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College faculty are busy individuals with limited time. If you find yourself typing the same words or phrases more than once a week, it’s time to set up a text-replacement tool. Below is a quick guide to the best options—free and paid—for Mac and Windows.
One time-saving tool that I love using in my teaching (and in the rest of my life) is a text-replacement tool. Also called “autotext” or “text expansion” programs, these tools run on your computer (Windows or Mac) and allow you to set up a personal library of shortcuts. When you type the shortcut text, the program automatically replaces it with something longer. If I find myself typing a certain set of words more than once a week, I try to create a shortcut for it.
A simple example: If I’m on a computer, I never type out Metropolitan State University of Denver. Instead, I type “/msud”, hit the space bar and the text is instantly replaced with the full name. Another example is “j@m” which becomes “[email protected]”. With the exception of email addresses I use a forward slash (“ / “) to start my shortcuts, but any rarely-used character could work well.
From over 100+ that I have in my library, here are a few other:
Shortcut text | Expanded text |
---|---|
/msud | Metropolitan State University of Denver |
j@m | [email protected] |
/ctld | Center for Teaching, Learning and Design |
/gait | Generative AI Taskforce |
/jitt | Just-in-Time Teaching |
/ghelp | Please make sure you get some help with this concept. You can talk to me about it, discuss it with classmates, or shoot me an email to make an appointment. |
/exp | Unless the question is multiple choice there is no place in this class where answers without explanations are acceptable. Always explain. |
Notice that the last two are full sentences that I use when giving feedback to students. That use alone is worth learning how to use one of these tools.
There are quite a few tools out there. I looked around in February 2025 to see what seem like the best options.
If you are interested in more than just text-replacement, you might consider things like this:
In a single year, this saves me hours and hours of typing. When I realize I’ve been using it for more than 15 years, I am truly glad I started the habit. My library started small and continues to grow!
If you have a similar tool that you have used, I would love to hear about it! Reach out to me at j@m, by which I mean [email protected] to share!
Generative AI disclosure: After writing this piece I used generative AI to write a first draft of the short “teaser blurb” that went out by email. Want to know more? Send me an email and we can chat!