20 Google Tools for Every Student’s Digital Toolkit
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Google is fast becoming the world’s leader in education tools for 21st-century digital learning. The 20 Google tools in this infographic are of critical importance in today’s classrooms, which rely on web-based instruction, social media and mobile learning. Google tools make for seamless technology integration.
While all Google tools may not be for you and your students, you’re sure to find something of value for research, writing, planning, supplying two-way narrative feedback and much more. Try a few Google tools today, and vault your students into the modern digital learning.
by Dailygenius.com. Find more education infographics on e-Learning Infographics
20 Google tools
- Privacy tools
- Google Drive
- Calendar
- Forms
- Mapmaker
- Google Docs
- Google a Day game
- Google now
- Accessibility tools
- Blogger
- Course Builder
- Google+
- Chrome
- Moderator
- Translate
- Sites
- Groups
- Chromebooks
- Google Scholar
- Cultural Institute
Learn more about each of these at Google Products.
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Mark Barnes is the Founder of Times 10 Publications, which produces the popular Hack Learning Series -- books and other series that provide right-now solutions for teachers and learners. Mark is the author or publisher of dozens of books, including Bestseller Hacking Education: 10 Quick Fixes for Every School. Barnes presents internationally on assessment, connected education, and Hack Learning. Join more than 150,000 interested educators who follow @markbarnes19 on Twitter.
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4 Comments
I always use google drives, google docs, blogger, google +, chrome, google translate.
I want to add a list of tools that are important to students: Youtube and wikipedia.
Twitter: scott_oosterom
This is a great list. I agree, YouTube should definitely be incluided. I rarely go a day without having students check out a video of some kind. There are some great science and math channels.
I recently set out school up with a Google for Education account. There are a lot of user-made apps through this feature. Teachers can choose which ones are they want to use and decide which are visible to students (and to which students) when they log into their new school “Google” accounts. Google Classroom also becomes available for teachers to create their own online classes for their students.
I have not had a chance to work with it completely, since the school year was ending. But I am anxious to get things rolling with it in the fall.
For any schools /districts without an account, it is completely free unlimited staff and students once you verify that your school is really a school. My school’s account was ready to roll in 2 days.
Twitter: OnlineCrsLady
Eeeeeek: do my eyes deceive me??? Google Books did not even make the list! Oh no!!! I love Google Books.
Fractus Learning did a nice piece on Google Books recently:
https://www.fractuslearning.com/2014/11/26/google-books-invaluable-resource-students-educators/
Twitter: markbarnes19
Laura, the infographic was created by DailyGenius, so they chose which Google tools to include. I think it serves best as a discussion starter, as evidenced by your comment. Personally, I don’t think any Google tools list is complete without YouTube. Thanks for moving the discussion forward.
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