Episode 6: Homeschooling with Google Forms Google Forms is great for moms (and dads) to use it to create self-graded quizzes and for surveys. You could use it to collect responses to questions like “what field trip your homeschool group might most want to go on”, and “which date works best”. But it is even […]


The post Homeschooling with Google Forms appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.

Episode 6: Homeschooling with Google Forms

Google Forms is great for moms (and dads) to use it to create self-graded quizzes and for surveys. You could use it to collect responses to questions like “what field trip your homeschool group might most want to go on”, and “which date works best”.



But it is even more useful for your children to use.


It is easy to figure out how to use Google Forms, but if you would rather your children learn it as part of a course, FundaFunda Academy (the sponsors of this podcast) offers 2 classes that include a module on Google Forms.


They have a 4 module unit study web-based unit study on all the Google drive apps as well as a full year (1 credit) Computer Applications class, both which include a module on Google Forms.


How your children can use Google Forms



Google Forms are great for students to use for research projects. They allow students to learn how to

design good questions without bias
do data collection and analysis
validate the data people enter
decide on the population sample they will send it to

Although you want your high school students to be able to do all these things, you can start introducing your younger children to Google Forms and just use some of the features. Sit with your elementary age children and together create a simple survey to send to family and friends. This will help them learn what to do and as a result, they will be ready to do it on their own by high school.


Some of the features of Google Forms they should learn to use

Design the form – There are some basic selections of colors, fonts etc
Question type – What type of question will be most appropriate (multiple choice, checkbox, sliding scales, choose from a list, text or grid)
Validation – Must the field be required? Is there a range that respondents should be limited to? A specific format of the answer should take?
Branching dependent on previous answers – Google Forms allows one to specify different paths dependent on what has already been entered
Summary of response – this provides all the answers to each question including graphs where appropriate
Export to Google Sheets (click on green button on the response page) – In Google Sheets they can now manipulate the data to obtain statistics, more graphs and charts etc.

Be sure to incorporate Google Forms into your homeschool so that your children learn how to conduct online surveys. Help them send it out to an appropriate sample of people. And teach them how to interpret and manipulate the data they collect.


 

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The post Homeschooling with Google Forms appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.