Guest Post: Battle of the TL;DR Extensions
A great comparison of TL;DR Chrome extensions from Justin Cowen at Dickinson-Iron Intermediate School District (in the UP!) - check it out!
If
you have never heard the term TL;DR before, it stands for "too long;
didn't read." It is a common phrase you can find on message posts around
the internet but now it can also be used in your web browser. There are
a couple of different Chrome Extensions that can provide your learners
with the ability to TL;DR a website. These extensions have several
benefits to help those in your classroom and assist those that need a
little extra assistance. TL;DR extensions can help students judge a
website quickly while researching to see if it contains information they
need. The extensions can also remove districting images from the text
and help keep the learners on task. Lastly, TL;DR extensions can also
help the struggling reader in your classrooms. Instead of being
overwhelmed by giant articles, a student with reading disabilities can
be presented with a summary of the text.
There are two awesome Chrome Extensions that you and your students can use to bring TL;DR into your learning environment. In the video below you can see the comparison of different TL;DR Chrome extensions, tlda and TLDR:. Give it a watch and then leave a comment with which one you prefer best!
There are two awesome Chrome Extensions that you and your students can use to bring TL;DR into your learning environment. In the video below you can see the comparison of different TL;DR Chrome extensions, tlda and TLDR:. Give it a watch and then leave a comment with which one you prefer best!