Tip of the Week |
10 Things You Can Do With Google Sheets:
1. Send personalized emails to everyone in a group. Rather than sending a generic, "hi everyone" greeting you can address each person by name.
2. Create and display progress trackers. This is ideal for things like reading logs or fundraisers.
3. Create flashcards. You can make them or have your students make flashcards from the information in a Google Sheet.
4. Schedule room use. Keep track of who is using a meeting room and when.
5. Develop and publish multimedia timelines. Include pictures, videos, and maps in your timeline.
6. Keep track of iPad/ Chromebook carts in your school. The same logic can be applied to keeping track of anything commonly borrowed in your school.
7. Create maps of data sets. If your spreadsheet contains location data, you can map it from a Google Sheet.
8. Create rubrics and email grades from a spreadsheet. Email scores and feedback from the same place that you recorded scores and feedback.
9. Develop and manage a gradebook. If your school doesn't have a system-wide gradebook system in place, you can create your own in Google Sheets.
10. Create Jeopardy-style games. This staple of review games can be developed and played from a Google Sheet.
1. Send personalized emails to everyone in a group. Rather than sending a generic, "hi everyone" greeting you can address each person by name.
2. Create and display progress trackers. This is ideal for things like reading logs or fundraisers.
3. Create flashcards. You can make them or have your students make flashcards from the information in a Google Sheet.
4. Schedule room use. Keep track of who is using a meeting room and when.
5. Develop and publish multimedia timelines. Include pictures, videos, and maps in your timeline.
6. Keep track of iPad/ Chromebook carts in your school. The same logic can be applied to keeping track of anything commonly borrowed in your school.
7. Create maps of data sets. If your spreadsheet contains location data, you can map it from a Google Sheet.
8. Create rubrics and email grades from a spreadsheet. Email scores and feedback from the same place that you recorded scores and feedback.
9. Develop and manage a gradebook. If your school doesn't have a system-wide gradebook system in place, you can create your own in Google Sheets.
10. Create Jeopardy-style games. This staple of review games can be developed and played from a Google Sheet.
Madison County Board of Education Web Page Disclaimer
Some links will let you leave the school and the school district site. The linked sites are not under the control of the school/district, and the school/district is not responsible for the contents of any linked site or any link contained in a linked site, or any changes or updates to such sites. The school/district is providing these links to you only as a convenience, and the inclusion of any link does not imply endorsement of the site by the school/district.
Buckhorn High School Library-Media Center ∙ Paige Craig, Library-Media Specialist ∙ 4123 Winchester Rd ∙ New Market, AL ∙ (256) 851-3300
Some links will let you leave the school and the school district site. The linked sites are not under the control of the school/district, and the school/district is not responsible for the contents of any linked site or any link contained in a linked site, or any changes or updates to such sites. The school/district is providing these links to you only as a convenience, and the inclusion of any link does not imply endorsement of the site by the school/district.
Buckhorn High School Library-Media Center ∙ Paige Craig, Library-Media Specialist ∙ 4123 Winchester Rd ∙ New Market, AL ∙ (256) 851-3300