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Here are the latest updates for nurhasaan10@gmail.com "Free Technology for Teachers" - 2 new articlesGames, Teams, and Mud - The Week in ReviewGood morning from Maine where sunny weather has returned after a couple of days of sleet, snow, and rain. That sleet, snow, and rain is part of what makes this time of year Mud Season! How muddy? This week a school bus in our area got stuck in the mud while taking kids home from school. This week I hosted a webinar titled How to Create & Sell Your Own Digital Products. If you missed it, the recording is now available to access here. Get the recording this weekend and you'll be able to join me for a live Q&A follow-up session next week. We're going to enjoy the relatively nice weather today and play outside while doing some light yard work. I hope that you have something fun to do today too. Before doing that, I have this week's list of the most popular posts. 1. Stop Printing the Internet 2. Plays.org - Educational Games Your Students Will Love to Play 3. New Whiteboard Features in Microsoft Teams and New Excel Formulas 4. Take Your Students on the American Ideals Virtual Field Trip Hosted by Discovery Education 5. Five Chrome Settings You Need to Know 6. Readlee - Know How Your Students Read Online Assignments 7. Kikori App - Social Emotional Learning Activities for All Ages Thank you for your support! Your registrations in Practical Ed Tech courses and purchases of 50 Tech Tuesday Tips help me keep Free Technology for Teachers going. Purchase ten or more copies of my ebook and I'll host a free one-hour webinar for your school or organization. On-demand Professional Development
Try This New Google Chrome FeatureThose of you who subscribe to my YouTube channel might have seen me share this yesterday. There's a handy new feature in Chrome that appears when update to the latest version. The new feature is a side panel reading list that could prove to be very helpful to those of us who tend to have a lot of browser tabs open at once. The new side panel feature in Chrome lets you create a list of your current tabs, view the list, visit the tabs, and keep track of which ones you have and haven't read. It's kind of like a more streamlined version of "traditional" browser bookmarking. Watch this short video to see how it works. More Recent Articles |
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