“What’s my favorite G Suite for Education tool?” asked a Google Educator Level 1 session participant. “Google Slides. You can do so much with it!” said another. Slides offers many exciting features that make it a versatile assistant for educators. In this blog entry, let’s take a look at five Google Slides hacks you may find useful. These may deepen your appreciation for Google Slides and increase your productivity. https://blog.tcea.org/five-hacks-for-google-slides/ #GoogleEDU #Teacher #Education #Edutooter #TCEA Be sure to check out this online course on Google Slides - https://courses.tcea.org
@mguhlin have you checked out any of the open source options in this space? They'd have a LOT of advantages for learners and educators alike.
@lightweight Yes, I run Linux Mint and LibreOffice. I have used NeoOffice, OpenOffice, and many others. I love Gnumeric. I haven’t tried NextOffice yet. I have encouraged use of FOSS my entire career, but at this time, I work in a situation that I write about questions educators have. They don’t get a choice in what they are allowed. Thanks for the offer.
@lightweight Yes, I am not of the Stallman variety of FOSS advocate. When I was in charge, I deployed FOSS solutions as was appropriate and made sense. OwnCloud, Moodle, Wordpress, and a host of other FOSS solutions. But, I am not in charge now, and I am not interested in proselytizing of any kind. You catch my meaning? 🙂
@lightweight I get it. It will be ok.
@mguhlin I don't think it is or will be. Here's an observation from here in Aotearoa NZ where educators have made a similarly major error of judgement: https://davelane.nz/explainer-digitech-risks-school-boards - we need educators like you, who appear to know better, to actively oppose this deeply flawed direction.
@lightweight Thanks for sharing. I have spent my time encouraging educators to use FOSS, but I see now I have fallen short in my efforts.
@mguhlin yeah. I get it. That's a very disappointing response.