Who this is for: classroom teachers, homeschoolers, after‑school mentors, club leaders, and self‑directed student learners using Incubator.org.
How to use it: pick a goal, choose 1–2 tools in each section, copy a prompt or setup checklist, and ship your project today.
Planning Tools → Lesson & Project Planning
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ChatGPT — Draft lesson plans, project briefs, rubrics, checks for understanding, differentiated options, study plans.
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Quick Start:
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Paste standards or your project goals
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Use the Copy Prompt below to ask for a 60‑minute plan with agenda, materials, accommodations.
Copy Prompt
You are my instructional designer. Create a 60‑minute hands‑on activity about [topic] for [grade/age]. Include: 1) hook, 2) mini‑lesson, 3) practice options at three difficulty levels, 4) exit ticket, 5) homework choice board, 6) materials list.
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- For Students
- Ask for a weekly study plan or step‑by‑step project roadmap.
- For Students
- MagicSchool — Teacher‑centric generators (objectives, IEP‑friendly supports, reading level adjustments).
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Getting Started:
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1) Sign in with school email
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2) Pick a template (e.g., Lesson Planner)
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3) Export to Docs.
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Eduaide — Activity types (anticipatory sets, stations, exit tickets) with toggles for Bloom’s level and modalities.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create an account
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2) Select activity type
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3) Adjust grade/reading level and download.
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Planning Tools → Resource Curation
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Wakelet — Drag‑and‑drop visual collections of links, PDFs, and videos; great for “one‑page” project hubs.
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Getting Started:
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1) New Collection
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2) Add links/PDFs
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3) Share the public link.
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Flipboard — Magazine‑style curations, collections; assign a student to curate weekly discoveries.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a Magazine
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2) Flip articles from the web
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3) Invite collaborators.
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Instapaper — Save articles to read later; highlight and export quotes for research notes.
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Getting Started:
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1) Install the browser button
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2) Save 3 sources
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3) Highlight quotes and export.
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Try this workflow:
Students save articles to Instapaper → highlight key quotes → export → paste into Notion/Docs with citations → publish a Wakelet collection.
Planning Tools → Calendar & Scheduling
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Google Calendar — Class calendars, reminders, and shared schedules.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a course calendar
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2) Add repeating sessions
- 3) Share with view permissions.
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- Calendly — Bookable office hours, tutoring slots, and project check‑ins without email ping‑pong.
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Getting Started:
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1) Connect your calendar
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2) Create a 15–20 min event type
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3) Share the booking link.
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Trello — Visual Kanban boards for unit planning or capstone milestones (“To Do / Doing / Done”).
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Getting Started:
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1) Make a board (To‑Do/Doing/Done)
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2) Add cards for milestones
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3) Add due dates & checklists.
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Organization Tools → Digital File Management
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Google Drive — Cloud storage & sharing.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create Starter folder template (duplicate per course/project):
01_Admin
02_Resources
03_Lessons
04_Student_Work
05_Assessment
06_Archive
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2) Set sharing defaults
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3) Add naming rules (e.g.,
Last_First_Project_v1
).
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Organization Tools → Note‑Taking Systems
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Obsidian — Local markdown vault with backlinking; perfect for Zettelkasten‑style research.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a Vault
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2) Add notes for concepts
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3) Use
[[links]]
to connect ideas.
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Notion — All‑in‑one workspace (notes, databases, tasks). Great for class portals & student portfolios.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a Workspace
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2) Add databases for Lessons/Assignments
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3) Build a “This Week” view.
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Evernote — Clipped notes with search.
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Getting Started:
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1) Install web clipper
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2) Create notebooks per unit
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3) Tag for fast retrieval.
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Copy Prompt
Design a Notion dashboard for a high‑school/college course on [topic]. Include databases for lessons, assignments, readings, and reflections, with properties for due dates, difficulty, tags, and status. Provide a roll‑up “This Week” view.
Organization Tools → Workflow Automation
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Zapier — Connect apps (e.g., Form → Spreadsheet → Email).
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Getting Started:
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1) Choose a trigger (Google Forms)
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2) Add an action (Google Sheets)
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3) Add email/slack summary step.
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Asana — Project management with tasks, timelines, and stakeholder visibility.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a project
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2) Add tasks per week
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3) Assign owners & due dates.
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Monday.com — Visual workflows for multi‑team coordination.
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Getting Started:
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1) Start with an Education template
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2) Add columns for status/owner
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3) Automate status updates.
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Starter automations (Zaps):
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Google Form (exit ticket) → Google Sheet (responses) → Slack/Email summary.
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New Drive file in
Student_Work
→ auto‑rename with student name/date → move to course folder. -
Calendar event created → create Trello card with checklist.
Communication Tools → Family/Mentor Communication (a.k.a. “Home Base”)
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Remind — One‑way or two‑way SMS updates without sharing phone numbers.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a class
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2) Share join code
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3) Schedule weekly digests.
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ClassDojo — Class announcements + behavior points; works well for younger learners.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a class
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2) Add families
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3) Post weekly photos/notes (with consent).
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Google Classroom — Assignments, announcements, and feedback in one place.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a class
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2) Post your syllabus & first assignment
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3) Turn on guardian summaries.
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Communication Tools → Virtual Meetings
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Google Meet — Live sessions, office hours, and guest speakers.
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Getting Started:
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1) Schedule with waiting room
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2) Enable recording (if permitted)
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3) Post agenda & link.
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- Live‑session checklist:
- waiting room on
- record (if allowed)
- auto‑mute on entry
- screen‑share permissions
- posted agenda
- 5‑minute tech check
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Communication Tools → Newsletters & Announcements
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Canva — Create newsletters quickly with drag‑and‑drop templates.
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Getting Started:
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1) Choose an education template
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2) Drop in dates & CTA
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3) Export PDF/PNG.
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Piktochart — Infographic‑style content, announcements and data visuals.
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Getting Started:
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1) Pick an infographic layout
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2) Add your class stats
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3) Download and share.
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Freepik — Icons and illustrations (check license & attribution requirements).
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Getting Started:
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1) Search by license
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2) Download vector/PNG
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3) Attribute if required.
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Copy Prompt
Create a 200‑word newsletter announcing our new [unit/project/club]. Include: what we’ll learn, 3 key dates, how families/mentors can help, and a call‑to‑action to RSVP.
Engagement Tools → Gamification & Interactivity
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Kahoot — Fast live quizzes. Use “Team Mode” for collaborative play.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a kahoot with 10 questions
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2) Enable Team Mode
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3) Review report post‑game.
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Quizizz — Homework mode + power‑ups; great for spaced practice.
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Getting Started:
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1) Import a quiz from the library
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2) Assign for homework
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3) Turn on redemption questions.
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Socrative — Quick checks with exit tickets and “space race” competitions.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a room
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2) Launch a Quick Question
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3) Export the report.
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Engagement Tools → Digital Storytelling
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ChatGPT — Script drafts, character ideas, narration outlines.
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Getting Started:
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1) Paste topic/goal
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2) Ask for 3‑scene outline
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3) Generate voice‑over text.
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Canva — Storyboards, comics, video edits with captions.
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Getting Started:
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1) Choose “Video” template
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2) Add scenes & captions
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3) Export MP4.
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StoryboardThat — Drag‑and‑drop scenes for visual narratives.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a 6‑cell storyboard
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2) Add characters/scenes
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3) Download as PDF.
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Copy Prompt
Outline a 3‑minute explainer video for [concept]. Include a hook, 3 scene beats with simple visuals, on‑screen text, and a 1‑sentence call‑to‑action. Reading level: 8th grade.
Engagement Tools → Polls & Quizzes
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Plickers — Paper cards + one device; perfect when students don’t have phones.
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Getting Started:
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1) Print class cards
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2) Add a question set
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3) Scan with your phone.
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Mentimeter — Live polls, word clouds, and Q&A for assemblies or PD.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a deck
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2) Add 2 polls + 1 word cloud
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3) Share the join code.
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Google Forms — Autograding quizzes and quick surveys.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a quiz
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2) Add answer keys
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3) Turn on “Collect emails.”
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Assessment Tools → Formative Assessment
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Quizlet — Flashcards & practice tests with images/audio.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a set from your vocab list
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2) Practice with “Learn”
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3) Share with class.
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Socrative — Instant checks for understanding with reports.
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Getting Started:
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1) Launch an Exit Ticket
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2) Project the live results
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3) Address the muddiest point.
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Gimkit — Game‑based review that rewards accuracy and speed.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create a Kit from a question bank
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2) Choose a game mode
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3) Review the report.
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Assessment → Rubric Generators
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Canva — Make rubric templates that look good and are easy to reuse.
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Getting Started:
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1) Search “rubric”
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2) Customize criteria
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3) Export PDF for print/share.
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Eduaide — Generate analytic rubrics aligned to objectives.
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Getting Started:
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1) Select Rubric tool
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2) Paste objectives
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3) Export to Docs.
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Brisk Teaching — Quick rubric and feedback tools for Google Docs/Classroom.
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Getting Started:
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1) Install add‑on
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2) Open a Doc
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3) Insert rubric & comment bank.
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Rubric skeleton (copy/paste)
Criteria (4) | Exemplary | Proficient | Developing | Beginning--------------------------------------------------------------Understanding of Content | … | … | … | …Evidence & Reasoning | … | … | … | …Communication/Design | … | … | … | …Reflection & Iteration | … | … | … | …
Assessment Tools → Exit Tickets
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Google Forms — The quickest 3-question exit ticket with autograding and email summaries.
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Getting Started:
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1) New form (3 Qs)
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2) Turn on quiz mode
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3) Auto‑email summary.
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Quizalize — Differentiated follow‑ups based on results.
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Getting Started:
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1) Create/import quiz
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2) Map to curriculum
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3) Assign follow‑up tasks.
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Quizizz — Quick pulse checks with auto‑feedback.
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Getting Started:
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1) Make a 5‑question quiz
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2) Enable instant feedback
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3) Review mastery.
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Copy Prompt
Draft 5 exit‑ticket questions for today’s lesson on [topic]: 2 multiple‑choice, 1 short explanation, 1 “muddiest point,” and 1 self‑rating of confidence with a 1–5 scale.
Professional Development & Growth Tools → Professional Learning Communities
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LinkedIn — Follow thought leaders, join educator and youth‑learning groups.
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Getting Started:
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1) Follow 5 experts
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2) Save 3 posts/week
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3) Share one takeaway.
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X (Twitter) — Build a curated list of practitioners sharing strategies. Try engaging in real‑time idea exchange.
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Getting Started:
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1) Make a private list of practitioners
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2) Participate in one weekly chat
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3) Ask one question.
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Facebook Groups — Niche communities for subject‑specific help.
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Getting Started:
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1) Join two subject‑specific groups
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2) Search past threads
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3) Post a help request.
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PD & Growth Tools → Online Courses & Webinars
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Coursera — University-backed micro-courses for pedagogy, assessment, data literacy, and more.
- Getting Started:
- Take 60–90 minute modules or longer specializations; many courses offer free audit.
- Capture notes in Notion and share 3-bullet takeaways with your PLC.
- Getting Started:
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Skillshare — Bite-size classes for classroom design, creativity, and productivity workflows.
- Getting Started:
- Use for “how-to” upskilling—templates, slide design, video editing, and visual communication you can reuse in parent/student comms.
- Getting Started:
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TED — Talks that spark pedagogy ideas, micro‑learnings, inspirations, student discussion, and mentor engagement.
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Getting Started:
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Use talks to launch inquiries, model concise storytelling, or anchor PBL entry events
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pair with short reflection prompts in Docs/Notion.
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PD & Growth Tools → Reflective Practice
- Google Docs — Keep a rolling reflection journal with headings and action-item tags.
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Getting Started:
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Use as a low-friction reflection log for weekly debriefs;
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Pair with headers for each week/unit and tag action items you’ll roll forward.
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- Notion — Linked database for reflections with properties (unit, standard, mood) and roll-ups.
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Getting Started:
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Build a reflections database to analyze trends across units/standards
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Add views (calendar, board) and monthly reviews.
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- Day One (Journal App) — Private, cross-device journaling for daily check-ins and professional reflection.
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Getting Started:
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Use for quick private PD notes, mood tracking, and photo/audio reflections.
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Weekly reflection template
Wins: …Stuck points: …What the data says (exit tickets/quiz): …One change for next time: …Shout‑outs: …
Starter Stacks (Pick‑and‑Run)
A. Solo Student Research Kit
Notion (dashboard) · Instapaper (sources) · Google Drive (files) · ChatGPT (draft assist) · Quizlet (study set)
B. After‑School Club/Workshop Kit
Google Classroom (hub) · Canva (announcements) · Mentimeter (live polls) · Kahoot (game) · Google Forms (exit tickets)
C. Capstone Project Team Kit
Trello (milestones) · Google Drive (shared folder) · Notion (knowledge base) · Calendly (check‑ins) · Zapier (automations)
Privacy, Accessibility & Inclusion
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Data care: Avoid uploading personally identifiable information (PII) to public tools. Check your organization’s policies.
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Licensing: Verify asset licenses (especially Freepik/Google Images). Use Creative Commons or your own media.
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Accessibility: Add captions, alt text, high‑contrast colors, readable fonts, and multiple formats (text/audio/video).
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Language‑friendly: Offer bilingual summaries or use simple‑English versions where helpful.
One‑Hour Sprint Plan
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Choose a Starter Stack above.
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Create a shared Drive folder using the template structure.
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Build your Notion/Docs dashboard and paste the weekly reflection template.
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Draft your kickoff newsletter in Canva using the Copy Prompt.
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Make a 5‑question Google Form exit ticket and schedule a Zap to send a daily summary.
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Celebrate a quick win and iterate next week.
Have 10 extra minutes?
Paste your unit goals into ChatGPT and ask for: curated resources, a formative assessment map by week, and two differentiated project options (individual + team). Ship it!
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