiful images, graphics, and videos. Best of all, Adobe Spark is free (my favorite price).

What Can You Create with Adobe Spark?

Spark lets you create three types of content. First, you can use Post to create images for sharing on social media. Upload your own photo or pick one from a large selection of stock photos, and add your text. Spark helps you create the right shape and size for different social media accounts, and helps you with the design

Second, create your own videos with Spark Video. Mix your own images with stock photos and icons, then add your voice and select background music and publish your video to share. Videos are self-hosted on Spark with a link you can share with your friends. You can also download your video to your computer.

Finally, with Page, Spark lets you create web stories presented as a magazine-style webpage and viewed on any device. You can share the link or publish the link on other websites.

If you prefer to work on a mobile device, Adobe has free iOS apps. You can download Spark Post, Spark Video, and Spark Page to your iPad or iPhone from the App Store. Right now, Adobe doesn’t have the apps for Android devices.

Adobe Spark is  quick and easy to use regardless of your training or experience in graphic design, web development, or video production. You don’t get unlimited options in designing your content, but you do get a great way to quickly create beautiful content for sharing your ideas and stories with a wider audience.

Filed Under: Student Success Center, tech tools Tagged With: Adobe, creativity

PingPad: Mobile Productivity Made Simple

productivity

In the past decade there has been an explosion in the number of communication, collaboration, and productivity apps available for users who want to organize and collaborate on projects with others.  But today, people prefer to get things done with their smartphones and mobile devices. Most of the productivity apps available center on documents which are difficult to view and edit on mobile devices. What is needed is an app for collaborating that works on your phone, especially since many internet users today don’t have a desktop or laptop.

PingPad

PingPad is designed to be a quick and easy tool for collaborating with others to get things done. It’s designed around groups, rather than documents. It’s easy to create groups from a list of contacts. You add contacts either from either an email or cell phone number, and then organize those contacts into groups. Create groups for your classmates, study groups, roommates, family, and friends.

How PingPad Works

PingPad is organized around three basic functions: notes, chat, and tasks. Your groups can then edit notes, create and assign tasks, and chat together. It’s a simple social productivity app, built on the ways you use messaging to communicate.

  • Create notes and lists privately, or within your groups for others can see and edit. You can add images to your notes or paste them into the chat section. You can link notes to organize information.
  • Coordinate with messaging and chat to keep your group updated. You can put notes and lists into the chat feature and share links to things. Share photos and screenshots to illustrate your ideas. Post chat messages as notes too.
  • Share the workload by creating to-do lists with tasks. Know what every member of the group is doing. You can delegate the work by assigning notes to group members. Establish deadlines and set due dates to keep the group on schedule.

PingPad works on both iOS and Android devices and also on your desktop. You can mute or push notifications for specific groups, so you will only see the notifications you want to see.

Using PingPad

New social apps usually have a big problem: you have to find other people before you can use them. PingPad solves this problem by encouraging users to create notes and lists for themselves. This makes the app useful even others aren’t using it yet.

PingPad is very simple and not at all difficult to use, but it took me a little time to figure out. It’s not organized in a way that was familiar to me, so I had a little trouble at first making it perform the way I wanted. However, its basic simplicity makes it very easy to use once you’ve played with if a bit. It didn’t take me very long before I was creating notes, inviting people to participate, and creating groups.

Doing things like working in a study group, sharing with classmates, or collaborating on a group project is where an app like PingPad shines. Its ability to quickly form groups and assign tasks means that users can get things done more quickly, and it meets the needs of users who want to work with their mobile devices rather than a desktop. And, PingPad is free, which is everyone’s favorite price. It’s likely that PingPad will eventually charge for premium features, but for now PingPad is completely free.

Filed Under: Productivity, Student Success Center, tech tools, time management Tagged With: collaboration, productivity, smartphones

Online Flashcards with Flippity.net

Every student knows that there are some things in every class that you simply have to memorize and keep at the front of your mind. Although flashcards are an old fashioned idea, they are still one of the best methods for memorizing information, and technology has given them a new look and feel. One easy tool for creating flashcards is Flippity.net.

Flippity Flashcards?

Flippity.net is a free Google Sheets conversion tool for creating online flashcards from Google spreadsheets. You can create your own set, or collaborate with others to develop and share a study or review flashcard deck. Like all the apps in your Google Drive, collaboration and sharing is easy. The flashcards must be made on a laptop or desktop computer, but one published they can be access on your mobile device through your Google Drive account.

Flippity is easy to use. First, you will need to make sure you are logged into your Google account. Then, just go to Flippity.net and follow the step-by-step instructions. You can include images and video in your flashcards, but you will need to have a URL for each picture or video you wish to upload. You cannot include images that are saved on your computer, only those that are stored online. The video below demonstrates how easy it is to use Flippity to create flashcards.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDrJC2KQmHQ


Flippity is a great tool that can be used for all types of content/classes. I especially like that the flashcard decks can be created collaboratively, so that groups of students can work together and maximize their study time. Just remember to complete the flashcard spreadsheet before you publish it in order to make sure everything is correct. If you are looking for a quick, easy, and free online flashcard creator to help improve your study sessions, give Flippity.net a try.

Filed Under: Help for Students, Student Success Center, study skills, tech tools Tagged With: flashcards, study skills

Smartphone Savvy with Drippler

Are you looking for ways to get the most out of your smartphone? Check out Drippler, the free discovery app that gives you tips, software updates, app recommendations and accessory deals, called “drips” that help you maximize your smartphone use.

Why Drippler?

The key to Drippler’s value is that is only gives you information that is relevant to your specific smartphone. With phones getting more complex, and use guides less available, it’s great to find an app that delivers relevant and personal tailored information. Checking my phone, I find information regarding ways to maximize my phone’s battery, 5 apps for using my phone as a wireless mouse and keyboard, how to fix 7 common iPhone keyboard problems, how to delete my iPhone’s browser history, Bluetooth headphone recommendations, and a variety of app and game recommendations. And all of this information is tailored specifically for my iPhone 6s.

Drippler is available for both iOS and Android smartphones and tablets. It’s free, easy to use, and well designed. Drippler even has a search function so you can find information on specific topics. You can share your drips with others, or bookmark and save them to build your own smartphone manual.

Drippler has definitely helped me get more functionality from my iPhone. I like that the information comes to me instead of having to constantly search for the most recent tips and tools. Drippler allows me to quickly and easily chose select what I need to maximize the productivity of my iPhone and iPad.

Filed Under: Student Success Center, tech tools, Technology Tagged With: smartphones, tablets

Organize Your Day with Dayboard

There are many time management and to-do apps designed to help you keep track of long-term goals, manage complex projects, and schedule and prioritize day to day tasks. Dayboard is a simple tool for posting your top five priorities for the day where you can see them often.

Dayboard for Google Chrome

Dayboard is a free Chrome extension that changes your new tab page into a to-do list. You can list up to five tasks which you intend to complete that day. Unfinished tasks do carry over to another day, but because you are only allowed to list five at a time, it’s best to use it for tasks that that you want to complete within a day.

This extension couldn’t be easier to use. Once you download and install it on your browser (there are extensions for Chrome and Firefox) your to-do list will appear every time you open a new tab. It will ask you to list the five items you want to accomplish that day. When you have finished a task, you can cross it off and add another. That’s all there is to it.

Dayboard is simple and easy to use. It doesn’t try to do too much, which I think is the secret of its success. I like that it appears every time you open a new tab in your web browser. Usually I get distracted by all the opportunities to procrastinate online, so having a reminder of what I need to accomplish every time I open my browser motivates me to stay on task. Since I work on a variety of ongoing projects, I can be very specific about what I want to accomplish on a given project per day, which helps me eliminate last-minute cramming sessions. The one problem I had is that I had gotten accustomed to seeing the Google screen when I opened my browser, and was a little frustrated when I had to go looking for it. I solved the problem by adding Google to my bookmarks bar.

Overall, Dayboard is a great tool for anyone looking for a simple to-do list that is easily accessed. If you are looking for a no-fuss task management system, you should give Dayboard a try.

Filed Under: tech tools, time management Tagged With: online tools, technology, time management

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