FEBRUARY's ONE WORD is LIST.
I am a list maker. I make lists on paper. In notebooks. In Google Keep. On sticky notes. For almost all parts of my life. Personal and professional.
When I started to think about what my second word for 2024 would be I knew right away that list would be a good one to continue after January’s word start/restart. In the last few years, I have used a few apps to track my reading. I’m currently using StoryGraph and I love the various data it provides about my reading. If there’s one thing I like even better than lists, it’s data.
I’ve been searching for a similar app or website that tracks podcasts but haven’t really found anything I like. I decided to use my favourite app, Google Keep, to track them myself.
I’ve been taking a screenshot of each podcast episode and uploading them to a Keep note. I also use Google Keep for a shared grocery list with my husband, that way no matter who goes to the store has the list. I have Keep list of plants I want to add to our garden, workout links, books to look into, websites I like, Christmas/Birthday gift ideas, and small renovations or changes we want to make around the house. So, so many lists.
I find the more things I can download from my brain the easier it is to remember pretty much anything else.
I’ve also used Google Keep for work-related lists for years but this is the first year that I’ve attempted to use it for assessment and documentation purposes. We currently create a new note for each student every month to collect pictures of the students in their play and learning throughout the day. We copy the notes into Google Docs and share them with the families at the end of each two-month cycle.
I have really liked using this system for keeping track of pictures and being able to share with families without needing to access a separate app (which my board "outlawed" years ago anyway). However, when I started to work on first-term reports a few weeks ago I found that it was a lot of work clicking back and forth between different Google folders and docs to see the pictures we had for each of the students to write personalized comments based on their activities and learning. I won't say that our system was bad, I just think it can be more streamlined and made more efficient. And like many things, you don't know what is working and what isn't working until you try it out for the first time.
So what now?
Well, like any good former teacher-librarian (wink, wink) I did some research!
This video from Pocketful of Primary is one I watched a few years ago when I started using Google Keep and it has some great tips for anyone trying out Google Keep for the first time. I especially like the idea of using images for headers (you can see how I have done that with my Grocery List above) as it makes things super easy to find.
A few other really good tips:
- how to pin notes
- how to add collaborators
- how to set up reminders
- how to add labels
- how to colour code the notes (my fave!! and I am going to start using it to colour code the four frames from the kindergarten document)
The Documentation Panel can include:
- pictures, drawings or diagrams from students about what is being explored
- pieces of artwork
- student writing
- photographs of students in explorations or play
- overall or specific expectations from the Ontario curriculum