Hello. I'm a yearbook advisor at a small high school in the mountains of Far West Texas.
I've used Trello in the past to manage my own personal projects, but I've not used it to manage a collaborative effort such as a yearbook.
My situation is that I have 11 students who comprise the main yearbook staff. They meet each day for 2 hours to layout pages in Adobe InDesign, and to study for the InDesign certification exam. During the second hour, our 11 photography students come into the same room to take commercial photography. Their role will be to learn Adobe Photoshop (studying for the Adobe Certified Associate exam and learning Photoshop techniques as well as studying photographic techniques via Lynda.com), and to take on photographic assignments delegated by the main yearbook staff.
I am looking for a way for the students to efficiently and effectively manage the complex process of creating a yearbook, and to make sure that things get done. I also want to make sure that things don't fall through the cracks and that each student is pulling his or her weight.
Anybody out there in a similar situation? I'd appreciate any advice.
Thanks,
Vaughn
Trello has several power-ups that are available, including better management of due dates.
Take a little bit of time and look through the power-ups and there's certainly some there to help. https://trello.com/power-ups
Hi Vaughn,
What a great question! A yearbook is a hugely complicated visual project that is perfect for Trello. Certainly you could use one board for it, but I'd suggest making two boards -- one for project tracking and one for yearbook layout.
As cards are done (e.g., photos or club pages) move them to the layout board where each list is a page (or two page spread). This will give you an easy way to see the "yearbook" as it's coming together and quickly identify gaps/problems. You can also easily rearrange pages by dragging the columns.
I agree with Peter about splitting out the other groups and certification program into their own boards.
I'd also recommend a few additional resources:
I'd love to hear how your project comes along, and please share your learnings back with us!
Sam
@Vaughn Grisham, how is this going for you?
It's going well, thanks. It's just a matter of making sure students actually look at Trello. I project our yearbook's Trello page onto a classroom wall, and it stays up there for the duration of the yearbook class each day.
I was the editor-in-chief of my high school yearbook so I am enjoying visualizing this! We didn't have Trello as it was *mphfygl* years ago. I think our most advanced piece of technology was an Xacto knife.
FYI the reason I saw your post is that thanks to the tags, it popped up in our new Education interest group which launched yesterday. There's a kickoff thread here in case you're interested in connecting with fellow educators.