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Showing posts with label forms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forms. Show all posts

Coda - free online doc system that you can build apps with



Coda

Coda, a low-code platform for building and automating business processes has a CEO who is very passionate about effective meetings. He has run meetings at various companies including Microsoft and YouTube. His team recently created templates for running better meetings based on the CEO's ideas. You can find them here https://coda.io/for/meetings.

Coda is a new doc. It's kinda like Google docs meets Excel except you can build apps with it. With building blocks like tables and buttons, anyone can create a doc as powerful as an app.

It is also something that is very useful for educational administrators, educators and students. They can all use it to create their own projects or use some of the pre-made Educational Templates. You can sign in with a Google account and save all of your projects to Google Drive. There are also iOS and Android apps for it. And, it's free to use. 




Meetings are notorious for being time wasters and non-functional. However, with the proper planning, preparation and execution, meetings can be effective and efficient.

The templates that they built on the site are meant to help managers keep track of 1:1s, getting feedback from their teams before meetings starts, and to better manage remote team members. They could be altered to fit an educational scenario as well. Here are some examples from our template gallery:



  • One of our most popular templates is this one which shows how Uber manages internal product development
  • As Game of Thrones winded down, this template shows a fun use case of organizing a "death pool" with your friends.






Coda is an platform that can be used to manage more efficiently and effectively. 
Meeting Organization with Evernote




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How educators and teachers can get the most out of online forms software - guest post

How educators and teachers can get the most out of online forms software

Online forms might not be the first thing that comes to mind as a helpful classroom tool. 10 years ago the idea would have seemed absurd. But today? Online form tools can save hours, paper, and your budget.

That’s because the way students and teachers interact with technology has completely changed.

I work for JotForm, a popular online form building platform, and below are a few of the popular ways that we’ve noticed educators are utilizing online forms.

Survey students and get instant results
Depending on your classroom cell phone policy, you could have all of your students submit survey responses at the same time straight from their phones and have the results show on a screen in front of the room. Interactive learning has come a long way, and online form builders have mobile-ready forms at the click of a button.

Scheduling parent conferences
Imagine a world where the only thing you needed to do to schedule important one-on-one meetings was just to distribute a single form that lets the recipient know what remaining slots are available.

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Paperless quizzing
A quick trip to the computer lab is all it takes to administer a paperless quiz using an online form that grades itself and provides instant feedback immediately upon submission. Quiz responses can be sent directly to your inbox or integrated into a spreadsheet to make it easy to compare which questions students consistently had trouble with or answered correctly.

Collect signatures digitally
If you need signatures from a parent, skip the middle man (or child). Send permission slip and waiver forms straight to parents’ emails and use the e-signature capabilities already built into the form. No more printed paper, forged signatures, or nagging students to return the completed form. The added benefit to this method is that you don’t have to worry about organization; all of your signatures are neatly stored for you.

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Student group project evaluations
It can be tough for students to give accurate feedback about fellow students for group projects, especially when one of them didn’t pull their weight. That’s why an anonymously submitted online form can be so effective: it encourages honest feedback. Consider open-ended questions like “how well do you think the group performed?”.

Online form building software has increasingly become a fixture in schools all around the world over the past decade, and for good reason: it just makes collecting and organizing information easier. The best part is that it’s insanely affordable. Most form builders are free based on a certain threshold of monthly responses, and generally pretty cheap even for the paid plans.

Chad Reid is the director of communications at JotForm, a popular online form building platform based in San Francisco.





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