Free Technology for Teachers - 2 new articles

Over the weekend a reader reached out to me for help with Google Forms. Specifically, he wanted to know how to impose a time limit on a Google Form. I was happy to help. The method that I use to impose a time limit on Google Forms is to enable the ...

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"Free Technology for Teachers" - 2 new articles

  1. How to Impose Time Limits on Google Forms - And 46 Other Tutorials
  2. Create Historic Map Overlays With These Free Tools
  3. More Recent Articles

How to Impose Time Limits on Google Forms - And 46 Other Tutorials


Over the weekend a reader reached out to me for help with Google Forms. Specifically, he wanted to know how to impose a time limit on a Google Form. I was happy to help.

The method that I use to impose a time limit on Google Forms is to enable the Google Forms add-on called FormLimiter. With this add-on installed you can set a time at which a form automatically stops accepting responses. You can also use FormLimiter to impose a limit on the number of responses that a form will accept. Watch my video below to see how it works. 

Video - How to Impose Time Limits on Google Forms

 


The video above is the 47th in my series of tutorials about how to use Google Forms. You can see the entire list here.

   

Create Historic Map Overlays With These Free Tools


Yesterday morning I shared a collection of more than 100,000 historic maps for classroom use. In that post I mentioned using those maps to create digital overlays on current maps. Google Earth provides a couple of ways to do that. Felt.com is another digital mapping tool that can be used for the same purpose. 

In the following videos I demonstrate how to create historic map overlays for comparison purposes. 

Video - How to Create Historic Map Overlays on Felt.com

 


There are a couple of ways to overlay historical maps on current maps in Google Earth. The first is to simply use the Rumsey Historical Maps collection layer in Google Earth. That method is demonstrated here. The other method is to find a historic map, download it, then use it as an image overlay in Google Earth. That method is demonstrated here.

 


 

   

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