Sharing Ideas with Freshmen Students via @postachio @evernote #PostachioEd
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In response to my education-focused series—featuring over 13 articles—on the use of Evernote and Postach.io, Professor Michael Flowers writes the following:
The posting describing this process is very helpful to me. I am used to snapping the class whiteboard, emailing the snapshots to myself, and then adding them to a section of my course website-a process that delays availability for students…and sometimes leads to forgetting (or getting behind on) that final “get it on the web” step. Going the route of Postach.io/Evernote will be so much quicker. Also, I will be teaching two sections of a freshman course and the immediate posting process will help me avoid confusing work from the two classes.
I am really pleased that you are putting so much energy into the education-uses-of-Postach.io/Evernote project. You efforts will benefit many (and give Postach.io a leg up as well). Although I am a long time Mac user, my wife and I have had cell phones for only two years (we tried holding out…not for any particularly good reasons since I am otherwise a “techie”) and so I am still getting used to all the things my iPhone is capable of. Thus I owe you a “thank you”.
Consider that Michael is able to create a Postach.io blog for each of his courses. Each Postach.io blog will connect to a separate Evernote notebook (also one per class). What a great digital archive of content Michael and his students will have.
Some additional ideas come to mind:
- Michael can invite his students to email their content into the notebook simply by giving out his “top-secret” Evernote email address (check your Evernote Account settings), then coaching students on putting the @notebookname in the Subject line of the email. This will deposit their work in the appropriate notebook.
- He can write up an outline of his course, placing all materials in the Evernote notebook then this will be accessible for his classes.
- He can create a “page” (that’s a tag he can add per Evernote note in a notebook that is being shared with Postach.io) that is a “table of contents” that features links to all other entries.
- He can activate Disqus commenting to allow students to share their reflections:

What else could Michael do?
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Everything posted on Miguel Guhlin’s blogs/wikis are his personal opinion and do not necessarily represent the views of his employer(s) or its clients. Read Full Disclosure
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