Android Advisor

How to let your children do their homework on paper, not Zoom

Fill out worksheets, sign permission slips, make PDFs and more, all from your phone.

- MARK HACHMAN reports

If your child’s school has been forced to close, Microsoft’s Office app for Android allows children to work on paper and submit their work electronic­ally. It launched in February, a few weeks before the pandemic drove us all indoors. As my family hunkered down to work and study from home, we found that the Office app could be used to manage day-to-day document tasks for my kids, as well as my wife and I. And most people don’t know about it, either.

Below, you’ll find a few quick tutorials on how to get things done with the Office app. But it’s amazing how much it can actually do. You can take a picture of a page of a book and use the Office app to extract the text automatica­lly using optical character recognitio­n. You can turn a photo into a PDF. You can sign a PDF that you’ve already created. You can take a photo of a spreadshee­t and turn that into an Excel table, or turn a document into a PDF, or vice versa. Don’t underestim­ate those last features, either, as PDF-to-Word conversion tools can be hard to come by. And, of course, unlike most of the PDF editors we’ve reviewed, all these Office app functions are free.

USE THE OFFICE APP TO SCAN IN YOUR KIDS’ HOMEWORK

Your child’s teacher has probably already told you one way of entering hand-drawn work: using the camera on the PC or Chromebook. At our school, the students are asked to open their Google Doc, navigate to the ‘Insert Image’ icon on the toolbar, and snap a photo from the user-facing camera. It’s easy, effective, but not always that clear.

If you’d like, you can use the mobile Office app to do the same thing, and it will look nicer. Open the Office app on Android, and navigate to the Actions icon at the bottom of the screen.

You’ll see a whole list of interestin­g menu items. Click Scan to PDF, a somewhat confusing name.

This will bring you to a pretty convention­al photo screen with some interestin­g options at the bottom. By default, ‘Document’ is highlighte­d. If you place your child’s worksheet on a table or bed, you’ll see a small ghostly rectangle surroundin­g it. This is the Office app’s AI magic at work: it will sense the document’s borders and align them so

that your PDF will look nice and neat. In other words, don’t spend a lot of time aligning the document’s borders within the frame, as the app will do it for you.

The Office app may be hypersensi­tive to boxes drawn on the page – it will sometimes think that a box, such as the middle one, is the entirety of the page. Note the ‘stacked photos’ icon to the lower left: you can use that to make a multi-page PDF using multiple images.

Choosing the ‘whiteboard’ option allows you to take a photo of a piece of artwork that’s hanging on the wall – and again, Office will make it nice and neat.

Office will save the file as a PDF, and it will be accessible from the main screen.

Office does have an option to turn an existing photo (from your camera roll) into a PDF, but all it does is turn the image into a PDF, with none of the AI snipping that the app otherwise offers. It’s more effective to snap a new shot if the original document is available.

HOW TO SIGN A PDF FROM YOUR PHONE

If your child receives a permission slip either in email or in person, and you

want to send it back electronic­ally, the Office app makes this easy, too.

Do you have a printed document? Use the ‘scan to PDF’ function above, to turn it into a PDF document.

Do you have an electronic document, such as a Word or Google Docs file? If it’s a Google Docs file, save it in Word. Word files can be opened with the Document to PDF conversion tool,

which is part of the mobile Office app you’re using.

Once you have a PDF of your file, you should see a Sign a PDF option in the Actions heading, under the Do more with PDFs subheading.

The app will open your PDF, and you’ll select an approximat­e spot to add a signature. Don’t worry if the location’s not precise. Once you’ve tapped the location, an entirely different window will open, where you can add your signature. You can save your signature as well.

Once you’ve entered your signature, the PDF will reopen again, with a mammoth overlay of your signature superimpos­ed upon it. Pinch and zoom the signature to shrink and fit it to the space, then save the PDF.

HOW TO SEND A PDF FROM THE OFFICE APP

The Office app’s main screen allows you to share a document (via text or email), including the PDFs you just created. But what if you need to move the file to your computer, or your child’s computer, to upload it? Again, the Office app has anticipate­d that.

The Transfer Files option at the top of the Actions page will direct you to transfer.office.com, a website where you’ll be asked to scan a code with your phone to authentica­te a transfer.

Because it’s web-based, you should be able to transfer the PDF regardless of whether the laptop is a Chromebook or a Windows PC. On your phone, you’ll need to select Send or Receive to make sure the file is going in the right direction. Find the file in File Explorer and save it where it needs to be.

HOW TO USE YOUR PHONE AS AN OCR TO SCAN TEXT

There’s another fun trick that may benefit older children working from a printed

textbook who need to take notes: Turn your phone into an OCR (optical character recognitio­n) device. We’re not scanning a page as your scanner would – we’re reading and copying the text on the page.

To begin the process, go to the Actions page once again and select the Image to text option. This will work on a live photo or a stored image.

Office does this reasonably well, though you’ll always want to proofread it. You’ll get better results if the page is flat and well-lit.

We’re all trying to manage the pandemic, working from home and distance learning if we have schoolage children. Microsoft’s Office app for Android is a handy way to save a little time and effort.

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 ??  ?? Microsoft’s Office app for Android stores a list of your frequently-accessed Office documents, but its list of powerful tools are hidden within the ‘Actions’ menu.
Microsoft’s Office app for Android stores a list of your frequently-accessed Office documents, but its list of powerful tools are hidden within the ‘Actions’ menu.
 ??  ?? The Office app may be hypersensi­tive to boxes drawn on the page – it will sometimes think that a box, such as the middle one, is the entirety of the page. Note the ‘stacked photos’ icon to the lower left: You can use that to make a multi-page PDF using multiple images.
The Office app may be hypersensi­tive to boxes drawn on the page – it will sometimes think that a box, such as the middle one, is the entirety of the page. Note the ‘stacked photos’ icon to the lower left: You can use that to make a multi-page PDF using multiple images.
 ??  ?? The Office app’s Actions menu.
The Office app’s Actions menu.
 ??  ?? If you look closely, you can see how the Office app has extracted the artwork from the rest of the scene.
If you look closely, you can see how the Office app has extracted the artwork from the rest of the scene.
 ??  ?? You then have the option to resize and move the signature as you’d like.
You then have the option to resize and move the signature as you’d like.
 ??  ?? The Sign with PDF tool allows you ample space to input your signature, as well as the option to save it.
The Sign with PDF tool allows you ample space to input your signature, as well as the option to save it.
 ??  ?? The Office app will direct you to this intermedia­ry site to facilitate sending files between your phone and your computer.
The Office app will direct you to this intermedia­ry site to facilitate sending files between your phone and your computer.
 ??  ?? Microsoft’s ‘Image to Text’ in action within the Office mobile app, transcribi­ng a page from Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs.
Microsoft’s ‘Image to Text’ in action within the Office mobile app, transcribi­ng a page from Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs.

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