POST
|
Thanks, Owen. StoryMaps is such a great platform, and I can see so many ways that it could be really powerful tool in the hands of student creators. Do you have suggestions for an getting started guide, online classes or other helpful resources that explain the back-end functionality of ESRI account management for new users/administrators? I am learning as I go.
... View more
06-22-2020
01:14 PM
|
0
|
2
|
657
|
POST
|
Thanks, Owen. I am familiar with Collections. It was a game changer when it rolled out in its ability to connect multiple maps into one cohesive package. It solved a huge problem I was encountering last summer when I was using the first version of StoryMaps to produce a digital exhibit from existing content. I was able to use Collections to weave together the six DC neighborhoods in the Smithsonian SM collection featured on StoryMaps Live in April. What I am running into in transferring that experience to producing the Greek Wax Project (as a Collection) in a school setting. The practical aspects I detailed below about overwhelming the organization (and students) with content is a concern when using the tool more widely in an educational context.
... View more
06-22-2020
11:41 AM
|
2
|
4
|
657
|
POST
|
I teach in a K-8 school, and we currently have ArcGIS accounts for 5-8th grade students. During Virtual Learning I helped another 5th grade teacher adapt his traditional Greek Wax Museum project for distanced learning using StoryMaps to create a Virtual Museum<https://arcg.is/19TPav>. I used StoryMaps as a way to guide students through lessons each day. And, I’d like to expand the use of StoryMaps in my school to use it in more sophisticated ways as well. The issue is that if one teacher at each grade level uses StoryMaps for student produced work twice a year, that ends up populating the Shared With Me feature with over 400 individual StoryMaps (and we are a small school). Students in 5th grade are wading through hundreds of projects from students in other grades that they don’t need to see. And, if a teacher wants to use StoryMaps as a professional presentation tool, he or she might not necessarily want students to have access to that work. I wish there were a way to either organize content into folders or have some intermediary level where you could make what you’ve created not necessarily visible within Shared With Me to the entire organization but still visible to the larger world (making publishing to group feature still a live URL). I am thinking is like how Unlisted video content is handled on YouTube. My instructional videos aren’t visible on my public facing feed, but I can still share them if I choose to share the URL. StoryMaps has a lot of potential for greater use in educational settings. Having a better understanding of the UE in educational settings from an administrative, educator and student perspective might help to smooth the transition. Kathy Carroll World History Social Studies Vertical Team Leader St. John’s Episcopal School 848 Harter Road Dallas, TX 75218 214-328-9131 www.stjohnsschool.org<http://www.stjohnsschool.org/> www.weavingourstory.org<http://www.weavingourstory.org/> <http://www.stjohnsschool.org/>
... View more
06-22-2020
07:26 AM
|
0
|
6
|
657
|
POST
|
How does one avoid the entire organization's content showing up in the Shared With Me section in StoryMaps? When students publish an individual StoryMap, it shows up in the account of every student & teacher in the school. I've been a part of other organizations where this doesn't happen. I know it must be an admin setting, but I can't seem to find a good tutorial to help me figure out how to understand how the Organization settings side. I'd like to use this platform more widely at my school, but I need to keep the shared content organized.
... View more
06-20-2020
01:32 PM
|
0
|
8
|
753
|
Title | Kudos | Posted |
---|---|---|
2 | 06-22-2020 11:41 AM |
Online Status |
Offline
|
Date Last Visited |
11-11-2020
02:24 AM
|