Showing posts with label Extensions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Extensions. Show all posts

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Installing and using the Google Translate extension

If you're dealing with online Hebrew texts and get stuck on a word, the Google Translate extension can help. It is far from perfect, and really can't deal with prefixes and suffixes well, but it can give you an idea of what the word means (at least its root if not its full form).

Go to the Chrome store and install the extension. (Click here for link.)

Once installed, go to your extensions




Then click the 3 dots next to Google Translate and click Options




And then choose Immediately display pop-up, and click Save.

When you double-click on a word now, Google Translate will try to detect the language (sometimes it thinks it's Yiddish) and translate. Verbs are almost never fully correct.



"Bring" is correct, but the proper translation is "that he should bring."

But here, Google Translate is more off-base.


In this context, הותרה means "loosened" or "untied" in the sense of being let off the leash to run wild.

And here it is waaaay off



The proper translation is "and take out" or "remove."

So beware. It can give you a sense of the word if you have no idea, but don't rely on it too much.


Friday, July 17, 2020

Link to Text Fragment extension

Google has a great new extension.
Did you ever have to direct students to a specific place within a long web document?

Link to Text Fragment is simple to use.
Highlight some text (more than a couple of words) and right-click. The extension will appear as one of your choices.


Click and it will copy a link to your clipboard that will direct students to the specific spot on the site.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

Line Numbers for Google Docs now works for Right-to-Left docs as well

One of the things that kept me using Microsoft Word is the line number feature. When teaching texts to students, it helps to be able to direct them to the right line easily.

The useful Google Docs extension Line Numbers for Google Docs adds line numbers along the left side of the page. But what if your document is a Right-to-left document, like Hebrew or Arabic?

Thanks to extension designer Pablo Gamito, the extension now easily handles such documents. (I e-mailed him on Friday and he updated the extension the very next day!)

EDIT: Two caveats - the numbers do not appear in a shared document (although there's nothing stopping the recipient from installing and utilizing the extension herself) and they are not retained if you use Download as pdf, although if you use Print to pdf, they are preserved. This has dampened my enthusiasm somewhat.

Install the extension from the Chrome Store. Once in a Google Doc, click the extension and choose how many lines (every one, every five, etc.) you want numbered.


Click on "Show More Options"


There are many ways to customize the numbering, as you can see. Choose the last item to have the numbers appear on the right.

If the numbers don't appear immediately, click Reload Google Docs Page. And voila!



If this is useful, be sure to give the extension a positive rating on the Chrome Store. And if your corporate / school account is like ours and won't let you log in to the Chrome Store even if you can download extensions, log in under your personal account and give the designer the thanks he deserves.



Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Posting documents on Google Classroom that don't need to be submitted

[UPDATE: Google Classroom has fixed this problem with the addition of the Post Material option, so this post is moot.][Does Google ever run their updates by actual teachers?! ]

I have a particular problem with the new Google Classroom - you can't assign a topic to an announcement.

So if I want student to be able to go back and locate a worksheet or a text document to study for a quiz or test, I have to post it as an assignment, so the posts are organized by topic.

But if I am sending out a graphic organizer on Google Docs, I want the students to have their own copy, and I don't want them to have to submit the document back to me - it's there for them to use, and to train them to take notes.

I tried to do it as I did last year, but it didn't work.

Unfortunately, as teachers we cannot see what the student gets when we post something. Luckily I have a fake student account, and recently I went back and forth through 4 different attempts until I got what I needed.

To wit:
1. Send out as an Assignment so that it can be grouped with the other worksheets and easily retrieved later.
2. Force each student to make a copy of the original document so that each student is working on his/her own copy
3. Not require them to return the document to me, but just to click the MARK AS DONE button.

The Process

Step One: Create your document on Google Docs.


Step Two: Change the Sharing settings from Anyone with the link can edit to Force everyone to make a copy.

You can do that manually (see directions here) or you can use the Sir Links-a-Lot Chrome extension (see post here).
Make sure the new link is saved to your clipboard.

Step Three: Open Google Classroom and Create an Assignment.



Name the assignment, change the Points Value to "Ungraded," do not assign a Due Date, and assign a Topic.


Do NOT use the Add Link feature! Paste the force-copy link on the Instructions line, and click ASSIGN.

This is what the student sees:



Student clicks on the link and it opens another window and forces them to make a copy. Student can then just click MARK AS DONE and clear the "assignment."

Sir Links-a-Lot Chrome extension

Here's a handy extension that can change your Google Doc's sharing setting from "Anyone with a link can edit / view" to forcing anyone with the link to make a copy.

Why would you want to do that?

I use it all the time to send out a Google Doc when I want every student to have his/her own copy to edit, highlight, take notes on, etc. but not as a class.

It can be found in the Chrome store here.

When installed, it looks like this when you click it while you have a Google Doc open.


Click Force copy and it with change the "edit" in the link to "copy.

Then share this new link with your class.

There are other functions available; I have found this one to be the most useful.

You can also do this manually, without the extension. Directions here.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

CheckMark Extension adds years to your life

[UPDATE: The new Comment Bank feature in Classroom makes this extension obsolete.]

Well, maybe not years, but I probably just saved over an hour of typing the same comments on 40 tests. It adds up.

CheckMark is an extension that lets you add customized comments (or canned comments if you teach English Composition on the grade level it's aimed at) on Google Docs at the click of a button. They can be as long as you need, and can include multiple languages, symbols or anything else you can put in a Google Docs comment (i.e. no special formatting).

Go the Chrome Store and get CheckMark



When you install it, it will appear in your Chrome Menu in the upper-right hand corner.


If the first time you click it it does not say Enabled, enable the extension.

At first it will present you with a list of canned comments for English Comp. If they work for you, enjoy. If they do not, you can delete every single one by clicking the red X.

Here's where it gets useful. Let's say you start grading and soon realize that several students have made the same mistake. Do you want to type "I think you confused Jefferson Davis and Thomas Jefferson" on 40 Google Docs? I didn't think so.

So let's go:

Click on the Extension, and then on the Preview Edit Pencil.

Click on the green + sign. Give your comment a 3-4 letter abbreviation so that you can readily identify it, and type (or paste) the comment you're going to be re-using. Click Apply.


I, by the way, ended up with about 11 "stock" comments for this particular test.

Back in Google Docs, when you come to one of those answers...

 Highlight a word in the answer, and the CheckMark bar will appear translucently above the line.

If you hover your cursor over the little blue box it will get darker and he comment will appear in a hover text box, just to be sure you're choosing the correct response.
 Click the blue box and CheckMark will automatically enter the pre-selected comment into Google Docs comments and close the comment box.


Downsides: If you're moving among different assignments, and you don't need CheckMark for one class, (mine were VERY test-specific) the only way to silence it is to [click the 3 square dots at the top-right of your Chrome browser] go into More tools, Extensions, and temporarily disable the extension.
Also, I have had limited success with it fully syncing between computer, and have gone home and not found all of my added comments available.
But I suspect these will get ironed out in future iterations.

I still think it is a fantastic addition to my Google Docs tool case.


Friday, March 16, 2018

Get the Google Apps you need directly from your Chrome Menu

As a teacher in a G Suites school, I use Google Apps (Docs, Forms, Drawings, etc.) all the time. And I need fast access to them if I'm going to get anything done.

The following two Chrome extensions, used in conjunction, make my life so much easier. Let me make your life easier, too.

Part One:


The first extension is App Launcher Customizer for Google™ .

Install it, and you can customize the App Launcher that appears on any Google App page in the upper right-hand corner. (It looks like a 3x3 grid of blocks.)



Click on the extension in your Chrome Menu and you'll see this screen.


Just drag all the apps you use into the "My services" window, and all the one that you DON'T want out of the "My services" window back into the "Available" window.

There are an AWFUL LOT of Available apps! Use the Search feature to find the ones you're looking for.

I personally like to keep my App Launcher window clean, so I ruthlessly limit it to 12 icons. Any time a new one comes in, an old one goes out, but you can cram it as full of apps as you wish.


Part Two:

The second extension is App Launcher in popup

After installing this, it will put the app launcher icon directly on your Chrome Menu.


The biggest advantage is now I don't have to be on a Google-related page to access the App Launcher, and now I have access to the apps I need on a daily basis, and only those apps, from anywhere in Chrome.


Monday, November 6, 2017

Supercharge your Google Apps with Add-ons and Chrome with Extensions


ICYMI - From today's Mimi Charnoff Professional Development Day, my list of my go-to Add-ons for Google Apps (Docs, Forms, Slides) and my favorites extensions for Chrome.

REMINDER: Extensions only work in Chrome on a Chromebook, a PC or a Mac. They do NOT work on Chrome on a phone or tablet (iPad, etc.) as they are not true Chrome browsers.


Google Doc Add-ons
Change Case
For those typing mistakes - ALL CAPS all gone
Extensis Fonts
Find precisely the right font
Kaizena
Add voice comments to a shared doc thru Google Classroom
Highlight Tool
Share labeled highlighter categories
Sefaria
Add Jewish texts directly to docs
In an open Google Doc, go to Add-ons.

Google Form Add-ons
123RF Stock Photos
Free photos to insert into Forms
All Questions Required?
For Quizzes - Click when finished
CheckItOut
For keeping track of inventory
Form Publisher
Convert to Doc, Slide, Sheet
Form Limiter
Limit time or number of responses
PaperScorer
Create bubble sheet from form - scan w/ phone to score


Google Slides Add-Ons - NEW!
AdobeStock


Free photos to insert into Slides
ShutterStock
Unsplash Photos
Pear Deck
Create formative assessments and interactive slides
Slides Toolbox
One-click for repeated tasks


Supercharge Chrome with Extensions
Edit Microsoft Office files with converting to Docs, etc.
Save articles to read later
Blocks ads online
Does what it says
Post or push site to Google Classroom
Click and e-mail webpage
Save directly to Keep
Declutters distracting pages
Declutter and open multi-page articles
Create a temp, real-word URL shortcut
New tabs open blank
Double-click on a word for its definition
Turn all your tabs into 1 link page
Translate, transliterate into other languages
On-screen tutorials within Google Apps
If you need to insert foreign accents
Opens Rediker in parallel window from Classroom
Opens up to 20 docs in separate tabs

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Screen Reading Showdown - PageZipper, Mercury Reader, Readability Redux

There's a lot of good stuff out there on the web. But reading on a computer monitor can be very uncomfortable.

First of all, the text is often shoved over into a skinny column while annoying ads hog most of the real estate on one or both sides.



Or those Wikitext articles that cover the entire screen in print.


Or that dreaded notice on the bottom "Click here for next page."


There are Chrome extensions to handle each of these problems individually, but there's one that handles them both.

PageZipper 


The first extension is PageZipper, available here on the Chrome Store, and it does just what its name claims. Install and click on the extension, and it will take a multi-page article and zip it together into one long continuous screen.


Here is screenshot showing the transition from the bottom of the first page to the top of the second.


But if there are ads at the bottom of each page, you still have to wade through all of them to get to the next page. And it does nothing to remove the distracting ads or increase the print size.

Mercury Reader

To deal with the crowded or cluttered page, there is Mercury Reader, available here on the Chrome Store. It is heir to such dearly departed extensions as Read Now and Clearly.

Mercury Reader cleans up the page, keeps the illustrations, eliminates the advertisements and extraneous information, and allows you to read in large, uncluttered print on your screen.


If you click on the Settings gear in the top right corner (not pictured) you can choose between serif and sans serif and adjust the size of the font.




Unfortunately, Mercury Reader will not display all the pages of a multi-page article.

Readability Redux

However, Readability Redux does all these things. It's customizable,  cleans up the page and displays all the pages of a multi-page article on one screen.

Caveat - the following extension can no longer be found by searching the Chrome Store, but this link will bring you to it directly. It hasn't been updated in 6 years, but it still works and it works better than any other extension at solving both these problems at once.

However, it does take a moment to set up to your liking. Right-click the extension and go to Options.



Fine tune your settings (you can see what they will look like as you choose) for Style, Print Size, and Margin Width.




Not only does Readability Redux remove all the ads and give you a nice readable, uncluttered page, it also automatically sews together all the pages from a multi-page article.

Here's a screen shot of the transition from the first to second page:


So despite its age and limited availability, Readability Redux is still my go-to extension for reading anything on my monitor.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Training for Google Apps

Don't walk, RUN! Run to the Chrome store and install the extension for Training for Google Apps.

Have you ever been stymied, wondering how to do something in Gmail, or Google Classroom, or Docs, or Slides, or Sheets or Forms, to name a few? Did you know you can have a built-in tutorial that doesn't even require you to leave the browser window in which you are working?

Whenever you go into various Google Apps for Education, you will see this little symbol in the right-hand corner:


Click on it and a searchable menu will pop up.



There are lots of items to choose from, or you can search for help on a specific topic. When you choose an item, either a video window will overlay on the screen with a tutorial, or you will get actual prompts (like CLICK HERE) that walk you through the steps.


I've already learned how to do several things that I never thought possible in Google Docs! Give it a try today!

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Kami - Fill out pdfs online

Several teachers have asked me about making the switch to Google Docs. They are concerned about converting their documents from Word or other text editors (especially some of the Judaics teachers who cling tenaciously to Davka Writer).
 They are also concerned with the problem of formatting - when you start typing on a Google doc, it pushes the blank space between questions forward.

Kami is a Chrome app and extension that opens in your browser and allows you (or the students) to write in blank space in a pdf. (And remember, you can use Share to Classroom to shoot Kami out to your students on the first day of class!)

So if you have a worksheet that in the past was printed out and filled in by hand in class, you can convert them to pdfs (just 'Save As... pdf' in most word processors) and then you can upload them to Google Classroom as Assignments (not Announcements) and have the students fill them out on the Chromebooks. Imagine - no more reading difficult handwriting! Reminder: Make sure to choose 'Make a copy for each student' before assigning.









Installing Kami

Just have the students install the Kami app as well as the extension (which allows for offline work) and when they open the assigned document in Chrome, they should select Open ... Kami.


The first time you (or your students) open a document in Kami, it will ask for access to your Google Drive. 


IT IS CRUCIAL THAT YOU ALLOW THIS ACCESS! Otherwise it will not work with Google Classroom properly, and work will get messed up or lost. (I know, I have a few "tinfoil hat" kids who are paranoid about granting access online, but trust Google and Kami. I've met the designer. He's cool.)

Using Kami

Most features of Kami work without paying for the Pro account. (There's one important exception, as we shall see.) Click on the T to add text anywhere within the blank space.  Kami gives a pretty bright choice of colors for text, but you can click the Settings gear and choose a more subdued, darker, legible color for text.

Begin typing

You just click on the Text button (the T in the circle) and then you can then begin typing normally in whichever language you choose. 

(English has spell-check; Hebrew does not.) And you can go back to your answer later and edit it, which is a feature missing from similar programs.

Saving and Google Classroom

Assuming you have signed in to Kami, the program will automatically save your work as you type.  However, it will not automatically save back to Google Drive unless you are running the Pro version. (Currently $99/teacher/year.)

  This is very important, because if you are assigning the document through Google Classroom the work needs to be saved there as well.

When you click the Sync button on the top right, you can MANUALLY save the file in Google Drive as well. (I say 'as well' because Kami will also keep a copy of it. Which is all the good, because things sometimes get lost.)

 

However, for this to work properly, the student will have to re-direct Kami to save the document in its Google Classroom folder. (They could move it after they're done and before they're ready to submit their assignment, but I think in the long run it's easier to train them to do it from the start every time.) 

In each student's Google Drive, there is a folder called "Classroom." Within that folder are folders for each of their classes. Within those folders are the files (Google Docs, pdfs, etc.) for each GC Assignment.

The student must first click >→ Move, and then maneuver to the appropriate folder.

 This only needs to be done once per document. But it is crucial for submitting the finished work to the teacher in Google Classroom. If they do not, they will end up returning the original blank document instead of the copy with all their answers in it.

When the student is finished working in the pdf document, they should save it one more time, and then they can head back to Google Classroom. The document in their folder is now the filled-in pdf. Like any other Google Classroom assignment, when they're ready, they can just click TURN IN.


That's it. The teacher gets the completed pdf the same way s/he gets any document through Google Classroom.  And if the teacher uses Kami, s/he can grade and comment on the pdf as well. Postscript: Just in case you were worried, once the pdf is submitted to the teacher, Kami will not allow it to be edited directly by the student.