u/AppointmentGlum4776

Hi,

I currently manage classes and was wondering how others handle admin tasks like:

  • attendance
  • fee/payment tracking
  • announcements to parents/students
  • homework sharing

Do you mostly use paper, spreadsheets, WhatsApp, or a dedicated app?

Right now, switching between calls, WhatsApp chats, and manual records feels messy, so I’m curious what systems or tools are working well for you.

Would love to hear what your current workflow looks like.

reddit.com
u/AppointmentGlum4776 — 11 days ago
▲ 0 r/edtech

Hi,

I currently manage classes and was wondering how others handle admin tasks like:

  • attendance
  • fee/payment tracking
  • announcements to parents/students
  • homework sharing

Do you mostly use paper, spreadsheets, WhatsApp, or a dedicated app?

Right now, switching between calls, WhatsApp chats, and manual records feels messy, so I’m curious what systems or tools are working well for you.

Would love to hear what your current workflow looks like.

reddit.com
u/AppointmentGlum4776 — 11 days ago

I’ve spent months researching how people are actually losing their money online—specifically looking at real-world cases involving crypto wallets and bank transfers. Most people think they're safe because they use 2FA, but scammers are getting much more "non-technical."

Here are 3 quick tips from my research that might save your bag:

  1. The "Address Poisoning" trick: Scammers send a tiny amount of crypto to your wallet so their address shows up in your history. Next time you copy/paste, you might accidentally copy theirs.
  2. Bank "Urgency" Scams: Your bank will never text you to "click here now" to stop a transfer. They will just freeze the account and wait for you to call.
  3. The "Seeding" Scam: If a "helpful" stranger asks you to test a new dapp or site, they are likely just phishing for your recovery phrase.

I actually put all 10 chapters of these real-world scenarios into a simple, beginner-friendly guide called "Hack-Proof Your Money" to help my own family stay safe.

If you want the full checklist or the link to the guide, it's in my Reddit bio (don't want to spam links here). Stay safe out there!

reddit.com
u/AppointmentGlum4776 — 13 days ago

With rising cases of bank impersonation via text messages, here are 5 key signs it's not actually your bank:

1. Sender is a random 10-digit number, not an official short code
2. Heavy urgency ("Your account will be suspended immediately")
3. Asks you to click a link to verify details
4. The URL in the link doesn't match the official bank domain
5. Requests sensitive info like PIN or OTP

Sharing this because these scams trick even cautious people.

What other scam tactics have you come across lately? 

If anyone wants a more detailed breakdown of common financial threats (written in simple language)
reddit.com
u/AppointmentGlum4776 — 14 days ago

With rising cases of bank impersonation via text messages, here are 5 key signs it's not actually your bank:

1. Sender is a random 10-digit number, not an official short code
2. Heavy urgency ("Your account will be suspended immediately")
3. Asks you to click a link to verify details
4. The URL in the link doesn't match the official bank domain
5. Requests sensitive info like PIN or OTP

Sharing this because these scams trick even cautious people.

What other scam tactics have you come across lately? 

If anyone wants a more detailed breakdown of common financial threats (written in simple language)
reddit.com
u/AppointmentGlum4776 — 14 days ago