FAQs

How do I use the digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo in my classroom without everyday computer access for all students?

  • Access to your digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo subscription is not limited to the classroom. You and your students can log in to your classroom’s digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo account from any computer with internet access, anywhere in the world, anytime day or night.
  • Online content can be shared with your students in the classroom via a SmartBoard or LCD projector, which requires access to only one computer.
  • You can also print and distribute copies of newspaper articles and digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo educational supplements.

What if my classroom computer doesn’t have internet access, has limited broadband width, or isn’t connected to a printer?

  • No extra software or downloads are required, so the digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo is easily accessed with either a broadband or dial-up connection.
  • Since access to your digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo subscription is not limited to the classroom, you and your students can read the e-edition and materials online at home, at the library—anywhere with computer and internet access.
  • Articles and materials can also be printed, e-mailed or saved, making the newspaper and program even more convenient and portable than before.

How do I find time in an already busy classroom schedule to use the digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo?

  • The digital Miami Herald and/or El Nuevo is a destination point and simply replaces the printed version. It is more functional and user-friendly in that it allows you to search, highlight, zoom in and out, e-mail, save, print and distribute as many copies as necessary.
  • Because each e-edition is available online for an entire week, you and your students can access and use the newspaper as both your personal and classroom schedules allow.
  • Once the programs are placed online, they will be available to you through the end of the semester, allowing you to work the materials into your lesson plans rather than building your plans around them.