I am frequently asked by colleagues and readers, "can you help me set up a blog, a wiki, or whatever?" I am not paraphrasing that question, I'm really asked to help set up a "whatever." The reason the "whatever" gets thrown in there is because teachers and people in general have heard the terms blog, wiki, website but they're not sure of the differences between them. My quick explanation of the differences is generally this; websites are good for providing a static resource of information, blogs are good for frequent updates and communication, and a wiki is great for collaborating on the creation of a reference site. I realize this is a very simplistic explanation, but many times that's all that people need to know when creating their first online presence.
Here are eight places that teachers can build and host a website for free:
Yola (formerly Synthasite) is the tool that I am currently using to build websites for my department and other departments in my high school. As I wrote in my original review of Yola an outstanding aspect of Yola is that not only is your website free, it is advertising free (unless you want advertising), and remains free regardless of how much content you add to it. This is a good thing if you plan to post a lot of audio or video content as some website builders and hosts begin to charge once you reach a certain volume content. Yola provides good tutorials and forums for first time users. I also learned first-hand that their responses to help requests are very quick.
Webs (formerly Free Webs) is another service that I have first-hand experience with in a school setting because my girlfriend (a teacher in another school district) uses it for her classes. Webs has all of the characteristics that you would expect to find in a free website platform. Websites built using Webs can include videos, calendars, polls, and a wide variety of third party widgets. Webs offers a wide variety templates and layouts to select from. For people with a higher level of comfort with technology, Webs might be a little too basic for your needs. In that case you may want to consider Snap Pages.
Snap Pages provides a free service as well as a premium service for creating your custom website. The free service has more than enough features for a teacher to set up and maintain a class website. The editing and customizing options of Snap Pages allow users to create pages that are little more clean and professional looking than some of the other companies in this market. The image resizing tool reminds me of the one found in Apple's Keynote presentation software. In fact, TechCrunch said that it's “a basic webpage designer that Apple should envy...”
Web Node is a simple way to build a website. The easy to use, drag and drop, interface makes it easy to change the look and feel of your website. For two reasons Web Node is a good tool for students to use to present and share their work with a wider audience. First, Web Node does not put any advertsing on your website. And second, the user interface is intuitive enough for most students to use on their own.
Sauropol, like other free website building and hosting platforms, is a free method for teachers to share information about their courses with parents and students. One feature that Sauropol offers that some similar services do not offer is the ability to use more than one template within your website. In other words, you're not locked into using one format for all of your content.
Weebly was the first website building tool that I ever tried. Until today, I hadn't been back to Weebly in months, but it's still just as intuitive as ever. Customizing the look, feel, and components of your Weebly website is easily done through a drag and drop editor. All of the pages on your site are automatically indexed for ease of visitor navigation. I know from first hand experience that Weebly responds quickly to emails from users.
Hipero is the latest website building tool that I have tried. After reading that Larry Ferlazzo added it to his list of the best ways to create a website, I had to try it. What impressed me most about Hipero is the selection of templates available to users. If you can't find a template you like in Hipero's collection of more than 200, you are just too picky. Like Larry said in his post about Hipero, it claims to be the easiest website builder, but I'm not sure if I agree. While Hipero is feature-rich I can't say that it is the most intuitive website builder I've used, that honor still goes to Webs and Weebly.
Last, but not least is Google Sites. Probably the biggest selling point for Google Sites is that you can integrate it with your Google account. You can also establish your Google Site as a collaborative work space. The option to set up your Google Site as a collaborative effort is nice if you teach as part of team and want all members to be able to update the site as needed.
All of these services offer some type of option for registering and hosting your site on a custom domain. What that allows you to do is drop the website builder's domain from the end of your url. For example, if I build a site using Snap Pages, in the free version my website's url will end with .snappages.com. This may not matter to you, but to some people it does.
Finally, all of the options in this list do essentially the same task, provide you with a website of your own. Some may be more intuitive to you than others. I tried them all before deciding on one for the department websites that I'm currently building for use next fall.
Friday, May 15, 2009
8 Ways to Build Websites (Not Blogs) for Free
Posted by
Mr. Byrne
at
10:48 AM
Labels: Teaching With Technology, Technology Integration, Website Builders, Website Creation
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20 comments:
Microsoft has a Website building service that you should consider for this list as well. It is called Office Live Small Business and it provides people the means to register a domain, build a website, and host the domain on their servers. It is free for the first year and only $15/year after that to keep your site hosted on their servers. You can choose your own .com (a real .com, not a sub-domain) and create e-mail aliases ending with @(your website's name).com.
Cheers,
Jeff
MSFT Office Live Outreach
I chose Google apps for all of the reasons that you mentioned with Google sites. It only costs $10 per year to have my own domain.
It also gave access to all of Google's other products using that domain. e-mail, calendar, documents, etc.
You can then access all of that stuff through the domain...
Like now my blog is blog.harmlessonline.net and my site is www.harmlessonline.net and then I created separate sites for my students and my fellow teachers...
students.harmlessonline.net and teachers.harmlessonline.net
It is really my favorite of the ones that I have seen.
By the way...
I read all of the time, keep up the good work!
The generous and, may we say, clearly articulated info in your post is exactly what this morning we woke up hoping to discover.
THANKS!
TT
I just wanted to add that sites like www.wordpress.com still allow you to have static pages in addition to a linear blog page. They also offer 3 GB of free online storage space (which for word.doc and pdfs is a ton!).
I use this because I like have the "filing cabinet" and instant updates available on just one site. I even plan to use this service for my webquest activities next year because if you've uploaded the item once, you can link it on ANY of your wordpress sites.
Just thought I would share what's working for me, personally. Thank you for this tremendous list of resources!!!
Candace
Great Post!
I would recommend Kompozer if you want to make your own website free. It is very user friendly.
Irfanview is also free & is great for headers, resizing images etc
I need to build another website and leave the one I share with another teacher on Google pages. I am not super savvy but want to create something that looks better but also has room to grow as I learn at the right price (free or few $$) . Snap pages looks beautiful but I like Mr. Follis's comment about having "file cabinents". I also don't want to lose all my work this time. Any thoughts - Thanks.
I need to create another website since I have to leave the one I share with another teacher. We will not be teaching together next year. I did a google site but it never looked as nice as I would of liked. I am not super tech savvy but Mrs. Follis's cabinent comment resonated with me. I am also considering buying a domain name. Snap pages looks good but I am really feel a bit overhwlemed by the whole process. Any thoughts - I need to start building a little at a time so I can not be overwhelmed in a new grade at the beginning of next year.
Anonymous,
All of the sites mentioned in the list will allow you to have "filing cabinet" type of pages. If you haven't left the website you collaborate on yet, you should be able to export a copy of the information if you would like to re-use it in the future.
Does anyone know if any of these sites archive what a user posted? For example, I want to see only what John Smith had commented on the discussion or blog posting. I have a teacher who likes wikispaces but wants that archived data. He doesn't want students editing the pages, just students adding to the discussion tab. Does anyone know of a site?
Thanks!
Heather
Your readers can also try Squidoo at http://www.squidoo.com/. There are ads but classes can choose a charity for ad revenue to be sent to. It's drag and drop modules make it very easy to use.
i like ur website. thanks for this comment posting...
more templates easy to download
Webnode keeps asking me to login whenever I click on design website. I am so far not able to design anything.
Thanks for this great information.
I've been using webs.com for a while, but this year, when I've been trying to make it a focal area of the classroom experience, it has been crashing quite frequently (so far it has functioned only 5 of the 12 days we've been in school). It has all of the functions I want in my edusite (blog, forum, calendar), but the lack of connection is becoming too much to bear. Thanks for the tips on the other sites. I'll be investigating those this weekend.
I don't know how you did it, but you managed to well. Thanks for the help.
Ibrahim
I just wanted to let you all know that I, like most of you, have been trying numerous site editors. I've been doing it over the past three years, and anything so far has been any better than WebStarts. It has been so easy to use and work with, templates are the coolest and most professional-looking I have seen before, well it has many great features. I'm very happy with it.
To Elaine, I too love Irfanview, it is a great tool.
Thanks for the post, it has been really helpful.
I currently have a large website called www.123techs4me.com it is hosted through School World. I want to move it to another website builder or blogger. It has over 300,000 viewers and I want to be able to use a product that allows me to paste in my html code so that I don't have to re-create the whole thing from scratch. I have bought a domain name called www.thetechalope.com I want to be able to use my domain name, add google adsence, have a search bar, do you have any suggestions on what would be best? Thanks for your help...your blog is fantastic!!!
These are great suggestions! I have a question though, and have yet to find something that will allow me to do everything I want it to. Maybe you can suggest something I haven't heard of.
I would like to have these things: individual student log ins with the ability to track who signed in and when and what they posted, ulitmate editor control meaning I as the site admin can delete or change anything but students cannot edit my or each other's work, static pages as well as a the ability to include more wiki-like pages where students CAN edit each other's work. Is there anything out there, or a group of things that will work together, that will allow all this?
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