Monday, November 23, 2015

More On Printing

Teachers at Wawaloam use Pearson SuccessNet resources. SuccessNet has videos which are solid resources for teachers and students. Unfortunately, Pearson embeds the SuccessNet videos inside PDF files. (Seriously, why build that proprietary hurdle, Pearson? Why?)

In order to view the SuccessNet videos, IT installed Adobe Reader on many Wawaloam teachers' laptops. With the Adobe Reader installed, SuccessNet videos play well. A big problem is, the Adobe Acrobat Reader installation disables Chrome's ability to display PDF files natively. That's a problem for EWG teachers who want to print PDF files to a school printer.

There is, however, an easy way to toggle how your Macbook - and Chrome - handle PDF files. Simply put, when you want to print your PDFs to a school printer, you enable Chrome's default PDF viewer. And, when you want to play a Reading Street video, you disable Chrome's default PDF viewer.

Don't panic. The straightforward process of toggling between the two modes is outlined in the video below.



Once you set Chrome to use its built in, default viewer, you can send PDFs directly to SharpFindMe via Cloudprint. If you're not sure how to do that, there is a brief video that demonstrates printing PDFs in EWG that was included in a recent post.

Still stuck? Please contact me.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

How Large Is That Font?

At Wawaloam, a teacher tried to print a list of sight words using a serif type face at 300 points to Sharp Find Me. The prints were mangled and or blank. Through some trial and error, we discovered the maximum type size Sharp Find Me can handle. The magic number is 231. Anything bigger prints as a blank. Who knew? If you want to print larger than 231 points to Sharp Find Me, you can take a screenshot of the word, scale the image, then print the image. Cumbersome, but doable. Or, print to a different printer such as a home inkjet.

EWG's Cloud Printing Revisited

In a post last year, I described a tedious method to print word documents and other local files to EWG's cloud printers using an application called CloudPrint. During the last year, the CloudPrint application moved from 'free' to $1.99. Users balked. While the CloudPrint app *could* be side loaded to circumvent the expense, I had a hard time reconciling side loading with ISTE-T standard 4a.

The video below shows you how to CloudPrint from word or any other local application on your Mac sans CloudPrint. The solution is simple, fast, and easy. I wish I had thought of it last year.



Tuesday, October 27, 2015

On Passwords

Do you know your Apple ID and password for your school Apple account?


Come on. Be honest. How about logging into Pearson Success Net (Reading Street) on the first, second, or third attempt? Could you? Setting up classes in Mathletics (Every Day Math) requires its own sign in. Do you know yours? What happens when you get locked out of an important classroom resource, or cannot apply a critical update? To whom do you turn? How long does it take? What opportunities are delayed or lost? I ask because in my travels throughout the district, I see password and account overload taking a growing chunk out of your valuable time. Your frustration is compounded by the fact that some of the tools you use - especially your Apple ID - are external to EWG, leaving EWG's IT or other support staff unable to assist you. Other tools are managed by people within EWG, but finding the right contact can be a frustrating slog through "That's not my department" email threads. While you are locked out, you or your students are waiting. It has never been more important to fine tune your password acumen. What follows are some suggestions on where to start.

Biometrics can be strong password solutions with fingerprint and facial recognition leading the consumer options, but they are not viable options for students awaiting your assessment activation. And, biometrics probably won't be available on school resources for a while, as much ed based tech still suffers a lagging adoption process.

Some people use the same password for everything. Doing so is total madness. Seriously. Don't use the same password for every site. Consider variants of a common password. More on this thought later.

Some have a master password list in a document or in a physical notepad. As long as your resource is readily accessible, such a strategy can make sure you and your students can access Mathletics or some other resource when the laptop cart is in your room. However, the same convenience of accessibility raises a proportional risk of accessibility by the bad guys and gals of the digital underworld. Still, a master password list for your school resources might be an acceptable risk if you squirrel it away well. A school password list in the hands of a mischievous student would make for a bad week, but its financial reward to a hacker is negligible.

A few colleagues are beginning to use password managers, like PadlockLastPass, Passwords, and others. Password managers range from free, minimalist approaches to subscription models with lots of powerful options. Password managers work, and can make your life easier. But, I have a problem with password managers. Using a password manager to secure and open all of your online IDs still leaves you vulnerable. If your password manager is hacked, so too is the entire digital realm 'protected' by the same. Don't think that password managers cannot be broken. Remember Target, Home Depot, OPM, DOD, and ...

It is easy to suggest that you simply use a different password for every single digital sign on you might have. The reality is, it is much tougher to remember and use 50 plus unique, strong passwords. But there are a few suggestions I can offer here to help you make strong, unique passwords that are reasonably easy to remember.

I like the kid (and adult) friendly password generator dinopass.com. Much like the AOL passwords of the nineties, dinopass suggests easy to remember passwords. Try it. Thumb through dinopass' rolodex of silly, memorable passwords. Latch onto one that you might use as a 'master' password. Add at least one space in the password. In a password sandwich maneuver , modify the password slightly from site to site. Consider using a site specific suffix (apl for Apple, Irdy for i-Ready) to your 'master' password to help protect the integrity of all your passwords as you traverse from site to site. You might have a password scheme that looks like this for various digital identities:

  • ja2zy Skunk35Apl
  • ja2zy Skunk35Aspn
  • ja2zy Skunk35IRDY

 I like this approach and have seen it work well for people who have taken a brief time to implement it. They rarely forget a password and seldom need a site's password recovery options.

Many systems require a mix of upper and lower case letters, as well as numbers and a sprinkling of special characters. That's too bad, because such requirements just add unnecessary complexity. Does it really matter how many $p3c!al characters you use in a password? Nope. Password length trumps complexity. Consider the difference in time to brute force break the password  "iown2dogs" versus "i own 2 dogs". The second version is considered to be 'safe' for centuries. The linked article is a fascinating read.

If password travails are wrecking your school day, or if you would like to work toward some sanity for your school based password system, let me know. I would be happy to work with you. Better still, if you have a solid password strategy that works well, share it with us.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Day Two Takeaways From MassCUE 2015

The best sessions are workshops where ideas are cultivated in the absence of vendors and proprietary cash sinks. Today's highlight was the collaboration lead by Dr. Kristen Swanson, author of Professional Learning in the Digital Age:  The Educator's Guide to User-Generated Learning. Simply fantastic session where participants began to consider the impact of technology on learning with research. I left with a lot to think about. If you ever go to MassCUE, load your schedule with "Featured Speakers".

Other takeaways:

When WiFi breaks, a presenter's session breaks, as does the workshop in which participants are supposed to practice.

I finally learned how and when to discretely leave an in-session workshop that would not be useful to me.

There are hundreds upon hundreds of vendors displaying "education solutions".


Vendors
More vendors
Even more vendors
The Microsoft Booth.
A Google workshop five minutes later. Standing room only.

I am conferenced out, and eager to rejoin the work taking place in EWG classrooms!


Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Day one takeaways from MassCUE 2015


  • Students as collaborators.
  • Students as thinkers.
  • Students as creators of content and things.
  • Education is messy.
    • You will make mistakes.
    • And that's okay.
  • Blended learning!
  • You will become increasingly irrelevant if you are not embracing and using technology to reinvent teaching and learning, empower your students, and engage them in purposeful use of the tools with which they are familiar.
Really looking forward to day two!

Monday, October 19, 2015

Exam View Updates

A number of teachers still use the venerable Exam View suite of tools to create assessments for their students. A popular feature of Exam View is to export assessments as web pages so that students can complete the self scoring quizzes online. Google Drive has helped serve Exam View web based assessments for about three years now, but that is about to change. Effective September 1, 2016, Google will reportedly shut down the ability to serve web pages directly from Google drive. While you don't have to worry about that eventuality this moment, you should keep it on your radar. There are probably a dozen great alternatives to help you continue serving your Exam View web pages, but I struggled to find worthy contenders free of monetary cost. Consequently, I began examining the possibility of using my own Macbook as a device on which to host and serve Exam View assessments. What follows is a video that muddles through the basics of hosting Exam View assessments on your Macbook. It's not at all difficult, and it works well. If you have questions, or would like to try it on your own Macbook, contact me.