The Leopard feature known as Spaces lets you display only those programs and windows required to tackle the projects at hand. If you’re working on multiple projects at once — say, a family scrapbook or book, you can set up separate spaces for each of these activities. Here’s how:
In System Preferences, click Exposé & Spaces and select the Spaces tab. Click Enable Spaces.
(Optional) Click Show Spaces in Menu Bar.
While this step is optional, it’s a handy way to keep track of what space you’re in.
Click the + and – buttons next to Rows and Columns to select the number of Spaces you think you’ll need and configure their layout.
You can choose between a 2-Spaces layout and 16-by-16 grid, with each one numbered, up to the total sum of spaces you’ve selected.
To assign particular applications to specific spaces, click the + under the Applications Assignments list and then click under Space to choose the one you have in mind.
If you like to e-mail and surf, you’d likely add the Mac’s Mail programs and the Safari browser to a particular Space. The family scrapbooker would probably put iPhoto to work in another.
(Optional) Choose Every Space.
When you choose this option, your application is available no matter what space you’re in.
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Classroom User Guide
When you make a class available for a student to add, Classroom preferences appear in System Preferences on the student’s Mac. From there, depending on the type of class (MDM created or teacher created), they can choose their My Card contact or manually enter their first and last name and a photo and change that at any time.
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Join classes automatically
If a student chooses Join Classes Automatically, they won’t be prompted to join the class and you can perform actions automatically. If the student leaves the area where the class is being held, for example, at the end of a period, their Mac disconnects from the class. The student will be prompted to join the class the next time you conduct the class.
Join classes manually
When a student sets the Join Classes setting to Manually, the student will appear when you start the class and displays their currently active app. The student is prompted to join the class when you perform your first action, such as open or lock device. The student can tap Allow, Always Allow, or Deny:
Allow: The action completes, and the student is prompted again when you perform any other action.
Always Allow: The action completes and allows you to perform that action—and the action it is paired with—again without prompting the student.
Deny: The action doesn’t complete, and the student is prompted the next time you attempt to perform any action.
Get the teacher’s assistance with some tasks
Teachers can assist students by controlling their Mac when students are in their class. Students say how much help they want by selecting Ask, Always, or Never for the following two tasks:
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Lock apps and device: Lock the device and lock an app open on the Mac.
AirPlay and View Screen: Use AirPlay to stream content to the Apple TV and view the screen.
Note: Depending on how your mobile device management (MDM) solution is configured, you may not be able to perform this task. Contact your MDM administrator and have them review Manage AirPlay and screen view settings in MDM.
When the setting is configured to Ask, the student has three options when a teacher wants to lock an app or the Mac, or wants to view the screen or AirPlay from the Mac:
Allow: The action completes, and the student is prompted again when you perform any other action.
Always Allow: The action completes and allows you to perform that action—and the action it is paired with—again without prompting the student.
Deny: The action doesn’t complete, and the student is prompted the next time you attempt to perform any action.
Remove a class
When a student removes a class, they must add back that class to participate in it again. When a student removes all their classes, the Classroom settings disappear from the Mac.