12 Tech Tasks To End the School Year

I posted this a few years ago, skipped the topic with all the craziness of the pandemic, and am updating it this year in articles about how to wrap up your school year.:

Wrapping up your school technology for the summer is as complicated as setting it up in September. There are endless backups, shares, cleanings, changed settings, and vacation messages that — if not done right — can mean big problems when you return from summer vacation. If you have a school device, a lot of the shutdown steps will be done by the IT folks as they backup, clean, reformat, and maybe re-image your device. If you have a personal device assigned by the school but yours to take home, the steps may be more numerous but really, not more complicated.

Here’s a list. Skip those that don’t apply to you and complete the rest. I won’t take time in this article (I’m over 800 words right now) for a how-to on each activity so if you don’t know how to complete one, check with your IT folks or Google it:

Make sure your firewall and antivirus programs are working.

Many computers come with a built-in one to keep viruses and malware out that slow your computer. Sometimes, they seem to turn off by themselves (I have no idea why). Check to be sure yours is active. If you have a Chromebook or an iPad, don’t even worry about this.

Clean out your documents.

Sort through the documents you collected this year and get rid of those you don’t need anymore. It’s intimidating, like a file cabinet that hasn’t been opened in months –- or years — and is covered with spider webs. If you don’t do this regularly, the computer must finger through these unused files every time you search. If you hate throwing anything away, create an ‘Old’ folder, toss them all in it, and save that to a flash drive or in the cloud.

Back up your files.

Whether you have a school or personal device, back up all of your files to an external drive or cloud storage. Even if you have an automated system (through your school or an independent platform like Acronis), do this so you can quickly put your virtual fingers on any file you want without waiting for someone else to find it. External storage is cheap. If you aren’t backing up videos, you can probably save all of your files to a $10 flash drive or your Google cloud.

Empty the trash.

Don’t even look in it. If you haven’t missed a file by now, it won’t matter if you throw it out.

end of school year

Learn to use programs or get rid of them.

You know, that program you were excited to get and then never opened. Learn it or lose it. Or if you still have Evernote but now use OneNote, delete Evernote’s shortcuts and downloads. Those extra files, drivers, and permissions just get in the way of the speed and efficiency of your computer.

Clean out your subscriptions.

Review the automated emails and RSS feeds that arrive to your computer daily. Get rid of those that no longer apply to your needs, are too simple, too complicated, or just didn’t work out as planned. You will appreciate this cleanup when you see that getting through daily email is much faster than it used to be.

imaging your computer

Clean out your temp files.

Temp files are supposed to be deleted automatically but that doesn’t always happen. See if this sounds familiar: A year ago, I realized my hard drive was almost full. I went through everything on it, deleted what I could, and still it was way too full.  After about an hour, I drilled down to a subfolder of my screencast program and found out that it was filled with gigabyte’s worth of temporary videos for screencasts I’d created. Simply deleting those increased my hard drive space by 50%.

Delete unneeded fonts.

Like the recycle bin, when you start up, your computer must bring up all those fonts that you collected for particular newsletters and magazines. They’re small files but not minuscule and take time to activate. Who needs a thousand fonts? Settle for a hundred.

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You’ll be surprised how fast it is to do all of these, especially if it’s the second or third time you’ve done them. And, you’ll be thrilled with the difference it makes in your ease of use, security, and comfort with the digital device that is so much a part of your job.


Jacqui Murray has been teaching K-18 technology for 30 years. She is the editor/author of over a hundred tech ed resources including a K-12 technology curriculum, K-8 keyboard curriculum, K-8 Digital Citizenship curriculum. She is an adjunct professor in tech ed, Master Teacher, webmaster for four blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice, CSTA presentation reviewer, freelance journalist on tech ed topics, contributor to NEA Today, and author of the tech thrillers, To Hunt a Sub and Twenty-four Days. You can find her resources at Structured Learning.

Author: Jacqui
Welcome to my virtual classroom. I've been a tech teacher for 15 years, but modern technology offers more to get my ideas across to students than at any time in my career. Drop in to my class wikis, classroom blog, our internet start pages. I'll answer your questions about how to teach tech, what to teach when, where the best virtual sites are. Need more--let's chat about issues of importance in tech ed. Want to see what I'm doing today? Click the gravatar and select the grade.

7 thoughts on “12 Tech Tasks To End the School Year

  1. Thanks for your reminders and suggestions, Jacqui. There’s a few there I’ll have to check out.
    I am surprised you’re winding down to the end of the school year though. It seems to have gone quickly to me, but not to the teachers, I’m sure. Enjoy the break!

    1. Early June out here in California marks the end of school. Other parts of the country, it’s May. Year-round school didn’t attract many takers when they tried it out.

      1. It just seems strange to me as our school year matches the calendar year. I guess our holidays automatically match summer at that time. You need your summer break in the middle of the year.

        1. We match school to the seasons–maybe a left-over from farming days. It makes naming the school year complicated–“the 2022-23 school year”.

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