Sarah Miller Tech

  • Home
  • Webinars
  • Blog
  • Shop
    • Shop Resources
    • eBooks
    • Shop T-Shirts
  • Free
blog image 2.png

Grab my FREE guide!

Stop neglecting social studies with these easy to use strategies! Teach social studies, even when you don’t have time!

DOWNLOAD

Get Started with Boom Cards

September 28, 2020 by Sarah Miller
 
Slide16.png
 

Getting started with a new tool can be a bit intimidating - even with the promise of saving your time and solving all your problems! It can be hard to find the time to learn a new platform or a new type of activity. That’s where I come in! I’m breaking things down and giving you just what you need to know to get started with Boom Cards in your classroom! 

what are boom cards.png

What are Boom Cards?

Boom Cards are digital exercises that are interactive, self-grading, and paperless! Many teachers have shifted their classrooms to be more digital friendly or even fully virtual. Boom Cards are a great tool to gamify learning for students, while providing data for teachers. 

Boom Cards are created by teachers on the Boom Learning website. You can create your own activities for your classroom or you can purchase an activity created by another teacher. Many different platforms sell these Boom Cards. Boom Learning has its own marketplace, but other marketplaces have Boom Cards for sale, such as TeachersPayTeachers or Amped Up Learning. 

play a preview game2.png

Preview Game Map Skills Boom Card Deck

Click the image to play a preview game!


Map Skills for 6th Grade Boom Cards
Economics Boom Card Free Sample

do i need a subscription.png

Do I need a subscription to Boom Learning?

Yes, you will need to create an account with Boom Learning to access Boom Cards. Boom Learning offers a free account and a paid version. So, you do NOT have to pay for a Boom Learning account to use Boom Cards. The free account provides you and your students with unlimited Fast Play. This means students can play the activities, but you won’t receive the data. However, the Fast Play does provide instant feedback to students if the deck is self-grading. 

Boom Learning offers 4 types of accounts: Starter (free), Basic ($15/year), Power ($25/year), and Ultimate ($35/year). To choose the right plan, consider the points listed below. 

  • How much creating will you do?

  • How much data do you need?

If you are not planning on creating more than 5 Boom Card decks or selling any of your Boom Card decks, then the Starter or Basic accounts will be just right. 

If you are planning on creating more than 5 Boom Card decks but NOT selling them, then you might consider choosing the Power package. 

If you do not need data from your students’ performance, you can use the free Starter account. 

However, if you need data from your students’ performance, you’ll choose from the other three accounts by the number of students. The Basic covers 50 students or less. The Power covers 150 students or less, and the Ultimate covers 200 students or less. 

GREAT NEWS!! 

All purchases from other marketplaces (ie. TeachersPayTeachers, Amped Up Learning, etc.) include a free 90-day trial of the premium student performance reports. 

During your 90-day free trial, you can create 3 classes and add up to 150 students. You can assign Boom Cards using Fast Pins (just the game without data), or you can get live and stored performance reports. You can also create 5 Boom Card decks. 

When your free trial ends, you still have access to your Boom Card decks (those purchased and those you created). You will be “downgraded” to the Starter account, so you will be able to have 1 class with up to 5 students. You can still assign any of your Boom Card decks using the Fast Pins (just the game without the data). 


Screen Shot 2020-09-17 at 5.46.56 AM.png
Screen Shot 2020-09-17 at 5.51.12 AM.png

boom and gc.png

Can I use Boom Cards with Google Classroom?

Yes! You can use Boom Cards with many different Learning Management Systems, such as Google Classroom, Schoology, SeeSaw, Dojo, Microsoft Teams, etc.. The process is simple! 

You’ll select the Boom Card deck, and click “Assign”. Then you have 2 options: Fast Play and Hyperplay Link. The Fast Play link does not collect data and its link will expire after 14 days. The Hyperplay Link will collect performance data and will prompt students to login before playing. Choose your link and add to an assignment in Google Classroom or your LMS.

what are points.png

What are “Points”, and how are they used?

Boom Cards are bought and sold by a points system. Points are credits buyers purchase to use in the Boom Learning Marketplace. For example, you can purchase 400 points for $5. Most sellers use a “1 point = $0.01” policy. This means that a $2 Boom Card deck will likely cost buyers 200 points in the Boom Learning Marketplace. 

more questions.png

Have more questions?

Boom Learning has a great Help page! Click the button below to learn more details about getting started with your students, details on the data, how to create your own Boom Cards, and much more! 

https://help.boomlearning.com/en/support/solutions

Use my Referral Link: https://wow.boomlearning.com/author/sarahmillertech?ref=blogBoomCards


 
Logo
 
September 28, 2020 /Sarah Miller
digital activities, distance learning, soc
blog image 2.png

Grab my FREE guide!

Stop neglecting social studies with these easy to use strategies! Teach social studies, even when you don’t have time!

DOWNLOAD

Distance Learning: Creating Geography Activities in Google Slides™️

May 26, 2020 by Sarah Miller
 
vlog 1.png
 

As you know, we’re teaching in different times. Maybe you’re killing it with this whole distance learning thing, or maybe you’re not – either way, today I’m going to share some advice with you on how to create these digital interactive activities. I’ll leave you with a step-by-step guide, so you can print that out – it’ll be like having me right there by your side!

Slide1.png

Drag and Drop activities can be used in a thousand different ways, and they are really great for geography!

Now, one common problem we face is that students will be dragging everything all over the place, not just the circle, and the slide gets all messed up. You have a couple options to solve this problem. 

1: Create all your non-movable pieces in PowerPoint, then use them in Slides.

This is my preference: Create your backgrounds (directions, map, etc. basically anything that needs to stay put) in PowerPoint, export them as images, then set them as a background in Slides. 

2: Create everything in Slides, but your non-movable pieces in Master Slide view.

If you’re like, “who the heck has time for PowerPoint AND Google Slides?!” Then this option is for you! You can create your backgrounds (all the non-movable pieces in the Master Slide view.

NEED A STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE? SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM OF THE POST!

Drag and Drop: Circle (or Shapes)

Drag and Drop: Circle (or Shapes)

Drag and Drop: Labels

Drag and Drop: Labels

Master Slide View in Google Slides

Master Slide View in Google Slides

Fill in the Blank using the “drag and drop” method.

Fill in the Blank using the “drag and drop” method.

Types of Activities you can create with Drag and Drop:

  • Drag the circle to _____. (See image above.)

  • Highlight (insert a semi transparent shape to act as a highlighter)

  • Match the labels to the correct location (see image above).

  • Fill in the Blank

Vlog 1 Icon Headers.1.png

Students definitely enjoy these types of slides much more than the others. However, I have found that I get much better responses if I provide them a template. I think we’ve all been there! Give them a blank slide and they spend a thousand years on their backgrounds and fonts. No more! I have a few ideas that will help you with this, and I go into a deep dive in a different blog post. CLICK HERE TO SEE THAT BLOG POST!

This time for your non-movable background pieces, you are going to have a table instead of a map or text. I highly recommend you either use the Master Slide or create in PPt. Students can get this table so messed up that it’ll practically be beyond repair! You can put whatever you want in the table for students to find. I like to have one slide dedicated to MAP images, and one slide dedicated to REAL images of the places. Students usually enjoy researching real images of new places!

Research: Students insert images to their slides

Research: Students insert images to their slides

Research: Students insert text into their slides

Research: Students insert text into their slides

These activities are perfect for distance learning and for blended classrooms! The possibilities are really endless here! I have created similar activities for science, social studies, and language arts. One drawback, though, with these Google Slides is that grading can be cumbersome because you have to open each student’s slide and scroll around. One tip I have for you is either grade directly in the Google Classroom portal so you can use the arrows to scroll from one student’s work to the next or to use Alice Keeler’s Drive 20 extension. I’ll have it linked below. Basically, you click on her extension and it will open up to 20 files at once. You’ll have to wait for them to load, but then you can switch from one student’s work to the next by the tabs at the top of your browser window. Another tip is to only grade this for completion, and then have students complete a Google Form activity with the same or similar skills and take that for a grade to show mastery


Thumbnails .png

Grab your Step-by-Step Guide

Grab your Guide now

Slide1.png

Africa Geography

Activity in Google Slides™️

Shop Now!

I want to hear from you!

What are YOUR go-to activities for geography? Let me know! Tag or message me on Instagram!

IMG_0170.JPG

Instagram

@SarahMillerTech

May 26, 2020 /Sarah Miller
social studies, geography, distance learning, Google, google classroom

© Sarah Miller Tech ∙ Powered by Squarespace ∙ Privacy Policy ∙ Terms of Use ∙ Disclaimer