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Chapter 9: Lending system for devices and materials

Edumaps

Overview

1

Goal of this pinboard

  • This pinboard explains how the lending system can be used in Edumaps.
  • After this pinboard, you will know:
    • which items can be lent out
    • how a lending map is structured
    • how rental items are set up
    • how reservations work
    • how blocked days and calendar views help
    • how loan slips can be used
  • Typical use: iPad cases, projectors, cameras, robotics sets, experimental materials, and media center devices.
  • ⚙ start
2

When is the lending system useful?

  • The lending system is useful when items need to be reserved or borrowed for a certain period of time.
  • Examples:
    • iPad cases
    • laptop carts
    • projectors
    • cameras
    • microphones
    • robotics cases
    • experiment boxes
    • book crates
    • VR headsets
    • media center materials
  • Advantage: Reservation, overview, and documentation are all in one place.
3

Basic principle

  • A lending item is displayed in a box.
  • The box contains:
    • name of the item
    • description
    • availability
    • reservation calendar
    • usage notes
    • lending conditions
    • if applicable, loan slip
  • One map can contain several lending items.

Preparing the lending map

4

Create a lending map

  • First, create a map for the lending area.
  • Examples:
    • School media lending
    • Media center device lending
    • Reserve iPad cases
    • Robotics and technology lending
    • Borrow experimental materials
  • Tip: Use columns for categories, for example tablets, projectors, audio, robotics.
5

Define categories

  • Good categorization makes lending clearer.
  • Possible columns:
    • tablets and laptops
    • presentation technology
    • audio and video
    • robotics and coding
    • natural sciences
    • other materials
  • Recommendation: Choose categories that match your school's inventory.
6

Create an introductory box

  • Place a short introductory box at the beginning of the map.
  • Content:
    • Who is allowed to borrow?
    • How does the reservation work?
    • Where does pickup take place?
    • How does the return process work?
    • Who is the contact person?
    • Which rules apply?
  • This way, basic questions do not need to be repeated in every item box.

Create items

7

Lending item as a box

  • Create a separate box for each lendable item.
  • The box should contain:
    • item name
    • short description
    • quantity or scope
    • accessories
    • pickup location
    • return note
    • contact person
    • terms of use
  • Example: iPad case no. 1: 16 iPads with charging cables
8

Write a good description

  • A good description reduces follow-up questions.
  • Example:
  • iPad case no. 1
    16 iPads with charging cables, transport case, and quick guide. Suitable for teaching projects, research, presentations, and collaborative work.
  • Pickup: Media room 1
  • Return: fully charged and with accessories
9

List accessories

  • List accessories directly in the box.
  • Examples:
    • charging cables
    • adapters
    • remote control
    • bag
    • manual
    • tripod
    • microphone
    • spare batteries
  • Tip: An accessory list helps with return and inspection.
10

Usage rules

  • Usage rules should be short and clear.
  • Examples:
    • handle devices carefully
    • report damage immediately
    • return all accessories completely
    • return devices charged
    • reservation only for school purposes
    • return at the agreed time
  • Note: The clearer the rules, the fewer conflicts arise later.

Reservation

11

Enable reservation

  • Open the box settings. Click on Bookings and calendar and activate the lending system.
  • In the settings, you can select the initial view, the blocked days after each lending process, in week view the time span of a day, bookable time slots, and whether school periods should be used instead of clock times.
  • Then check:
    • Is the calendar visible?
    • Is the item named correctly?
    • Are reservations possible?
    • Are the rules understandable?
    • Does a test reservation work?
  • Recommendation: Test the process before publishing.
12

Select time period

  • Users select the desired lending period in the calendar. Activate the initial view (month, week, or day) in the box settings.
  • Depending on the item, the following may make sense:
    • single lesson period (week view)
    • full day (month view)
    • several days (month view)
    • full week (month view)
    • project period (week view)
  • Tip: In week and day view, you can define the reservation duration under Bookable time slots in minutes (e.g. for 2 hours = enter 120 minutes).
13

Calendar views

  • Calendar views help keep an overview.
  • Useful are:
    • month view for long-term planning
    • week view for the school week
    • day view for many short loans
  • In practice: For iPad cases, the week view is often especially helpful.
14

Blocked days

  • You can define blocked days in the settings. Blocked days prevent reservations for the specified number of days after a successful loan.
  • Suitable for:
    • maintenance
    • inventory
    • repair
    • internal use
    • transport days
  • Example: A robotics case was borrowed and returned. Two days are needed to sort the parts again and prepare the case.
  • If you want to block individual calendar days (e.g. a fixed maintenance date), simply book this period yourself as admin. Then other users will no longer be able to reserve that period.

Administration

15

Keep track of all loans

  • Admins can check and manage reservations centrally. For this purpose, the All rental items page is available. It lists all active rental items across all your maps.
  • The overview shows:
    • who borrowed the item
    • which period is booked
    • which item is affected
    • whether overlaps occur
    • when return is planned
  • Tip: Check upcoming loans regularly, especially before school holidays.
  • The dashboard also shows you when loans are coming up.
16

A user's loans

  • For questions, it is helpful to see the loans of a specific user. Click on the reservation in the calendar or in the timeline (All rental items).
  • Typical questions:
    • Which devices has the teacher reserved?
    • Are there multiple open loans?
    • When is the return?
    • Which reservation is causing a conflict?
  • This allows problems to be clarified quickly.
17

Change or remove reservation

  • Reservations sometimes need to be adjusted. You can do this directly in the calendar (click on the loan, then edit) or under “All rental items”.
  • Reasons:
    • date postponed
    • device defective
    • incorrect period
    • double booking
    • user canceled
    • item is needed internally
  • Note: Be sure to inform affected users if a reservation is changed.
18

Loan slip

  • A loan slip can document the handover. You can open it by clicking on the loan in the calendar and then selecting Loan slip in the dialog.
  • The loan slip contains:
    • user's name and email
    • item
    • period
    • accessories
    • return note (optionally defined in the letterhead or in the box content)
    • signature or confirmation
  • In practice: Especially useful for expensive devices or media center lending.

Practical examples

19

Example: iPad case

  • Box title: iPad case no. 1
  • Content:
    • 16 iPads
    • charging cables and transport case
    • pickup in the media room
    • return fully charged
    • reservation possible by day
    • contact person: school IT
  • Tip: Add a checklist for return and accessories.
20

Example: projector

  • Box title: Mobile projector
  • Content:
    • projector with HDMI cable
    • remote control
    • power cable
    • transport bag
    • suitable for classrooms without fixed technology
    • return on the same day
  • Note: List accessories especially carefully.
21

Example: robotics case

  • Box title: Robotics case – grades 5 to 8
  • Content:
    • robotics sets
    • manual
    • accessory box
    • suitable for group work
    • reservation possible by week
    • introduction recommended
  • In practice: Link directly to an introductory map or manual.

Checklist

22

Before publishing

  • ☐ Lending map created
    ☐ Categories defined
    ☐ Introductory box created
    ☐ Item boxes created
    ☐ Accessories described
    ☐ Rules formulated
    ☐ Reservation function tested
    ☐ Blocked days checked
    ☐ Contact person named
23

Regular maintenance

  • ☐ Mark defective devices
    ☐ Enter maintenance days
    ☐ Check old reservations
    ☐ Update accessory lists
    ☐ Check pickup location
    ☐ Monitor return process
    ☐ Add new devices
    ☐ Remove items that are no longer available
24

Typical mistakes

  • Avoid these mistakes:
    • mixing several devices unclearly in one box
    • not listing accessories
    • not naming a return rule
    • forgetting blocked days
    • skipping the test reservation
    • not naming a contact person
    • leaving defective devices bookable
  • Rule of thumb: A good description prevents a bad return.
25

Next step

  • The more devices, items, and maps are created at your school, the more important fast retrieval becomes. That is exactly what the next chapter is about.
  • Chapter 10: Structuring Search, Tags, and Large School Pinboards
  • There you will learn how to quickly find individual devices or materials using content and box search – such as by device number – and how to keep large school pinboards organized with tags.