Volume 2, Number 3
November, 2001
Content Guide:
Elementary
School
Middle School
High School
General
Technology Applied
Into the Classroom
STLP News
Through a Student's Eyes
The Web
Red-Hot Links
Literacy On Line
Tech Help
Tips from the Pros
Training Schedule at the Ambrose Lab
Staff
profiles
Miscellaneous
"The network is down . . . "
(humor)
The TIPS Archives

Editor: Jeffrey L.
Jones,
District TRT jjones@fayette.k12.ky.us
| This
website is intended for the instructional use of students and staff of
Fayette County Public Schools |
| |


Tips from the Ambrose Office Expert
|
Here's some tips for use with Outlook, the email client:
1. Forward a contact to someone else:
Open
contacts folder, then right click on the contact you wish to send, then
click forward. A new email message will appear along with the
contact as an attachment. Enter the email address to the person you
wish to forward this to, then click send.
2. Dragging Addresses:
When
composing or replying to an email message in Outlook, you can easily
rearrange the names receiving the message by dragging their email
addresses between the TO:, CC:, and BCC: address fields. Just select
the address and drag. If you have errant semicolons in these three
fields, you can remove them by pressing ALT+K.
3. Recalling Messages:
Have
you ever wanted to get a message back that you have already sent?
A. Make your Folder List visible.
B. Click Sent Items.
C. Open the Message you wish to recall.
D. From the menu choose Actions, then Recall this
message.
E. To recall this message, click Delete unread
copies of this message, then press OK.
F. To be notified of the success or
failure, Check 'Tell me if recall succeeds or fails...'
G. Click OK
|
Submitted by Mark
DiMascio |
MultiMedia
Spanning PowerPoint
Slides With Your Music
Do you have musical
excerpts or narration that you wish could run continuously behind several
PowerPoint slides, but it's not on CD? Place the music on the first slide,
then go to "Slide Show/Custom Animation...". There, select your
music file, and click on the "Multimedia" tab. You can choose to
stop the sound file after the current slide, or any number of slides after
that. This selection is only available if you click the "Continue
slide show" option. Additional information available from Sound
in your PowerPoint.
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Submitted by Jeffrey L. Jones |
|
Using the Internet
Copying and
Pasting from the Web
When students copy
and paste from web pages, mixed in with the
text they really wanted, they often get garbage such as banner ads, text in
weird tables with merged cells, horrible graphics that are split into
several pieces, etc. To copy/paste just the text from a web page:
1. In Internet Explorer, select the text you want or press
<Ctrl>
+ "A" to select the entire page.
2. Press <Ctrl? + "C" to copy.
3. Switch to Word, then select "Edit/Paste Special."
4. Double-click "Unformatted Text." Word will paste
all text in the default font, no formatting, no graphics.
|
Submitted by Mike Johnson |
| Hardware Solutions
Displaying
your computer in the classroom
Here's a list of
methods by which you can display computer content to your class, ranked by
cost:
| Hardware |
Cost |
Advantages |
Disadvantages |
Possible
Funding Source |
| Computer Screen |
Free |
(Did I mention it's free?!) |
Very small - only appropriate when a
few students will be observing |
None required |
| Scan Converter with your existing TV |
$100 or less, plus your TV |
Cheap, can be left hooked up all the
time |
Display is small, not high quality,
computer and TV should ideally be near each other |
Department/School/PTA/KETS |
| Digital TV |
$600 or more, depending on size |
Roll in, roll out, can be placed near
teacher workstation |
Too expensive to purchase for all
teachers |
School/PTA/KETS |
| Digital Multimedia Projector |
$2000 or more |
Very large display, very good quality |
So expensive only a few can be
purchased by a school, must be positioned in room to project to
screen, generally requires an additional computer. |
KETS |
|
Submitted by Jeffrey L. Jones |
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