Techsmith Capture – Free Screencapture Software, Image and Video!

There are several good options for capturing screenshots and recording video screencasts.  Techsmith sells two fantastic programs, Snagit and Camtasia.  I have purchased both of them, but for those that don’t need that level of horsepower, Techsmith Capture is a great choice, which borrows some seasoned basic elements from Snagit and Camtasia.  It can be mastered in minutes, captures both images and video (even your webcam), and then easily shares them to your free screencast.com account.

Highly recommended!  Here’s a brief diddy on how to use it.

Installing GIMP on a Chromebook

For 99% of the image editing tasks, GIMP and Photoshop can do the same thing.  Of course, GIMP is much-lesser known as it is a free open-source program that does not have Adobe’s multimillion-dollar advertising campaign, but nevertheless, it gets the job done and more!

Now with many schools adopting Chromebooks, full-featured image editing has been limited.  No more, as you can now easily install GIMP on most Chromebooks.  I managed to install it on my 3-year old $225 Costco Chromebook and it runs great.  This is the full version of GIMP, not some watered-down web version.

Here are  Terminal Commands For Installing GIMP on a Chromebook,  versions 2.8 or 2.10, using your Chromebook’s version of Terminal.  Installing 2.8 is a little easier, but 2.10 is worth the little bit of extra time.

3D Printing For Teachers

3D Printing For Teachers

STEM-909 –  Three 900-Level Semester Units

The Good News: Your school district purchased a 3D printer for your classroom. The Bad News: Training wasn’t included. 3D printing technology has great potential in educational environments as course subjects can be brought to life. This equips the students with practical (and very valuable) real-life experience.

To the greatest degree possible, we’ll use free/open-source programs that run on multiple systems without making compromises. This will help maximize availability for you and your students, whether at school or at home. An inexpensive guidebook is recommended, and the apps/software are free. This class can be completed without access to a 3D printer and we’ll explore methods to help you teach 3D printing to your students the same way. The syllabus describes the journey but know that there will be ample opportunity to adapt lessons that fit what you teach and the hardware you have available.

Students will also have the option to adapt many of the assignments for use in their own classroom.  Forum discussions throughout the course will allow the students to share creative and effective classroom uses of digital imaging.

  • Three graduate-level semester credits from Fresno Pacific University.
  • 100% online.
  • Uses completely free, powerful software.
  • No textbook is required, everything is included in the course.
  • Neither previous academic coursework nor work experience is required.

 

Register Here!

Save Up To $45!
Use this code to save $15 per course: Eric45

Informational Video

Coming Soon!

Sample Screencast From The Course

Teaching With Tinkercad

Teaching With Tinkercad

STEM-910 –  Three 900-Level Semester Units

Tinkercad is an amazingly easy-to-use, powerful program for creating 3D digital designs that are ready to be 3D printed, incorporated into projects or solve design challenges. This FREE collection of online software tools help people all over the world think, create, make and Tinker! For teachers, it integrates easily with Google/Tinkercad Classroom and is 100% cloud-based, meaning it will operate on any device that can run a web browser, including Chromebooks and iPads.

From the moment you open its welcoming interface, Tinkercad will draw you into the world of 3D modeling one basic shape at a time. All of the instruction is online, there are no extra materials to purchase. Students of all ages love Tinkercad. Discover and learn you can energize your instruction with Tinkercad.

Students will also have the option to adapt many of the assignments for use in their own classroom.  Forum discussions throughout the course will allow the students to share creative and effective classroom uses of digital imaging.

  • Three graduate-level semester credits from Fresno Pacific University.
  • 100% online.
  • Uses completely free, powerful software.
  • No textbook is required, everything is included in the course.
  • It can be taken on any device with an Internet connection and a mouse!
  • Neither previous academic coursework nor work experience is required.

 

Register Here!

Save Up To $45!
Use this code to save $15 per course: Eric45

Informational Video

Coming Soon!

Sample Screencast From The Course

Student Reviews For Eric

When a student completes one of my classes, they get the opportunity to submit a rating and thoughts on their course experience.

All of these reviews are unmoderated, so if someone really wants to let me have it, you’d see it.  That hasn’t happened yet, much to the disbelief of the lovely Mrs. Westland.

Here are direct links to my course review pages.

SketchUp, STEM-903

Photo Editing With GIMP,  TEC-997

Photography For Teachers, TEC-998

Online Photo Editing For Chromebooks, TECH-908

Video  Editing: HitFilm Express, TECH-900

3D PRINTING FOR TEACHERS

STEM – 910 Teaching With Tinkercad

TECH -914 iMovie For Macs, iPads and iPhones

 

About Fresno Pacific University

Fresno Pacific University is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) and is authorized to offer independent study graduate-level courses through the Office of Continuing Education. These open-enrollment courses serve teachers and administrators across the country and beyond with relevant and beneficial courses of study. The primary goal is to meet the needs of school districts and provide courses that will strengthen the teachers, the school district, and the students they serve.

Build Wallace and Grommit’s Spaceship With SketchUp (and Pixlr)

When I started planning this project, I was asking myself what could be fun for kids, have supporting media, and be short/easy.  I think I hit the first two perfectly, but I kept wanting to introduce new skills.  Before I was done, I realized I had created a monster, but a fun monster indeed.

Anyone can do this project, but it is helpful to have some prior SketchUp experience – explaining every move for a total beginner would result in something no one could use.  However, for those that don’t, they can refer to my online indexed guide for all of SketchUp’s moves and grooves.

Here is a brief excerpt from A Grand Day Out to get your students fired up.

You can stream the whole episode for free if you have an Amazon Prime account.

Here is a link to the playlist.  Enjoy!

SketchUp Pro 2020 – Should You Upgrade?

At the end of January, Trimble announced SketchUp Pro 2020.  I winced somewhat when I saw the subject title wondering if they wrecked a near-perfect thing.  After reading their announcement, the basics have remained untouched.

Students and teachers are either using the web-version or SketchUp Make 2017, which was the last free desktop version.  Regardless, I am still a strong advocate of using the built-in and custom keyboard shortcuts.  They save time and work in any version.

I did upgrade my free version of Pro to 2020, but that is because I know I am going to get work to grade saved by others using 2020 and I won’t be able to open it with earlier versions.  Otherwise, I saw no real reason to “upgrade”.

BTW, you can save your files so they can be opened by earlier versions.

SketchUp – Modeling A 3D Pencil

This is a series of video screencast tutorials that demonstrate how to create a pencil using SketchUp.  It is a great introductory activity.

Students love doing these activities, but they don’t want to have anyone show them for 70 minutes on a projector screen and then set them free.  They also don’t want to have to figure out written directions (did you ever open up the shrink-wrapped manual?).  They just want to jump in and create. This format allows students to start from the beginning and model as they watch.  If they skip a step or have trouble, they can go back and rewatch that portion of the tutorial. If they find another way to do the same thing, that’s even better.  If a student misses a day, they have not missed any instruction.

The screencast is indexed giving students the advantage of quickly find out where they left off from the day before or go back and rewatch a segment for better understanding.

 

 

Directions, supplemental files and SketchUp files saved at various stages can be found by downloading the document below.

Complete Pencil Lesson Package Download

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SketchUp – Modeling A 3D Toy Locomotive

This is a series of video screencast tutorials that demonstrate how to create a toy locomotive using SketchUp.

Students love doing these activities, but they don’t want to have anyone show them for 70 minutes on a projector screen and then set them free.  They also don’t want to have to figure out written directions (did you ever open up the shrink-wrapped manual?).  They just want to jump in and create. This format allows students to start from the beginning and model as they watch.  If they skip a step or have trouble, they can go back and rewatch that portion of the tutorial. If they find another way to do the same thing, that’s even better.  If a student misses a day, they have not missed any instruction.

The screencast is indexed giving students the advantage of quickly find out where they left off from the day before or go back and rewatch a segment for better understanding.

 

 

 

Directions, supplemental files and SketchUp files saved at various stages can be found by downloading the document below.

Complete Locomotive Lesson Download

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