How to create classroom templates in Google Docs and Slides

How to create classroom templates in Google Docs and Slides

Great templates can drive great classroom learning. Learn step-by-step how to make your own with Google Docs and Slides.

When I find a good template online, it makes me want to jump for joy. Templates save us time. They give us ideas and get us started. And when we find a good one, students benefit.

Do you ever wish you could create your own templates? When you do …

It may not be as hard — or as time-consuming — as you think.

Plus, you can use Google tools that you’re already familiar with to create them.

With a good template, you can create …

Here’s a step-by-step tutorial to get you started creating your own templates to assign to students!

1. Decide what you want on your template.

Sketch it out on a sheet of paper. Make a bulleted list. For many people, identifying their goals and the basics first makes things easier. If you can imagine your template in your mind, you can skip this step.

2. Choose an app to create your template.

Here’s why Google Slides reigns for most templates:

If you really, really need to use Google Docs, create your document and jump down to STEP 7 below.

3. Resize your slides. (Optional)

Google Slides defaults to a 16:9 ratio for its slides — the standard for most LCD projectors.

But wait — your students likely won’t be projecting your template to a projector, right?

In that case, let’s make the page whatever size we want! Some things to consider:

To change the dimensions of your slides in Google Slides, go to File > Page setup.

Resize slides

4. Design the parts that students won’t change.

The title. The instructions. Images. An outline/frame around where student responses will go.

Anything that students won’t write on and manipulate. That’s where we start.

Whether you’re doing a one-page template or a multi-page template, design everything students won’t change first.

TIP: If you like the idea above of creating an outline/frame around what students will type or add …

Add a shape

Use shapes to show students where to put items or where to write.

5. Lock everything into the background.

Once you’ve created everything your students won’t change, it’s time to make it all immovable. Locking everything into the background will prevent students from moving things — accidentally or intentionally!

This saves your slide as an image file. Think about it. You can’t move anything around on a single image file! This is what locks it into place.

Now, you need to insert this image of your slide as the slide background. Here’s how I suggest doing it …

Lock the background

If you have multiple pages, you can do this same process for each slide in your template. (Note: When you download slides as images, it will continue to save with the same filename but with a number. Keep an eye on how it generates new file names and you’ll figure out which one is which.)

Here’s an example of a page where I locked items in place as the background image.