Showing posts with label picasa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label picasa. Show all posts

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Google Photos

 

Google Photos

Why?

  1. Unlimited storage (for GApps domains)
  2. Support across all devices, mobile, laptop, desktop...
  3. Mobile device/iPad friendly albums
  4. Searchable photos, even without your naming them, Google can recognise the content in your photos, eg if you search for 'dog'. 
  5. Media backup, using the desktop uploader you can now upload all (or as much as you want) of your media to Google Photos, and remove it from your hard drive to save space.

Google Photo Albums

You can easily find Google Photos, by using that link, or you can also find it by clicking on the app grid in GMail, then scroll down:

 

See this post for guidance on using Google Photo Albums, sharing them, adding collaborators to collate photos, creating animations, and collages, and even adding text ...


Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Learning Journals in the Early Years

It's early days but our concerted efforts to realise the first examples of ePortfolios AKA Learning Journals in the Early Years are starting to take shape.

Why Learning Journals, what's wrong with Portfolio?

We feel that the term 'Portfolio' has a tendency to imply product over process, best work over, well, work. What we really want to see is the 'journey' of learning, yes the final 'product', but arguably more importantly, the process of learning that the student/teacher documented on the way there.

Here's a tantalising glimpse of two our Kindergarten classes K1 and K2, trust me when I tell you that the actual contents are truly transformational, no, revolutionary when compared to the pretty but teacher centred, relatively passive paper counterparts. Unfortunately as these are live journals, I can't share access to the journals themselves.

More to follow later in the year when they are more representative of an entire years learning, but for now, the strategy in a nutshell is:

  • Teachers who are not 'techie' but are great teachers, and ready to learn
  • Build a 'capture culture' in every classroom, not just the teacher, the kids.
  • Lot's of devices in the hands of the kids—2:1 iPads, and 6 iPod touches in every classroom
  • Every teacher with a MacBook, and an iPad
  • Tools: iOS Devices, iPhoto, iCloud and Picasa
  • An amazing school that stops at nothing to provide teachers with whatever they could possibly need to innovate, create and excel at cultivating & motivating learning.


Work flow:

  • We set up iCloud accounts for each classroom, and connect every iOS device in that room to that account.
  • We activated PhotoStream in a separate account on the classroom teacher's Mac (to avoid PhotoStream conflict)
  • Now any content saved to the camera roll on any device (screen capture makes this very easy) connected to that classroom account wirelessly loads directly into the teacher's PhotoStream—a stream of class capture culture consciousness... 
  • In iPhoto, Teachers 'curate' content from the stream, dragging 'critical incidents' into an album that they have created for each child.
  • Captions are added using the 'Info' button in iPhoto
  • Video is not supported by PhotoStream so that has to be downloaded manually into iPhoto
  • When teachers are ready, each album is Exported to Picasa directly from iPhoto, with video that's about 10 minutes per album, with a decent connection
  • Once they are all uploaded, each album is then shared by the teacher with parents via email directly from Picasa (or Google+ Photos) this takes about an hour.

iPhoto Photo Stream - Reflecting Classroom Capture Culture

#rEvolutionary


Reality Check:

This model could be replicated using as little as ONE iOS device, ie a teacher iPhone,  and one Apple Mac computer (all come with iPhoto as standard) it just means that the teacher would have to do the capturing, instead of the kids. Even one shared class iOS device would make capturing learning by students possible as well, obviously the more devices you can out in the hands of the kids, the easier it is to capture their learning, but the more content you will need to curate!




Friday, March 1, 2013

Seashore Digital Artwork in Grade 4

Seashore is a fantastic free application for Macs - basically a kids version of PhotoShop. The conventions and mechanics of it are identical to PhotoShop, which makes it ideal for developing the students' image manipulation skills in the Primary School.

Grade 4 with Caroline and Siân have been getting their students to make pixelated magic with Seashore, at the end of the unit, the students contributed their creations to a class album using Picasa to share them with each other.  The students learned how to:


  1. use a digital camera to capture an image that is in focus and with good exposure.
  2. critique their own work and that of others using an art vocabulary.
  3. upload an image from the camera and into a Picasa album.
  4. change an image into a different visual form using software, in a way that is very different to editing the photo.
  5. produce a visually interesting image that still resembles the original photo.

View the album to see some of the results...



Sunday, September 18, 2011

Sharing photos from iPhoto to a Picasa online gallery

Often there is a need to share a collection of photographs with students. The easiest way to do this is to use iPhoto and then export to a Picasa Gallery. You can upload images/photographs and even videos to Picasa, although your account will have a size limit of around 1GB.
  1. From within iPhoto you need to click on an event and then select export from the File Menu.
  2. Then choose to click on the Picasa Web Albums option
  3. Add your school abc@gapps.uwcsea.edu.sg email address and password
  4. Then you can fiddle and change some options to make the album public or private and add tags.