Title: Outlook Calendar Training
1Outlook Calendar Training
- Stefanie SimsITSCrockett MS
2TEKS Alignment
- Teachers can use an online calendar. Students
and parents can access it for items such as
reading assignments, home work assignments, and
general information about your classroom. - One way an online calendar can be used to support
TEKS in a Reading classroom is to post a daily
sponge warm up activity that students can
respond to in writing. - 6.11.B Reading/literary response. The student
expresses and supports responses to various types
of texts. The student is expected to interpret
text ideas through such varied means as journal
writing, discussion, enactment, and media (4-8).
3Blackboard Calendar
- Instructors blackboard course?Control
Panel?Course Calendar?Add Event - When students login to Blackboard, the date
event will appear on their welcome screen or they
can go to Instructors blackboard course?Course
Tools?Calendar
4www.localendar.com
- Instructor must create an account
- Can be imported into a web page
- Post class events, home work, etc.
5www.google.com/calendar
- Requires account
- You can invite others to view or post as public
6What Microsoft says about using your Outlook
Calendar as a teacher
- The following slides are from Microsoft Office
Online?Home?Products?Outlook?Outlook 2003 Help
and How to?Outlook for your job?Education - http//office.microsoft.com/en-us/outlook/HA012073
141033.aspx
7Manage your class calendar with OutlookApplies
to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003
- As a teacher, you have many demands on your
time from school administrators, colleagues,
parents, and students, not to mention your own
personal life. Taking the time to organize your
calendar and plan can help alleviate the stress
of juggling and prioritizing daily tasks while
meeting the needs of all involved. - One of the best tools to help manage your
schedule is the Calendar in Microsoft Office
Outlook 2003. Spending an hour or two to organize
your Outlook Calendar is time well spent. If done
properly, an organized Calendar can save you a
lot of time throughout the year.
8Organize events by color
- One simple way to organize your Calendar is to
categorize entries by color. - To begin, think about how you spend a typical
workday, and divide it into categories. Assign
each category a color and corresponding label in
your Outlook Calendar. Labels might include
Parent Meeting, Education Conference, School
Holiday, Workshop, as well as one label for each
subject you teach. As all teachers know, a good
amount of time is spent in staff meetings or
district committee meetings Calendar items for
these should each have their own color as well.
Also, be sure to choose a color for items related
to personal business. - By using the Outlook Calendar view add-in, you
can filter your Calendar so that it displays
items that are related only to one or more color
labels. This is particularly helpful when you're
trying to view all items related to one subject
you teach, for example, or to see a general
overview of your school year.
9Set up recurring events
- Next, think about the events, meetings, or
appointments that recur regularly. For example,
you may have a staff meeting on the first
Wednesday of each month. By making the staff
meeting recurring in your Calendar, you can
schedule all of your staff meetings for the
entire year with one entry. - Finally, find all days that are different from
the regular workday, such as school holidays.
Because you've already entered some recurring
events, if they happen to fall on a holiday,
you'll want to go in the Calendar and delete the
item from that date. Be sure to delete the single
occurrence and not the entire series of events.
10Plan for day-long events
- It's best to enter school holidays, field trips,
and teacher workshop days as All Day Events in
your Outlook Calendar. You can also use this
option to flag a day (such as a conference), and
then as the date approaches, you can enter more
specific information. - An All Day Event displays a banner at the top of
the given date while still permitting you to
enter additional appointments or meetings for
that day. For example, you may know in September
that your class has a field trip to a museum on
May 20. You can enter the field trip as an All
Day Event for May 20 to flag the day. As more
information is available, you can enter
information such as when you expect the bus to
arrive, when the tour begins, when the students
will eat lunch, and when the bus returns to
school.
11Use your Calendar as a unit plan or lesson plan
book
- At the beginning of the year, it may seem like
you have all the time in the world to get through
the intended curriculum for your subject.
However, as you get closer to the end, you might
find that you're running out of time. Using the
Calendar to schedule your units and lessons will
give you milestones, so you won't run out of time
when June arrives.
12Add unit overviews to your Calendar
- First, think about the units of study that you
need to cover during the year. If this seems like
a daunting task, consider mapping out one quarter
at a time. Let's say you have six units for the
first quarter in Science and five units for the
first quarter in Math. Determine how long each of
these units will take. If you're using a
textbook, this information is often included in
the teacher's guide. - To place this information in your Calendar, use
the All Day Event feature, and be sure to assign
each unit a unique color and label. This will
create a banner above the start date on your
Calendar for each unit and show you when the
previous unit must end. - To view on your Calendar only the units you'll be
working on at any given time and no other
appointments, meetings, etc. add a Unit Plan
view, again by using the Outlook Calendar View
add-in. Using the add-in, identify the units that
you want to see. This will provide you with a
filtered view of your Calendar that shows how all
units overlap especially helpful if you do
integrated teaching across subject matters. Also,
consider providing copies of this unit plan
overview to your students to help them plan their
time as well.
13Assign tasks to units
- If there are tasks necessary to a particular
unit such as scheduling the library for class
research time or making copies use Tasks in
Outlook to list and schedule them. - If, for example, you take your students to the
computer lab during a particular unit, add
"Reserve computer lab" to your TaskPad, give
yourself a due date, and assign a reminder. If
your school has its library, computer lab, or
other rooms set up in Outlook as resources, you
can
14Add daily lessons to your Calendar
- Adding lessons to each day in your Calendar may
seem like an extraordinary measure. However, it
will be very useful in creating substitute plans,
reminding absent students what they missed, and
serving as a reminder for the next school year.
Essentially, your Calendar can replace your
lesson plan book. To make the task of adding
lessons to your Calendar more manageable,
consider breaking it down by month, by unit, or
by quarter. When adding lessons to your Calendar,
remember to assign each lesson item a color and
label so that you may filter your Calendar as
necessary otherwise, your Calendar will look
crowded.
15Schedule or accept invitations to district-wide
events
- If everyone in your district is using Outlook for
their scheduling needs, your Calendar becomes
even more useful. Schools and districts can use
Outlook to schedule meetings and district-wide
events, as well as to reserve the required
facilities. If, for example, you're trying to
schedule a meeting among all of the eighth-grade
science teachers in the district, you can use
Outlook to find out what is the available time
that everyone has in common. - If you receive a meeting request, you can opt to
accept or decline the request. If you accept the
request, the meeting is automatically added to
your Calendar. (Be sure to assign the appropriate
color and label after the meeting is in your
Calendar.)
16Get started now, and save time later
- The task may seem daunting at first, but
maintaining your Calendar in Outlook can save you
a lot of time in the future. Take the time to set
it up at the beginning of the school year. Stay
committed throughout the year to adding,
deleting, and moving items. And always be sure to
assign items a color and label so that you can
easily filter views and get the most out of your
Calendar.
17Calendar Entries
18View a way to display items in an Outlook
Calendar
View
Display
19Appointment Section of your Calendar
Date Navigator
20Appointment Form Text Boxes
Text Box
Information to Enter
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22Edit Labels/Color Code Calendar
Click on Icon?Edit Labels?Type in Titles of your
Choice or keep standard labels
23Category
- A category is a keyword or phrase that you can
assign to related items so that you can easily
track the items in View?Arrange by Category
Note to get back to calendar view View?Arrange
by?Current View?Day/ Week/Month
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25The Meeting Form
- The meeting form is used to invite participants
to a meeting. It consists of three tabs - The Appointment Tab allows you to enter a
subject, a location for the meeting, start and
end time, and any other information regarding the
meeting - The Scheduling Tab allows you to coordinate the
meeting to fit the schedules of attendees - The Tracking Tab displays the meeting
participants and their replies. This sections is
not visible until the Meeting form is sent to the
participants
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27- To track meeting responses
- Display the Calendar
- Display the date on which the meeting is
scheduled. - Double Click the meeting to open it
- Select the Tracking tab.
- 5. Click the Close button to close the meeting
form.
28How to Print the Calendar
- With the Calendar open, on the Standard toolbar,
click the Print button to display the Print
dialog box. - From the Print Style list box, select a Calendar
style. - In the Print Range box, specify the start date
and end date. - If necessary, select other print options.
- If desired, click Preview to display Print
Preview - If necessary, click Print to return to the Print
dialog box. - Click OK to print the Calendar.
29Calendar Options
- Calendar Work Week Including workdays, the first
day of the week and year, as well as work start
and end times. - Calendar Options for changing calendar display
and color options and for adding Holidays. - Advanced Options, that include using an alternate
calendar, setting free/busy options, scheduling
resources, and altering and adding time zone
information.
30Tools?Options?Calendar Options
31Share Calendars
32Permission Level Roles
33Anything else?
- If we have time, we can look at TASKS and
Contacts and Public Folders - Is there anything else that you would like to
learn?