Classroom Teacher

How to e-mail MarkBook student reports to improve parent-teacher communication

One of the hardest things to do well as a teacher is to keep parents/guardians regularly informed about how their child is doing.

Many families have a computer at home, and many parents/guardians use e-mail on a regular basis.This means that the tech savvy teacher can use classroom technology to send home electronic updates and progress reports about how the child is doing in their course.

If you keep track of student marks using paper and pencil, or spreadsheet like Microsoft Excel, you should seriously consider using MarkBook software. MarkBook is great because you can print up pretty student reports like this one:

Here are two ways to send electronic copies of student marks to the your parents. (In my next post, I’ll show you an even better way to send MarkBook student reports to parents using Google Docs/Google drive.)

This post was dictated using Dragon NaturallySpeaking with the voice recognition software getting 98.3% of the words correct.

How to email MarkBook Student Reports

Teachers, please think carefully about student privacy before e-mailing markbooks student reports to parents. If you’re not very tech savvy, accidentally clicking the wrong button might send the wrong information to the wrong person.

The disclaimer on the MarkBook e-mail page probably says it best:

“users are solely responsible for the accuracy, subject matter and content of e-mail and must ensure that such communication complies in all respects with the policies of their Board or District.”

Classroom Organization using Student Alpha Numbers

To make classroom organization a little simpler, I’ve assigned each student a class number based on their alphabetical order.

1. e-mail MarkBook student reports directly from MarkBook software

There is a way to e-mail progress reports to parents directly from the MarkBook software, but I stopped using it.

Getting my e-mail address to work in the first place was a big headache because my school e-mail address doesn’t allow SMTP e-mail access and using a Gmail account at school didn’t always work.

(The downside of using a school Google Gmail account instead of your regular work e-mail account is that parents sometimes simply reply to your e-mail and if you don’t regularly monitor your second e-mail account, you might miss some important parent responses.)

Once I got MarkBook to send out my e-mails, it turned out that sometimes the formatting in the tables in the e-mails was messed up. MarkBook sends out HTML e-mail messages and not JPEGs or PDFs of the printed progress report. So sometimes, the columns were so skinny that parents couldn’t really read the electronic MarkBook student report anyway.

2. E-mail MarkBook student reports using Microsoft outlook and Microsoft OneNote

I used to use Microsoft OneNote a lot more than I do right now.

I here’s how used to e-mail home MarkBook student reports to parents. (In retrospect, this method works, but it takes a long time. In my next post, I’ll show you how to use the free Bullzip PDF printer and Google Docs or Google Drive to quickly send home student work or student reports.)

  1. In MarkBook, print student reports directly to Microsoft OneNote. (Microsoft OneNote 2010 has a “send to OneNote” printer driver so that you can print directly to OneNote.) This creates a note with your class set of MarkBook student reports as JPEGs.
  2. In Microsoft OneNote, I create a new section for my class and I create a new page for each student. Each page contains the student alpha number and the first name as the title. (To speed things up, I keep this master list of blank student pages in a separate area and I simply duplicate the pages when I need to e-mail out a new batch of student reports of student work.)
  3. In Microsoft OneNote, I open the note with my class set of MarkBook student reports, and one by one, I cut and paste the report JPEG files into the appropriate student page.Here are some other tips:
    1. Life is a lot easier if you use keyboard shortcuts (CTRL-X, CTRL-V)
    2. Use CTRL-ALT-SHIFT plus and minu signs to zoom in and out of Microsoft OneNote so you can see the entire student report JPEG at once.
    3. Since I use a student alpha number in the MarkBook student report as well as in the page titles in Microsoft OneNote, it’s easy to check to make sure I’ve copied the correct student file.
    4. Eventually, this Microsoft OneNote page gets e-mailed to the parents. If you have several things that you want to e-mail parents (i.e. MarkBook student report, a scanned essay, a scanned rubric, etc,) it’s easier to put all of the scanned images into a single OneNote page, then into a separate page for each document.
  4. In Microsoft OneNote, I select the student page and then in the home ribbon, I click on the e-mail page button to automatically copy the note into a new Microsoft Outlook e-mail document.
    1. You may want to modify the footer, otherwise you will get “created with Microsoft OneNote 2010. One place for all your notes and information”at the bottom of each e-mail. You can edit the signature in Microsoft OneNote by going to File > Options > Advanced. For example, you could put something like, “For more information, visit our class website at.”
    2. The title of your Microsoft OneNote page becomes the subject of your e-mail.
    3. I would copy and paste a general introduction into the start of each e-mail that explained what the e-mail was about.
  5. In Microsoft Outlook, add the parent e-mail addresses and then send the e-mail.
    1. Make sure the e-mail get sent from the correct address, otherwise your parents (and indirectly your students who help their parents with computer problems) may find out what your personal e-mail address is. (I only use Microsoft Outlook for my school Google apps e-mail account, so this isn’t an issue.)
    2. Consider setting up your address book so that the student name (with their student class alpha number) is included in the parents display name. That way, you know at a glance if you have the correct e-mail addresses for a particular student.
    3. If your school has Google apps for education set up and students have their own school Gmail account, you might consider including them in your markbooks student report e-mails so they have an electronic copy as well. (That way, if they lose their markbooks student report, they can print out another copy, instead of asking you to print out another copy.)
    4. Double check the e-mail to make sure you are sending the correct parents the correct MarkBook student report. This is a huge privacy issue. Consider setting up Microsoft Outlook so that it does not send e-mails automatically when you click the send button. If you’ve ever sent an e-mail and wished that you could undo, you can set up Microsoft Outlook so that when you click the send button, it actually waits 5 min., 10 min., an hour, etc. before actually sending the e-mail. This gives you a chance to fix your mistake before get sent to. Austin has a great tutorial on how to delay delivery of e-mail using Microsoft Outlook.

Next time, I’ll show you how you can use shared folders between parents, teachers, and students using Google Docs (Google drive) to quickly share markbooks student reports with parents.

This post was DICTATED using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 Premium Wireless. What is Dragon NaturallySpeaking?

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