Showing posts with label flickr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flickr. Show all posts

Make and Publish Books for Free Using A Cell Phone and Flickr

If your students have access to a cell phone (or any digital device i.e. iPad, laptop) that can take and send/email pictures, they can make and publish their own books quickly and easily using Flickr.  This is a great way to bring student books to life by publishing them digitally in a format that can be easily shared with the world or printed as a book for the classroom or school library.  

With Flickr you get an email that you (or anyone you share the email with) can use to send all your pictures to and Flickr makes it very easy to sort and group pictures using tags or drag and drop features. You can get a link or code to embed any picture or group/sets of pictures into any online space. When emailing your subject line becomes the picture caption and the message/body becomes the description. To follow are the steps to making a book using Flickr, a sample book, and ideas for the classroom.


Steps to making a book with Flickr

  • Have students set up an account on Flickr to be used with school-related projects.
  • Flickr provides an email address to which you (and others) can send pictures.
  • Tell Flickr what tag should be associated with pictures sent to that email by going to http://www.flickr.com/account/uploadbyemail. As students are working on different projects, they will update and change their tag.  For instance if you wanted them to share what they did on their summer vacation, their tag might be "summervacation." If you wanted all kids in your class to share pictures to one album you may use a tag with your name i.e. "Class602SummerVacation."
  • Inform students to take pictures with their camera and to make sure to use a subject (photo title) and message (photo caption).  This becomes the text on the pages of the book.
  • Using a tag allows you to instantly generate a slide show with photo titles and captions.  No work required.
  • Your tag allows Flickr to generate a link to your slide show that can be shared as well as a code that can be embedded into any online space.  
  • Creating a slide show with Flickr saves teachers several hours over alternate methods such as sending individual emails to themselves, downloading every picture, then create a powerpoint where they would upload each picture, and copy/paste the titles and captions.
Here is a book I put together in just a couple minutes with pictures I took at the wedding I attended last weekend.


Ideas for the classroom:
1) Have students illustrate their writing on separate pieces of paper. Include a cover.  Next have them take a picture of each illustration using the text of their writing in the email message.  
2) Have students create a "My neighborhood" book and take pictures of meaningful places in their neighborhood with a subject and message on each picture which will create the content of their book.
3) Have students create an "About Me" book where they will take pictures of that which is important to them with each picture having a Subject (title) and Message (description).
4) Have students take pictures of the steps for a "How To" book with Subject (titles) and Message (steps) to serve as each page of text. 
5) Assign a student each day responsible for capturing the picture of the day. They are responsible for writing the subject (Title) and message (description). What a great scrapbook for the year for students, home-school connection tool, and photos to share with administration.
You have read this article Cell phones in Education / flickr / literacy with the title flickr. You can bookmark this page URL https://benncam.blogspot.com/2011/09/make-and-publish-books-for-free-using.html. Thanks!

Using Flickr to Collect Images Captured on Cell Phones

While using a cell to capture photos is quick, easy, and efficient, frequently the pictures are just stuck on the phone. Flickr provides a free, easy and efficient way to share pictures taken on your cell phone. With Flickr you get an email that you (or anyone you share the email with) can use to send all your pictures to and Flickr makes it very easy to sort and group pictures using tags or drag and drop features. You can get a link or code to embed any picture or group/sets of pictures into any online space. When emailing your subject line becomes the picture caption and the message/body becomes the description.

Ideas for Educators
Using Flickr
1) Create a slide show of all your blackboard lessons and/or instructional charts and tag them by unit of study for students and families to refer to at any time.
2) Take pictures of field trips. Pass your phone around to your students to indicat
e subject (Title) and Message (caption). Afterward your photos instantly become a slideshow memory of the trip that can be referenced by students and shared with the schools community.
3) Make a Facebook of your students. Pass your phone around. Let students take self-portraits that they email to your Flickr account with their name in the subject and something they want to share about themselves in the message. What a great way for you to get to know your students and for them to get to know each other.
4) Take a picture of the day. Assign a student each day responsible for capturing the picture of the day. They are responsible for writing the subject (Title) and message (description). What a great scrapbook for the year for students, home-school connection tool, and photos to share with administration.

Here's How to Get Started:

Flickr

  • Set up an account on Flickr to be used with school-related projects.
  • Flickr gives you an email address to which you (and others) can send pictures.
  • Tell Flickr what tag should be associated with pictures sent to that email by going to http://www.flickr.com/account/uploadbyemail. As you are working in different units you will update and change your tag.  If you were studying poetry with grade 8 in class 403 your tag could be poetry8403. If you were studying fiction it could be fiction8403. 
  • When sending pictures to your Flickr account make sure you use a subject (photo title) and message (photo caption).
  • Using a tag allows you to instantly generate a slide show with photo titles and captions.  No work required.
  • Your tag Flickr will generate a link to your slide show that can be shared as well as a code that can be embedded into any online space.  
  • Creating a slide show with Flickr saves teachers several hours over alternate methods such as sending individual emails to themselves, downloading every picture, then create a powerpoint where they would upload each picture, and copy/paste the titles and captions.
You have read this article Cell phones in Education / flickr with the title flickr. You can bookmark this page URL https://benncam.blogspot.com/2010/10/using-flickr-to-collect-images-captured.html. Thanks!

Share pictures from multiple phones to a shared space

I recently was trying to determine the best way to have a variety of people send pictures to a shared space. I was looking to figure this out for an art lesson where a teacher wanted students in her various classes to take pictures of art in their neighborhoods, answer some reflective questions about each piece and share it all with others. Her idea was to have the students each email her the pictures to her email account then she would take each picture and place it in a power point with the picture name and question answers.

My thought was that this would be too hard and too time consuming so I turned to my personal learning network for advice where I asked:
"How can you take pics on ur phone, then send from phone to a shared space or album?"

Here are their suggestions:

From Twitter:

cwebbtech I have shot pics on my phone and then sent them to my drop.io account. Works very well.
matthewbritton E-mail is the easiest if it has to be universal - but not that many people have e-mail set up on their phones.
jdthomas7 Many ways, here is good article if you use Flickr: http://ow.ly/1CQmC
zenirj app shozu does it pretty well. What r u trying to send to. Most places will set up email for that.
techeducator Evernote! It creates an email address that you can send things to. Then you can make it public. Works with webclips photo etc.
Aaron_Eyler there is a setting in FlikR for an upload-like feature via email.
iSchoolBand I use an app called photobucket. It is free and makes sharing simple.
Serena F smilieface80 Have u tried Clixtr? Goes to shared album. Think u can even check it on the web afterwards. Still have yet to try it tho.

From Facebook
Melanie Sutherland HoltsmanMelanie Sutherland Holtsman - I have a flickr app I do that with
Kristin Hokanson Kristin Hokanson - flickr gives you and email that you can use that's how I do it :)
Jeff Branzburg Jeff Branzburg - Can be done with Google's picasaweb; each account has an email address to send pix to. Not sure about mms access though. Maybe there is a paper book explaining it ... oops ... I mean online electronic text!
Laura Sabbagh Laura Sabbagh - maybe from your phone you can email it to yourself and do it from there?
Lisa Velmer NielsenLisa Velmer Nielsen - Jeff and Kristin, when you email it to flickr or picassa how does it go into a special album? And, Jeff (haha) so old school :-p No one's gonna go out and buy info we can get for free right here :-)
Kristin HokansonKristin Hokanson - In flickr prefs, you can set your settings up so that you can tag all pix that are emailed. Usually I set up the set afterward from the tags OR like we did at PETE & C...embed a slideshow that filters any picture with that tag into it. Helpful?
Jeff BranzburgJeff Branzburg - If I send a pic via email to picasaweb it goes to a public folder named dropbox with a URL.

Here's what I decided to do and how.

I picked two of the suggestions to try. The one that was recommended the most and the one that was fresh on my mind. Here is what I found.

Drop.io
I like Drop.io a lot. In fact I just wrote this about it Drop off audio, video, or text files that can be discussed and commented on with Drop.io so I tried that first. Drop.io is very easy to use for this purpose as you instantly get an email where pictures can be sent. The pictures appear on a page with the email subject line and message body listed as a comment. The pictures can easily be downloaded or embedded. What didn't seem easy to do was group the pictures or make them into a slide show.

Flickr
I decided that Flickr does the trick pretty well. Here's how and why. With Flickr you set up a professional account. Flickr gives you an email address to which students send pictures. You can tell Flickr what tag should be associated with pictures sent to that email and you can change the tag at anytime. So, if you were doing an art project the tag could be the subject and your class grade and room number i.e. art8-403. Therefore without any work all the students photos would be tagged with that code. You would then have the student indicate the name of the art in the "Subject line" and the answer to the questions in the "Message" or "Body" of the email. This appears as the photo title (subject) and description (message/body). The teacher can click on a tag (which she already set up in advance) and run a slideshow without any work on her part. As the slideshow runs it shows the name of the art along with the answers to the questions in the description. If the teacher would like she can also encourage students to comment on one another's photos in the comment box.

This option saves the teacher several hours over the method of having students send individual emails and then requiring the teacher to download every picture then create a powerpoint, upload each picture, and copy/paste the titles and question answer. This really requires no work on the part of the teacher once her account is set up. Students just email the picture to her Flickr email with a subject and answer to the question and wah-la. It's showtime! What's more you get a url so the slideshow can be embedded into any online space and shared with the world.
You have read this article Cell phones in Education / flickr with the title flickr. You can bookmark this page URL https://benncam.blogspot.com/2010/04/share-pictures-from-multiple-phones-to.html. Thanks!