Showing posts with label Evernote. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evernote. Show all posts

Monday, May 7, 2012

Evernote buys Penultimate handwriting app - could mean good things for Education


          

Handwriting recognition on tablets and other devices is something that I think is vital for many educators and students. It's hard to take notes in a math or science class just using a keyboard due to the symbols and equations. Penultimate is a handwriting app for the iPad that allows users to take handwritten notes and drawings. Evernote just bought Penultimate.

iPad Screenshot 1

I think this is an excellent thing for education. Penultimate was only on the iPad. Evernote is on, well, everything. Evernote said that they will be keeping Penultimate and integrating it into Evernote. I'm hoping that this means that it will be available on all of the platforms that Evernote is available on. I also think that Evernote should make sure it handles the use of a stylus, so that the writing on smaller devices is easier to do and read.

This kind of app, integrated with Evernote, and on all platforms, will be an excellent tool for education.

Source: Evernote Blog: http://blog.evernote.com/2012/05/07/evernote-acquires-penultimate/

Related:

Evernote for Education - resources, tips, how to, lesson ideas, and much more








Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Buy a Livescribe SmartPen by April 30th, get 1 yr Evernote Premium free. Great deal.



I'm a huge fan and user of Evernote. I'm a huge fan and user of Livescribe Pens. If you've thought of purchasing a Livescribe smartpen, and like Evernote, you should buy the smartpen before April 30th. If you do, you'll get one year of Evernote Premium free.

I know this sounds like an advertisement, but I love a good deal, so I figured I'd pass it on to you.

Evernote for Educators: http://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/p/evernote-for-education.html
Livescribe SmartPen reviewhttp://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/2011/11/livescribe-smartpens-updated-pricing.html

Buy a smartpen by April 30th and get one year of Evernote Premium* for FREE









Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Evernote tip - Create a table of contents with note links



Evernote is one of my favorite resources. I use for note taking, clipping research and information from the internet, for lesson resources and lesson planning and much more.

Here's a great tip: You can create a table of contents using note links. This means you can associate notes with each other and get your notes more organized. You can learn more about Note Links here on the Evernote blog.

Note links allow you to link different notes together instead of copy-paste or re-typing. You can link lesson plans with lesson resources, link reference information to meeting notes, and so forth.

The table of contents feature is great because you organize related notes into the table and organize related notes to each other. I created a table of contents for my Physics class curriculum and linked all the different notes I have to each unit topic. I can then go to one note and then easily find related information.

Here's how to create a table of contents (from the Evernote Blog):

  1. Grab the Note Link to a note by right-clicking on the note and selecting to Copy Note Link.
  2. Create a New Note in your notebook or go to a note where you’d like that Note Link to go.
  3. Paste the link (it will show up as the hyperlinked title of your note) into your New Note or existing note.
  4. Do this for all other notes you’d like to include in your table of contents, putting them in the order that you’d like people to look through the notebook.
  5. You can perform this as a batch action, too. Select multiple notes, right click and then add them to your new or existing note.






Related:

Evernote for Education - resources, how to's, tips, lesson ideas, getting started, and more.








Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Evernote Web Clipper for Chrome gets updated with some useful features






Evernote is one of my favorite tools. I use it for lesson plans, meeting notes, lesson resources, clipping web content, bookmarking, sharing resources and more. It's a very important and useful resource for me.

One of the great features of Evernote is the Web Clipper. The web clipper is an add-on for a web browser and lets you clip entire web pages, links, or parts of a web page, directly into your Evernote notebooks. The Evernote web clipper for Chrome is great and just got an update. Now it has Smart Filing and Clipping to Shared Notebooks. Smart Filing remembers what notebook you have clipped content into from certain webpages and will automatically suggest notebooks, relevant tags, or both, when you clip from that web page again. This can save you time when clipping resources from the same site. You can change the suggestions though.



You can also now clip into shared notebooks, so multiple people can work together to build notebooks with research, data, notes, and more.


These new features are great for education - saving time, helping you get organized, and allowing multiple people to work on shared notebooks with the web clipper. Teachers, administrators and students can use these features for research and planning.


Evernote is constantly updating and improving it's features and products and promises more updates to Evernote and the web clipper in the future.


Get the Evernote Web Clipper for Chrome 



Related:

Evernote for Education - resources, how to's, tips, getting started, and more.

Google Chrome Browser review






Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Springpad, a great note taking/organizing app, gets upgraded


Springpad

Springpad is a great note taking and organizing app and service that I've reviewed before and really like. It is similar to Evernote in many ways, but also has some differences. Springpad is free and has web and mobile apps for iOS and Android.

Springpad allows you to create and organize tasks in a different way than Evernote, and organizes your notes differently. You can take notes, clip web sites, create task lists, and more, just like in Evernote, but you can also import data from a bar code, search by location, and add photos. You can organize things by notebooks and tags like in Evernote, but Springpad also has "The Board" which is a digital cork board to help you organize the important things.


Springpad organizes your notes, bookmarks, web clippings, and other data and information in different ways than Evernote and lets you share notebooks with others also. They also have tons of notebooks available for viewing on their site.

There is a new interface, new ways to share and follow notebooks, and more. Here's a video from Springpad on their new features.







Updates are to the web app, the iPhone and iPad apps, and the Android app
Springpad


Related:

Evernote in Education Resources

Springpad - free notes and organizer software - very cool

Notetaking Apps - a comparison of some popular ones

10 Great, Free Apps for Students for Notetaking and Class Planning





Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Evernote - tips for students to be more productive with it



I just posted a new resource to the Evernote for Education page, entitled "10 ways Evernote can help make students more productive" which great tips for students to use Evernote in Education.

Evernote is one of my favorite resources for both educators and students. It really is an amazing app and service.

If you haven't tried Evernote yet, or want to learn more about it, check out the information and resources here: Evernote for Education page






Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Evernote Android App gets Speech-to-text built in



Evernote, one of my favorite and most useful apps, has an update for Evernote's Android app that now includes Speech-to-text. The speech recognition allows you speak and the app will create text into the note. This is also a great way to have transcribed notes without the transcriptionist.

This can also be useful for students and teachers as a learning tool, note taking, and even for students with disabilities to be able to take notes by voice instead of by hand.


The Evernote blogs says it only works on Android 4.0 (ICS) and some other devices, but it works great on my Droid Incredible 2 running Android 2.3.4. I dictated a few notes and it only had one error out of a full paragraph (it missed one letter).

You can get the updated app in Google Play

Source: Evernote Blog: http://blog.evernote.com/2012/03/27/evernote-for-android-update-speech-to-text-and-big-widget-enhancements/


Related:

Evernote for Educators - resources for getting started and using Evernote in Education

Android Smartphone and Apps I use as an educator

Android for Education resources and apps









Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Send Your Bookmarks to Evernote using Booknote Importer (Mac)



Booknote Importer 

I know, I know, another post about Evernote. Sorry!

Many people, myself included, use Evernote for bookmarking. I like being able to easily add notes and even attachments to a bookmark. Richard Byrne, FreeTech4Teachers, also uses Evernote for bookmarks.
(I still use Google Bookmarks too. I use them for different bookmarking reasons).

If you use Mac and want to have your current bookmarks imported into Evernote, there is a solution for you: Booknote Importer.

Booknote Importer takes your bookmarks from your browser and makes them notes in Evernote. You first export your bookmarks from your browser and then open up Booknote Importer and load them in. 

This is a great way to move lots of bookmarks into Evernote quickly and easily. Once in Evernote, you can share the notes the bookmarks are in with others.


It is free and available in the Mac App store.


Source: Lifehacker



Use StudyBlue to create study materials from your Evernote notes



Last week I wrote about StudyBlue, a free service that lets students create and share flashcards, quizzes and other study materials. I am constantly writing, Tweeting, and presenting about Evernote (it's just that good and useful). Today, I found out from Richard Byrne (FreeTech4Teachers) that you can take your notes from Evernote and import them into StudyBlue to create flashcards from your notes. That is just too cool.

This is a great resource for students. They can use Evernote to take notes, and then use these notes in StudyBlue to create flashcards, quizzes and study aids to help them learn the material.

Here's the link to get started using your Evernote notes in Studyblue.



Related:

StudyBlue - create and share flashcards, quizzes, and study guides







Friday, March 9, 2012

MasterNote - Templates for Evernote - makes it even more powerful (Mac OS)


MasterNote App, Templates for Evernote

MasterNote is a very cool application that I just found out about for Evernote. It's not free, but it's only $5 and very useful. It is currently only available for Mac OS X.

MasterNote allows you to create templates to save time on repetitive tasks and notes. You create the templates from your Evernote notes and can save them for future use. It saves you time by allowing you to create the template of your most frequently used notes and each template can contain as many notes as you wish. You can save multiple templates and even save some as forms.

With MasterNote, you can create template notes for note taking, reports and papers, journals, lesson plans, quizzes, handouts, and more.

The site has tutorial videos for different types of notes and templates,


Thanks to William Stites for letting me know about this site! My PLN Rules!


Related:

Evernote for Education - resources for using Evernote as an Educator or Student

Evernote - some great ideas for using it in education

10 Great, Free Apps for Students for Notetaking and Class Planning - includes Evernote, Everstudent and Skitch

Evernote Trunk- hardware, apps & notebooks that make Evernote more awesome. 

Evernote Clearly - one click for distraction free online reading - very cool 

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Evernote For Schools Site: Resource for Using Evernote in Education


Evernote. I know, you must be getting tired of me writing about Evernote. I can't help it. It is an incredibly useful, easy to use, and once you start you have no idea how you lived without it, free resource that I use for literally everything. Evernote has apps for mobile devices, desktop software, and you can access your notes through any web browser.

I talk about it on this blog a lot, I share about it on Twitter and Google+, and I teach other teachers and my students how to use it. Evernote has some great resources for using it and lots of educators have created resources for using it, but Evernote has just announced "Evernote For Schools Site: Resource for Using Evernote in Education."



Evernote for Schools is a micro site on the Evernote page that has useful resources to help educators and students use Evernote more effectively as an education tool. It has a collection of resources including education-related case studies, videos, and a discussion forum for connecting and sharing tips and ideas for using Evernote in a school setting.

Teachers can use Evernote to organize notes, lesson plans, lesson resources, student reports and notes, and research. Students can use Evernote to organize all their content (notes, projects, worksheets, lists and more) on all the computers, phones and tablets they use, at school and at home.

There is an Evernote for Schools Discussion Forum where educators share tips, tricks, resources and best practices and you can follow the Evernote for Schools Twitter account, @evernoteschools, to keep up to date on new developments, upgrades, news, tips and much more.

If you use Evernote, this site can help you use it more effectively. If  you don't use Evernote, this page will help you get started using Evernote in education.
http://www.evernote.com/about/schools/



Related:

Evernote for Education - collection of tips, resources, and more for using Evernote in Education

Using Evernote for e-Portfolios

Livebinder of Evernote Resources for Education

Evernote - some great ideas for using it in Education

Evernote - get organized, for free, on all devices and platforms








Friday, February 10, 2012

10 Great, Free Apps for Students for Notetaking and Class Planning




These days, there are some great apps for students to use to take notes for class, or to use as class planners.



1. Evernote and EverStudent
My favorite is Evernote. I use it for everything, literally, and many of my students use it for taking notes, clipping web pages, creating to do lists, and more. There is also a new Android app available, called EverStudent, that integrates with Evernote and acts as a planner for students. EverStudent allows students to manage tasks and assignments with a planner interface by class, color code classes, add instructor info to your notes and group classes by semester or term. All the information is synced to Evernote for access from any device and to share with others. It is available for Android only.





2. Skitch

Skitch also works with Evernote and allows you to create sketches and annotate, edit and save photos and your sketches. Students could use this to take notes or sketches that can't be done with just text. It's available for Android and Mac. iOS version is coming.



3. MySchoolNotebook



MySchoolNotebook is another note taking app I just reviewed earlier here: http://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/2012/02/myschoolnotebook-free-onlineapps-for.html


4. Memonic



Memonic is similar to other note taking tools in that you can clip web content, take text notes, share notes, and access it from any computer. There are also apps for iOS and Android. You can also email a note to your Memonic account from any computer.

There is also a feature coming that will allow you to use Memonic's web clipper to save notes directly to your Evernote account.




5. SimpleNote

SimpleNote is exactly what it's name says - it's a free, simple note taking app. Notes are just text. However, it does have some great features. You can access it from any computer or web-enabled device. You can easily start and make a note and even share it with others. Your notes are searchable with tags and content search, and there are some extensions and add-ons that you can use with it.





6. SpringPad


Springpad is a notes and organizing service that allows you to create and organize tasks in a different way than Evernote, and organizes your notes differently. You can take notes, clip web sites, create task lists, and more, just like in Evernote, but you can also import data from a bar code, search by location, and add photos. You can organize things by notebooks and tags like in Evernote, but Springpad also has "The Board" which is a digital cork board to help you organize the important things.

Springpad is free, and is available via web app and for iPhone, iPad, and Android.



7. TrackClass




Trackclass is a great, free resource for students. The site allows students to track their classes and assignments, and even will send reminders (email or SMS) for upcoming assignment due dates and test dates. There is also a note taking utility so students can take notes on it if they have a computer in school, or transcribe notes later. You can even attach files to each class and assignment to keep things organized. It is a great way for students to stay organized.



8. Soshiku 


Shoshiku is another free class organizer, similar to Trackclass. It has a calendar, notes, task list, and reminder system like Trackclass. It is not as full featured, in my opinion, as Trackclass, but it is easy to use and some students may like it better than Trackclass.



9a. Paper Planners - Even today, with students having smartphones and laptops and tablets, some still prefer to use paper planners. I use to use Franklin Quest planners until I got my first PDA (A Palm IIIxe in 2000). Some planners can be customized for your school too. We give every student a planner that includes schedules, calendar, homework and assignment lists, and even a hall pass log.

Here are some links to some paper planners. They are obviously not free. Students could also print out blank calendar and planner pages that you can find online and use them as a free paper planner.

Franklin Covey - great paper planning systems, but a little pricey for students.
Day Timer paper planners
DIY Planner - make and print your own planner pages
Planner Pads - paper planners
Day Runner - paper planners
Mead Student Planners
At-A-Glance
Student Planner USA - some nice ones on here (and not expensive)
SchoolMate Student Planners

9b. LiveScribe smart pen


Students could use a LiveScribe smart pen to take paper notes, but have those notes synced to their computer (and even to Evernote). This is a good option for math, science, and engineering, where you really can't take good notes using a keyboard. It also has a voice recorder to record what the teacher is saying. You can buy notebooks, or print out your own paper notes.



10. Google - Calendar, Docs, and Task List 


Google is another great way to get organized and take notes. Google Calendar is a great way to organize class schedules, assignment due dates with reminders and more. You can even color code classes and assignments. If the teacher uses Google Calendar for the class, you can just view that calendar with yours. Google Docs can be used for taking notes and the Tasks can be used as a task list. They can be accessed from any computer or mobile device.


Share these with your students (and use some yourself).



What are your favorite apps for taking notes and getting organized?


Thursday, February 9, 2012

Paper, we don't need no paper! Tools and tips for going paperless


Going paperless - it's good for the trees, good for budgets, increases efficiency and organization, and makes life easier in many ways. But how do you go paperless? I used to use paper planners (Franklin Quest) until I got my first PDA (Palm IIIxe) in 2000. I also try to go paperless in as many other ways as possible.

The first thing you need is electronics. You need to have ready access to a computer, tablet and/or smartphone. If you don't have paper, you need to be able to check your electronic data whenever you need too. A smartphone is one of the best tools to go paperless. You can access your calendar, notes, to do list, files and pretty much everything else. I use an Android smartphone and it makes my life so efficient and easy.

Another piece of hardware is a scanner, especially one that has document feed capabilities (vs. a flatbed scanner). With this, you can digitize all the paper you already have for easy access and storage. I even scan in student work for easy access at home to grade it and to keep and e-portfolio for the students.

Apps and software are the next piece of the paperless puzzle. You need to have a calendar, notes, to do list, access to your other files, and apps to read all your files. I use Google's products for calendar, task list, contacts, documents, email, blogs and web sites, and more. I use Evernote for notes (other notes apps) and also have scanned documents and other files uploaded to my Evernote notebooks. I use Dropbox and Sugarsync to back up all of my files and access them at any time, from my smartphone or any web enabled device.

Once you have your services and apps set up, you can access your files and data anywhere. You can get more organized, keep your data together, stay on schedule and more. You don't have to carry things around with you either.

You can do almost everything online now, including banking. Bills and paperwork can be sent electronically instead of paper, and you can get digital magazines instead of print.

If you don't have ready access to a mobile device, but spend most of your time near a computer, you can always print out your calendar/schedule for the week, along with your to do list and space for notes. 1 page of paper or so per week is better than tons of paper.

If you like taking notes with a pen and paper, take a look at the LiveScribe smartpen. You write on the special paper (buy it or print it out) and the pen stores what you write. It also has a voice recorder. It then syncs your notes to your computer and makes them digital and accessible anywhere. You can even share your notes via email and Evernote, along with some other services.

Going paperless is, in my opinion, a great way to get organized, help the environment, save money (after the initial hardware purchase, all the apps are free), save your back, and be more efficient.



Related:

Tools to go Paperless (in school and at home)

Evernote for Education

Android Smartphone and Apps I use as an Educator

Interesting Comment Regarding Going Paperless

Unfettered by Stuff - or "Why I don't lug stuff home every night"

Google for Educators resources

Why I use Google's resources as an Educator

Alternatives to Google's web services and apps

Tips for saving money and finding free resources for school

My Favorite Resources for Teachers and Students

Livescribe SmartPen

Notetaking Apps - a comparison of some of the popular ones

Getting Students and Teachers Organized - tips and resources






Monday, February 6, 2012

Awesome LiveBinder of Evernote Resources for Education


I'm a huge fan and user of Evernote for, well, everything. I use it for my lesson plans, lesson resources, lesson schedule, meeting notes, class notes, student notes, research, web clippings, recipes, to do lists, project management, and so much more. I share notes with colleagues and students. I can access my notes anywhere on any web enabled device. I created an Evernote for Education resource page to collect great resources and to use when I do training on using Evernote in education.

I just found an incredible resource for anyone looking to use Evernote, especially in Education. Justin Stallings, an educator that I know from my Personal Learning Network on Twitter, has created an incredible LiveBinder of resources on Evernote for Educators. There are links to official Evernote pages and videos on how to use Evernote, to links and resources on using Evernote as an educator to get organized, as a learning tool, and much more.



If you use Evernote as an Educator, you really need to look through this LiveBinder on Evernote for some great ideas and tips. If you don't use Evernote, why not? Seriously, Evernote is an incredible resource for educators and students alike and this page can help you get started.

Check it out: http://www.livebinders.com/play/play/245623


I'm adding it to My Evernote Resources for Education page.



Related:

My Evernote Resources for Education Page

LiveBinders - Organize materials in online binders

Twitter - A Great Resource for Educators



Using Evernote for ePortfolios - great idea



I'm a huge fan and user of Evernote for, well, everything. I use it for my lesson plans, lesson resources, lesson schedule, meeting notes, class notes, student notes, research, web clippings, recipes, to do lists, project management, and so much more. I share notes with colleagues and students. I can access my notes anywhere on any web enabled device. What I haven't used Evernote for yet is ePortfolios. But I found a teacher who is.

"Evernote as Portfolio - The story of using Evernote as a portfolio in my k-12 school" is a blog written by a teacher in Portland, Oregon who has been working to use e-portfolios in their classroom for the last six years. They are writing this blog to share their work, successes, and obstacles in using Evernote and mobile devices to create e-portfolios with their students.

The blog has great examples of using Evernote for e-portfolios, along with what worked and what didn't. 

This is a great resource for teachers looking to use e-portfolios with their students and wanting an easy to use, free system like Evernote.  

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Catch - easily capture notes, information and more

Catch

Catch is a service, similar to Evernote, that allows you to capture notes, photos, voice memos, and more and then access it anywhere. You can use the iPhone, iPad or Android app or access it through the web. Data is synced on your device so you can access it even when offline. They have browser extensions for clipping web content also (Chrome, IE, Firefox).

The free account is pretty powerful and offers the mobile notebook and journal, text, web clippings, photos and voice memos, 3 streams and 70MB per month of content uploaded. You can even Geotag your notes.

You can also upgrade to paid accounts to add brainstorming and conversations, along with increased streams and data upload amounts.

A stream is a way to group different data (notes, photos, etc) into a topic to keep them organized.

You can share your content with others, or keep it private. They also have Catch-U, a help site that can help get you started using Catch.

You can create a free account or login using Google or Facebook.

Catch seems like another great way to collect and organize data and notes.

catch.com


Related: