The document discusses using Moodle as a learning management system in TAFE classrooms, outlining its benefits like being open source and customizable, as well as considerations for implementing it such as ensuring consistency across courses through instructional design and use of learning objects. It also describes the role of an LMS in administering training programs and facilitating collaborative learning.
The presentation broadly describes impacts and challenges of Blended Learning in India with respect to Covid19 situation from March 200 to September 2020
A digital learning strategy makes a significant and positive impact on organizations, learners, and patients. Learning management systems empower organizations to deploy educational programs, develop competencies, and apply accreditations.
In this webinar we covered best practices when considering moving from classroom-based training to online delivery. This includes the needs of your audience, content creation, delivery, post training data collection, and learning analytics insights.
Define your pedagogical approach; Define your business model; Define (inter)national opportunities and threats; Define institutional opportunities and threats; Define student attractors and deterrents; Review your pedagogical model; Review your business model
The presentation broadly describes impacts and challenges of Blended Learning in India with respect to Covid19 situation from March 200 to September 2020
A digital learning strategy makes a significant and positive impact on organizations, learners, and patients. Learning management systems empower organizations to deploy educational programs, develop competencies, and apply accreditations.
In this webinar we covered best practices when considering moving from classroom-based training to online delivery. This includes the needs of your audience, content creation, delivery, post training data collection, and learning analytics insights.
Define your pedagogical approach; Define your business model; Define (inter)national opportunities and threats; Define institutional opportunities and threats; Define student attractors and deterrents; Review your pedagogical model; Review your business model
Defining a quality model for Blended Learning course for adult learners: the experience of Patronato EPASA CNA (Italian National Confederation of the Craft Sector and Small and
Medium Enterprises)
In order to improve the quality of the traning process of their employes the Patronato EPASA CNA started a experimentation of a new model of traning. The needs of the patronato were to:
* To develop a training system for a large number of learners, geographically distributed throughout the country, which is economically sustainable
* To develop a training system that meets the needs of learners with different levels of skills and knowledge.
* To develop a training system that enables the assessment of the effectiveness of the training and monitoring the level of learning for each individual operator.
e Learning is the most impacting and cost effective method of training available for organizations today. HR professionals can improve their efficiency and effectiveness of training programs they conduct by adopting e Learning.
Benchmarking for future growth, a must for institutions with a strong regional focus: You are not alone. A presentation on the refreshed ACODE Benchmarks for technology enhanced learning, to the Digital Rural Futures Conference 25-27 June 2014 at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia.
Modelling openness: Developing the Digital Fluency course at OUTBrenda Mallinson
It is recognised that more than ‘literacy’ is needed in today’s academic environment in order to take full advantage of the affordances of using ICTs for the full range of teaching and learning, research, and administrative duties and blended modes of provision.
In order to address this issue, OUT, in collaboration with Saide’s OER Africa initiative, has conceptualised a course on ‘Digital Fluency’ to be provided as an Open Educational Resource (OER) and made available for ODeL provision.
The move from literacy to fluency encompasses effective and ethical online communication, critical interpretation, quality resource creation and curation, knowledge co-construction, and an understanding of using all of these abilities to open up education – with all of these becoming increasingly standard and effortless over time.
A presentation delivered at the ASEAN Cyber University Project 2nd Working Group Meeting held on 31 August 2017 at COEX, Seoul, Korea. Project is anchored and coordinated by the Korea Education & Research Information Service
A presentation delivered at the Higher Education Leaders Asia Forum 2017 held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on February 28, 2017. Event was organized by IQPC and Higher Ed-iQ.
Many universities are currently shifting from face-to-face education into the online distance education, others are becoming dual-mode universities and a few others are totally online and at distance. However, the transition has not been easy. With the adoption of new educational models leading to a virtual university, many issues related to technology and pedagogy have unfolded significantly. While adopting technology into their teaching to deliver instruction and manage online courses at distance, teaching faculty have become totally immersed in a discussion concerning how to apply principles of pedagogy to technology. Best pedagogical practices in Moodle are discussed in this presentation.
Defining a quality model for Blended Learning course for adult learners: the experience of Patronato EPASA CNA (Italian National Confederation of the Craft Sector and Small and
Medium Enterprises)
In order to improve the quality of the traning process of their employes the Patronato EPASA CNA started a experimentation of a new model of traning. The needs of the patronato were to:
* To develop a training system for a large number of learners, geographically distributed throughout the country, which is economically sustainable
* To develop a training system that meets the needs of learners with different levels of skills and knowledge.
* To develop a training system that enables the assessment of the effectiveness of the training and monitoring the level of learning for each individual operator.
e Learning is the most impacting and cost effective method of training available for organizations today. HR professionals can improve their efficiency and effectiveness of training programs they conduct by adopting e Learning.
Benchmarking for future growth, a must for institutions with a strong regional focus: You are not alone. A presentation on the refreshed ACODE Benchmarks for technology enhanced learning, to the Digital Rural Futures Conference 25-27 June 2014 at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia.
Modelling openness: Developing the Digital Fluency course at OUTBrenda Mallinson
It is recognised that more than ‘literacy’ is needed in today’s academic environment in order to take full advantage of the affordances of using ICTs for the full range of teaching and learning, research, and administrative duties and blended modes of provision.
In order to address this issue, OUT, in collaboration with Saide’s OER Africa initiative, has conceptualised a course on ‘Digital Fluency’ to be provided as an Open Educational Resource (OER) and made available for ODeL provision.
The move from literacy to fluency encompasses effective and ethical online communication, critical interpretation, quality resource creation and curation, knowledge co-construction, and an understanding of using all of these abilities to open up education – with all of these becoming increasingly standard and effortless over time.
A presentation delivered at the ASEAN Cyber University Project 2nd Working Group Meeting held on 31 August 2017 at COEX, Seoul, Korea. Project is anchored and coordinated by the Korea Education & Research Information Service
A presentation delivered at the Higher Education Leaders Asia Forum 2017 held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on February 28, 2017. Event was organized by IQPC and Higher Ed-iQ.
Many universities are currently shifting from face-to-face education into the online distance education, others are becoming dual-mode universities and a few others are totally online and at distance. However, the transition has not been easy. With the adoption of new educational models leading to a virtual university, many issues related to technology and pedagogy have unfolded significantly. While adopting technology into their teaching to deliver instruction and manage online courses at distance, teaching faculty have become totally immersed in a discussion concerning how to apply principles of pedagogy to technology. Best pedagogical practices in Moodle are discussed in this presentation.
Progressive Professional Development of Teachers in Higher Education- IndiaSameer Babu M
Professional Development, Teachers Training, In-service Teacher Education, Teaching in Higher Education, MOOC, Strategies of Professional Development, Innovation in Faculty Development, Teaching at Tertiary Level, Innovations through MOOC, Flexible blended Training for Teachers, MOOCx for Teachers, Human Resource Management and Training, Teachers for a better classroom, Course Era, edX, Udacity, Online Training, Clinics for Teachers, Higher Education and Experiments, Future of Indian Teacher Training, Cost Effectiveness in Teachers' Professional Development, Ideal Inservice teacher education, NCTE and future possibilities.
The e-learning contained many educational resources are generally used in learning systems like Moodle, It’s free open source software packages designed and flexible platform to create Learning Objects (LOs) and users’ accounts. The author demonstrates how to use semantic web technologies to improve online learning environments and bridge the gap between learners and LOs. The ontological construction presented here helps formalize LOs context as a complex interplay of different learning-related elements and shows how we can use semantic annotation to interrelate diverse between learner and LOs. On top of this construction, the author implemented several feedback channels for educators to improve the delivery of future Web-based learning. The particular aim of this paper was to provide a solution based in the Moodle Platform. The main idea behind the approach presented here is that ontology which can not only be useful as a learning instrument but it can also be employed to assess students’ skills. For it, each student is prompted to express his/her beliefs by building own discipline-related ontology through an application displayed in the interface of Moodle. This paper presents the ontology for an e-Learning System, which arranges metadata, and defines the relationships of metadata, which are about learning objects; belong to academic courses and user profiles. This ontology has been incorporated as a critical part of the proposed architecture. By this ontology, effective retrieval of learning content, customizing Learning Management System (LMS) is expected. Metadata used in this paper are based on current metadata standards. This ontology specified in human and machine-readable formats. In implementing it, several APIs were defined to manage the ontology. They were introduced into a typical LMS such as Moodle. Proposed ontology maps user preferences with learning content to satisfy learner requirements. These learning objects are presented to the learner based on ontological relationships. Hence it increases the usability and customizes the LMS. In conclusion, ontologies have a range of potential benefits and applications in further and higher education, including the sharing of information across e-learning systems, providing frameworks for learning object reuse, and enabling information between learner and system parts.
In the current digital era, education system has witness tremendous growth in data storage and efficient retrieval. Many Institutes have very huge databases which may be of terabytes of knowledge and information. The complexity of the data is an important issue as educational data consists of structural as well as non-structural type which includes various text editors like node pad, word, PDF files, images, video, etc. The problem lies in proper storage and correct retrieval of this information. Different types of learning platform like Moodle have implemented to integrate the requirement of educators, administrators and learner. Although this type of platforms are indeed a great support of educators, still mining of the large data is required to uncover various interesting patterns and facts for decision making process for the benefits of the students. In this research work, different data mining classification models are applied to analyse and predict students’ feedback based on their Moodle usage data. The models described in this paper surely assist the educators, decision maker, mentors to early engage with the issues as address by students. In this research, real data from a semester has been experimented and evaluated. To achieve the better classification models, discretization and weight adjustment techniques have also been applied as part of the pre – processing steps. Finally, we conclude that for efficient decision making with the student’s feedback the classifier model must be appropriate in terms of accuracy and other important evaluation measures. Our experiments also shows that by using weight adjustment techniques like information gain and support vector machines improves the performance of classification models.
In the current digital era, education system has witness tremendous growth in data storage and efficient retrieval. Many Institutes have very huge databases which may be of terabytes of knowledge and information. The complexity of the data is an important issue as educational data consists of structural as well as non-structural type which includes various text editors like node pad, word, PDF files, images, video, etc. The problem lies in proper storage and correct retrieval of this information. Different types of learning platform like Moodle have implemented to integrate the requirement of educators, administrators and learner. Although this type of platforms are indeed a great support of educators, still mining of the large data is required to uncover various interesting patterns and facts for decision making process for the
benefits of the students.
Moodle est une plate-forme d'apprentissage en ligne (en anglais : Learning Management System ou LMS) sous licence libre servant à créer des communautés s'instruisant autour de contenus et d'activités pédagogiques. Le mot « Moodle » est l'abréviation de Modular Object-Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment : « Environnement orienté objet d'apprentissage dynamique modulaire »
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
1. IN A TAFE CLASSROOM Presenter: Tony Whittingham
2. Who is the Workshop’s facilitator ? Tony Whittinghamtonytheteacher@gmail.com PRE TAFEPhotogrammetrist Satellites Mapping TAFE Teacher Civil Eng. ComputerTraining State Manager Director POST TAFE UTS eLearning Saikore Wikis Digital Media Workshops Part time Randwick
3. Session Outcomes Knowledge of MOODLE as a force for change in a TAFE classroom Describe role of a Learning Management System (LMS) Knowledge of potential and limitations of MOODLE Apply instructional design to MOODLE course design Assess the value of learning objects for MOODLE
6. Registered Sites “Moodle usage continues to grow at an amazing rate, with over 52 thousand registered Moodle sites and over 950 thousand registered users on moodle.org”
7. Introducing ……MOODLE MOODLE is an alternative to proprietary commercial learning management systems, and is distributed free under open source licensing.
8. Learning Management System Feasibility Study Part II of the Open Source Collaborative Moodle Assessment ReportAugust 23, 2010 the North Carolina Community College System 2009
9. Introducing ……MOODLE An organisation has complete access to the source code and can make changes if needed.
10. Introducing ……MOODLE MOODLE’s modular design makes it easy to create new courses, adding content that will engage learners.
11. Moodle can be installed on any computer that can run PHP, and can support an SQL type database (for example MySQL). It can be run on Windows and Mac operating systems and many flavors of linux.
12.
13. The Five Forces That Shape A TAFE MOODLE Strategy Threat from new providers Changing work environment Use of technology by schools Threat of new products or services Adapted
14. How can we evaluate the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats for TAFE’s use of MOODLE? Who? How? When?
16. Learning Management System VERSUS Knowledge Management System LEARNING MANAGEMENT SYSTEMSystem for the administration, documentation, tracking, and reporting of training programs KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMSystem for organising and facilitating collaborative creation of documents and other content
17. MOODLE LMS In A TAFE Classroom Problems / Newsletters TEACHERS STUDENTS CLASSROOMOnline and/or Face to face Login? Create L M S Subject? Enrolment key? M a n a g e CLAMS Group A Group B Resources and activities Gradebook Course Topics Wiki Portfolio Upload Assessment projects
18. Should there be a POLICY for MOODLE’s statewide use in TAFE? Who? How? When?
19. Knowledge of potential and limitations of MOODLE
25. Instructional Design In MOODLE Courses Quality of learning materials Consistency of the learner interface Reusability of learning resources
26. Instructional Design In MOODLE Courses ATTENTION MOODLE Topic ARCS Instructional Design Model RELEVANCE CONFIDENCE SATISFACTION
27.
28. From the management point of view it’s critical to establish common guidelines and approaches for all the online classes. You don’t want each instructor delivering in a totally different way when each class is part of a curriculum. Consistency can appear boring to the designers but is critical for the student. — 164
29. “Students at Cambridge don’t want to have to worry about different interfaces and have spontaneously asked for greater consistency between courses”. Cambridge University, Sakai Workshop, May 2009
30. How can we ensure consistency in TAFE’s MOODLE courses? Who? How? When?
32. WHY USE Elearning OBJECTS? The purpose of learning objects is: “to increase the effectiveness of learning by: making content more readily available, reducing the cost and effort to produce quality content, allowing content to be more easily shared.
33. WHAT IS A eLEARNING OBJECT True learning objects include learning objectives and outcomes, assessments, and other instructional components.
34. Cisco’s Reusable Learning Object (1997) Cisco Systems used learning objects to transfer its instructor-led Career Certification courses into an e-learning format to better streamline lessons, allow thousands of employees to learn at their own pace, and arm its closest learning partners with reusable learning objects they could repurpose into customized course offerings.
35. GRANULARITY Granularity refers to how rigorously we choose to break down and store our learning objects. MOODLELearning Object? Instruction’s characteristics Competency Unit Elements of Competency Performance criteria Element s Learning resources Objective Structured knowledge Assessment Assessmentactivities Assessment Information
36. Learning Object Granularity One of the greatest barriers to the adoption of learning object initiatives is the inability of the participating institutions to agree on what constitutes a learning object.Educause, Learning Objects in Higher Education, 2002 The unit of a learning object can be a course, a subject, a module, a section, or a raw object. Generally a finer level of granularity will promote reusability, by allowing for use in multiple contexts.