Moodle Introduction:
Develop Your Own Online Course Today; pre-conferenceat "eLearning Africa 2012"; Pieter van der Hijden; Cotonou, Bénin; 23 May 2012.
This document contains the Moodle LMS Nomenclatures that we come across in a day to day life. Hope this document helps you in clearing the basic Moodle terminology doubts.
This document provides instructions for setting up Moodle on a website using cPanel. It describes downloading the Moodle files, using cPanel's File Manager and MySQL Databases tools to upload the files and create a database and user for Moodle. It then outlines the Moodle installation process, including filling out site details and preferences. It also provides guidance on customizing Moodle through adding themes, uploading user pictures, changing interface language and more. The overall document serves as a step-by-step guide for getting started with Moodle.
Cheryl Cox is a lecturer and Moodle course developer and mentor who provides training on innovative uses of Moodle beyond the standard implementation. The session outline includes an introduction to TAFE and Moodle, examples of non-standard Moodle uses, and how to create resources, hide content, and get help. The presentation aims to dispel misconceptions about Moodle's capabilities and provide practical guidance for optimizing the learning management system.
A short overview of the Learning Management System Moodle. This is intended to help people to decide whether or not moodle will meet their needs.
14.07.2015 Added slide (33) about moodle cloud offering free hosted (but a little limited) moodle site to all-comers.
Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) used by educators around the world to create online courses and websites. It was created in 1999 by Martin Dougiamas to help educators create online courses with tools for assigning work, tracking progress, and fostering interaction. Moodle allows teachers to easily create, manage, and deliver course content online through an intuitive interface without needing any programming experience. Some key features include online discussions, quizzes and assignments, gradebook tracking, and tools for communication and collaboration. There are over 208 countries currently using Moodle in 75 different languages.
Moodle is an open source learning management system (LMS) that allows teachers to create online courses, tests, and lessons. It is free to use, runs on many platforms, and supports over 78 languages. Moodle was created by Martin Dougiamas as part of his PhD research and is now used around the world by teachers and students. It provides forums, chats, calendars and other tools for teachers to manage courses and students to participate in online learning.
This document introduces Moodle, an online course management system that allows clients to access learning materials anytime from anywhere. It is available through and supported by eXtension. The document outlines how Moodle can organize information and pull together courses. It also describes the roles and administration settings in Moodle, and how to add content like text, photos, books, files, links, quizzes and surveys. Users are instructed to get an eXtension ID and contact the speaker to be added to training courses on using Moodle.
The document introduces Moodle, an open-source learning management system. It discusses how Moodle allows teachers to be facilitators in constructivist learning by putting students in control of their learning. It provides statistics on Moodle usage globally and highlights some of Moodle's key features, such as course design, activities, and resources that give teachers flexibility and control over their online courses. The presentation encourages attendees to sign up for a Moodle training course to learn how to set up and customize their own Moodle site.
This document contains the Moodle LMS Nomenclatures that we come across in a day to day life. Hope this document helps you in clearing the basic Moodle terminology doubts.
This document provides instructions for setting up Moodle on a website using cPanel. It describes downloading the Moodle files, using cPanel's File Manager and MySQL Databases tools to upload the files and create a database and user for Moodle. It then outlines the Moodle installation process, including filling out site details and preferences. It also provides guidance on customizing Moodle through adding themes, uploading user pictures, changing interface language and more. The overall document serves as a step-by-step guide for getting started with Moodle.
Cheryl Cox is a lecturer and Moodle course developer and mentor who provides training on innovative uses of Moodle beyond the standard implementation. The session outline includes an introduction to TAFE and Moodle, examples of non-standard Moodle uses, and how to create resources, hide content, and get help. The presentation aims to dispel misconceptions about Moodle's capabilities and provide practical guidance for optimizing the learning management system.
A short overview of the Learning Management System Moodle. This is intended to help people to decide whether or not moodle will meet their needs.
14.07.2015 Added slide (33) about moodle cloud offering free hosted (but a little limited) moodle site to all-comers.
Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) used by educators around the world to create online courses and websites. It was created in 1999 by Martin Dougiamas to help educators create online courses with tools for assigning work, tracking progress, and fostering interaction. Moodle allows teachers to easily create, manage, and deliver course content online through an intuitive interface without needing any programming experience. Some key features include online discussions, quizzes and assignments, gradebook tracking, and tools for communication and collaboration. There are over 208 countries currently using Moodle in 75 different languages.
Moodle is an open source learning management system (LMS) that allows teachers to create online courses, tests, and lessons. It is free to use, runs on many platforms, and supports over 78 languages. Moodle was created by Martin Dougiamas as part of his PhD research and is now used around the world by teachers and students. It provides forums, chats, calendars and other tools for teachers to manage courses and students to participate in online learning.
This document introduces Moodle, an online course management system that allows clients to access learning materials anytime from anywhere. It is available through and supported by eXtension. The document outlines how Moodle can organize information and pull together courses. It also describes the roles and administration settings in Moodle, and how to add content like text, photos, books, files, links, quizzes and surveys. Users are instructed to get an eXtension ID and contact the speaker to be added to training courses on using Moodle.
The document introduces Moodle, an open-source learning management system. It discusses how Moodle allows teachers to be facilitators in constructivist learning by putting students in control of their learning. It provides statistics on Moodle usage globally and highlights some of Moodle's key features, such as course design, activities, and resources that give teachers flexibility and control over their online courses. The presentation encourages attendees to sign up for a Moodle training course to learn how to set up and customize their own Moodle site.
The document provides an overview of Moodle, an open-source learning management system (LMS). It describes that Moodle was created in 1999, is used in over 200 countries, and can be used to create online courses, communicate with students, assess learning, and manage course content and participants. The document also outlines many of Moodle's core features for course creation and management, learner engagement and assessment, and administrative functions.
This document provides 10 tips for engaging students in using Moodle: 1) Make Moodle visually pleasing using icons and links; 2) Embed social media like Twitter; 3) Use wikis for collaborative activities; 4) Use the Guerra scale to design engaging course content; 5) Use lessons to facilitate sequential and self-directed learning; 6) Use forums to promote discussion and collaboration; 7) Add video to quizzes; 8) Use assignments to collect student work and provide feedback; 9) Use the feedback module to create knowledge surveys; and 10) Add widgets like WolframAlpha. The overall aim is to increase interactivity, use of multimedia, and collaborative opportunities in Moodle.
Moodle is an open source learning management system that allows teachers to create online courses with tools for content delivery, assessment, and interaction. It provides a platform for teachers to upload course materials like readings, organize discussions and forums, conduct quizzes, collect assignments, track attendance and grades. Moodle creates an interactive online learning environment through its modular design and accessibility from anywhere on the web.
Moodle is a free and open-source course management system (CMS) that allows educators to create online courses with tools for assigning work, holding discussions, giving quizzes, uploading files and more. It was created by Martin Dougiamas to help bridge the technology gap between digital native students, who have grown up with technology, and digital immigrant teachers. Moodle benefits include allowing access to course materials anywhere in the world and helping teachers communicate with students outside the classroom.
Moodle is a modular, object-oriented, dynamic learning environment. It can be used as a complete online learning system, for collaboration, or as a repository for self-study materials. Moodle allows for collaborative or independent courses and activities are at the core of learning. It was designed with social constructivist principles in mind where learning occurs through constructing artifacts for others in a collaborative community. Moodle provides customizable interfaces, authentication options, and course management tools like forums, assignments, quizzes and more to create an effective online learning experience.
In this workshop, participants will examine trends and benefits of eLearning in the K12 environment. Then participants will apply best practice techniques with hands on Moodle exercises.
South Devon College is upgrading its learning management system from Moodle 1 to Moodle 2. It has undertaken a review of existing Moodle 1 courses and begun testing Moodle 2. From May to July, staff tested how Moodle 1 resources work in Moodle 2 and developed courses for the September 2011 term. Support is provided to help staff update courses to meet quality standards or recreate them in Moodle 2. The full upgrade will take place on August 1st after a testing period, with all upgraded and developed courses moving to the new Moodle 2 platform.
This document summarizes 17 popular Moodle modules and plugins for enhancing online courses. They include tools for web conferencing (BigBlueButton), tracking attendance, sharing content between courses (Sharing Cart), monitoring student progress (ProgressBar), allowing students to upload documents (StudentFolder), estimating time spent on a course (CourseDedication), creating custom reports (ConfigurableReports), managing task lists (Checklist), improving course navigation (CollapsedTopics and GridFormat), setting learning objectives (LessonObjectives), offline paper quizzes (OfflineQuiz), accessibility options, audio/video question types (PoodLLRecording), gamification (Level Up!), creating questions (QuestionCreationActivity), and analytics on course activity (Heat
MODULAR OBJECT-ORIENTED DYNAMIC LEARNING ENVIRONMENT (MOODLE) is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) that allows educators to create online courses with assignments, quizzes, forums, and other activities. It has a modular design that provides flexibility to add or remove features and is suitable for both fully online and blended courses. Moodle also offers features like resources, calendar, chat, forums, quizzes, glossary, assignments, and reports to help teachers facilitate learning and monitor student activity.
This document discusses the benefits and uses of Moodle, an online learning platform. Moodle is described as really useful, important, and easy to use. It is useful as a virtual classroom assistant and for distance learning. It allows for centralized and incremental learning anywhere and anytime. Moodle has features like online tests, assignments, grading, and forums that facilitate online learning. It also supports social constructivist learning through social interaction and tools. Moodle helps meet the needs of a rapidly changing environment by expanding learners' digital literacy and meeting their expectations for online tools and resources while also promoting eSafety.
Moodle 3.8 includes enhancements to interactive video, forums, and messaging as well as new instructor tools. It improves the integrated video player H5P with filters and buttons. Forums now allow grading of discussions and have improved user experience. Messaging adds emojis. Instructors gain features like timeout alerts, improved quiz editing, and showing hidden courses. The webinar promotes using the feedback module to measure eLearning success and reporting across courses.
The benefits of moodle how to engage teaching staffChris Chapman
Moodle is an online learning platform used by over 1.3 million teachers globally to enhance teaching and learning. It offers students interactive activities and access to information in a teacher-controlled environment. For teachers, Moodle provides a central location to deliver, mark, and provide feedback on coursework from anywhere. It makes teaching easier by streamlining previously difficult tasks. The document outlines how promoting Moodle within a college, such as presenting its benefits, providing support, and demonstrating its use, can help engage more teaching staff to adopt the platform.
Moodle is an open-source learning management system with general features for users including a modern interface, personalized dashboards, collaborative tools, calendar, file management, text editor, notifications, and progress tracking. It also has administrative features for customizing site design, secure authentication, multilingual support, bulk course creation, learning paths, security updates, reporting, collaboration, multimedia integration and group management.
Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) that can be used to create online courses with various features for course management, learner management, and content delivery. Some key features of Moodle include modules for assignments, quizzes, forums, choices, surveys, and more. It also includes tools for grading, tracking learner activity, managing files, and integrating calendars and events. Moodle provides advantages like low cost, flexibility, and active learning opportunities through discussion forums and group work. However, it may lack some advanced assessment and content management capabilities available in proprietary LMS solutions.
Moodle Introduction by eLeDia by Ralf Hilgenstock, German Moodle partner. The presentation gives ou an overview about the concept, structures and tools of Moodle Learning management system.
This book provides a comprehensive guide for using Moodle 2.0 for e-learning course development. It includes step-by-step instructions for installing and configuring Moodle, explains various course activities and features, and provides many examples and screenshots. The book is suitable for both beginners and experienced users, covering topics from administration to course creation to social features.
This book provides a comprehensive guide for using Moodle 2.0 for e-learning course development. It includes step-by-step instructions for installing and configuring Moodle, explains various course activities and features, and provides many examples and screenshots. The book is suitable for both beginners and experienced users, with early chapters focusing on administration and later chapters covering specific course elements and tools for teaching.
Moodle introduction: develop your own online course today; preconference at Online Educa by Pieter van der Hijden (pvdh@sofos.nl) en Hans de Zwart (hans@ned-moove.nl); Ned-Moove (Nederlandstalige Moodle Vereninging) (www.ned-moove.nl); Sofos Consultancy; Berlin, 3 December 2008.
Information Technology (IX CLASS FIRST TERM) Adityaroy110
This document provides an introduction to a student handbook on fundamentals of computers. It outlines the contents of the handbook which covers 11 sessions on basic computer concepts such as introduction to computers, parts of a computer system, types of computers, operating systems, file operations, the internet, world wide web, digital technology and computer security. The handbook aims to develop relevant knowledge and skills through exercises and assessments in each session. It acknowledges contributions from various partners who provided content for the handbook.
The document provides an overview of Moodle, an open-source learning management system (LMS). It describes that Moodle was created in 1999, is used in over 200 countries, and can be used to create online courses, communicate with students, assess learning, and manage course content and participants. The document also outlines many of Moodle's core features for course creation and management, learner engagement and assessment, and administrative functions.
This document provides 10 tips for engaging students in using Moodle: 1) Make Moodle visually pleasing using icons and links; 2) Embed social media like Twitter; 3) Use wikis for collaborative activities; 4) Use the Guerra scale to design engaging course content; 5) Use lessons to facilitate sequential and self-directed learning; 6) Use forums to promote discussion and collaboration; 7) Add video to quizzes; 8) Use assignments to collect student work and provide feedback; 9) Use the feedback module to create knowledge surveys; and 10) Add widgets like WolframAlpha. The overall aim is to increase interactivity, use of multimedia, and collaborative opportunities in Moodle.
Moodle is an open source learning management system that allows teachers to create online courses with tools for content delivery, assessment, and interaction. It provides a platform for teachers to upload course materials like readings, organize discussions and forums, conduct quizzes, collect assignments, track attendance and grades. Moodle creates an interactive online learning environment through its modular design and accessibility from anywhere on the web.
Moodle is a free and open-source course management system (CMS) that allows educators to create online courses with tools for assigning work, holding discussions, giving quizzes, uploading files and more. It was created by Martin Dougiamas to help bridge the technology gap between digital native students, who have grown up with technology, and digital immigrant teachers. Moodle benefits include allowing access to course materials anywhere in the world and helping teachers communicate with students outside the classroom.
Moodle is a modular, object-oriented, dynamic learning environment. It can be used as a complete online learning system, for collaboration, or as a repository for self-study materials. Moodle allows for collaborative or independent courses and activities are at the core of learning. It was designed with social constructivist principles in mind where learning occurs through constructing artifacts for others in a collaborative community. Moodle provides customizable interfaces, authentication options, and course management tools like forums, assignments, quizzes and more to create an effective online learning experience.
In this workshop, participants will examine trends and benefits of eLearning in the K12 environment. Then participants will apply best practice techniques with hands on Moodle exercises.
South Devon College is upgrading its learning management system from Moodle 1 to Moodle 2. It has undertaken a review of existing Moodle 1 courses and begun testing Moodle 2. From May to July, staff tested how Moodle 1 resources work in Moodle 2 and developed courses for the September 2011 term. Support is provided to help staff update courses to meet quality standards or recreate them in Moodle 2. The full upgrade will take place on August 1st after a testing period, with all upgraded and developed courses moving to the new Moodle 2 platform.
This document summarizes 17 popular Moodle modules and plugins for enhancing online courses. They include tools for web conferencing (BigBlueButton), tracking attendance, sharing content between courses (Sharing Cart), monitoring student progress (ProgressBar), allowing students to upload documents (StudentFolder), estimating time spent on a course (CourseDedication), creating custom reports (ConfigurableReports), managing task lists (Checklist), improving course navigation (CollapsedTopics and GridFormat), setting learning objectives (LessonObjectives), offline paper quizzes (OfflineQuiz), accessibility options, audio/video question types (PoodLLRecording), gamification (Level Up!), creating questions (QuestionCreationActivity), and analytics on course activity (Heat
MODULAR OBJECT-ORIENTED DYNAMIC LEARNING ENVIRONMENT (MOODLE) is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) that allows educators to create online courses with assignments, quizzes, forums, and other activities. It has a modular design that provides flexibility to add or remove features and is suitable for both fully online and blended courses. Moodle also offers features like resources, calendar, chat, forums, quizzes, glossary, assignments, and reports to help teachers facilitate learning and monitor student activity.
This document discusses the benefits and uses of Moodle, an online learning platform. Moodle is described as really useful, important, and easy to use. It is useful as a virtual classroom assistant and for distance learning. It allows for centralized and incremental learning anywhere and anytime. Moodle has features like online tests, assignments, grading, and forums that facilitate online learning. It also supports social constructivist learning through social interaction and tools. Moodle helps meet the needs of a rapidly changing environment by expanding learners' digital literacy and meeting their expectations for online tools and resources while also promoting eSafety.
Moodle 3.8 includes enhancements to interactive video, forums, and messaging as well as new instructor tools. It improves the integrated video player H5P with filters and buttons. Forums now allow grading of discussions and have improved user experience. Messaging adds emojis. Instructors gain features like timeout alerts, improved quiz editing, and showing hidden courses. The webinar promotes using the feedback module to measure eLearning success and reporting across courses.
The benefits of moodle how to engage teaching staffChris Chapman
Moodle is an online learning platform used by over 1.3 million teachers globally to enhance teaching and learning. It offers students interactive activities and access to information in a teacher-controlled environment. For teachers, Moodle provides a central location to deliver, mark, and provide feedback on coursework from anywhere. It makes teaching easier by streamlining previously difficult tasks. The document outlines how promoting Moodle within a college, such as presenting its benefits, providing support, and demonstrating its use, can help engage more teaching staff to adopt the platform.
Moodle is an open-source learning management system with general features for users including a modern interface, personalized dashboards, collaborative tools, calendar, file management, text editor, notifications, and progress tracking. It also has administrative features for customizing site design, secure authentication, multilingual support, bulk course creation, learning paths, security updates, reporting, collaboration, multimedia integration and group management.
Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) that can be used to create online courses with various features for course management, learner management, and content delivery. Some key features of Moodle include modules for assignments, quizzes, forums, choices, surveys, and more. It also includes tools for grading, tracking learner activity, managing files, and integrating calendars and events. Moodle provides advantages like low cost, flexibility, and active learning opportunities through discussion forums and group work. However, it may lack some advanced assessment and content management capabilities available in proprietary LMS solutions.
Moodle Introduction by eLeDia by Ralf Hilgenstock, German Moodle partner. The presentation gives ou an overview about the concept, structures and tools of Moodle Learning management system.
This book provides a comprehensive guide for using Moodle 2.0 for e-learning course development. It includes step-by-step instructions for installing and configuring Moodle, explains various course activities and features, and provides many examples and screenshots. The book is suitable for both beginners and experienced users, covering topics from administration to course creation to social features.
This book provides a comprehensive guide for using Moodle 2.0 for e-learning course development. It includes step-by-step instructions for installing and configuring Moodle, explains various course activities and features, and provides many examples and screenshots. The book is suitable for both beginners and experienced users, with early chapters focusing on administration and later chapters covering specific course elements and tools for teaching.
Moodle introduction: develop your own online course today; preconference at Online Educa by Pieter van der Hijden (pvdh@sofos.nl) en Hans de Zwart (hans@ned-moove.nl); Ned-Moove (Nederlandstalige Moodle Vereninging) (www.ned-moove.nl); Sofos Consultancy; Berlin, 3 December 2008.
Information Technology (IX CLASS FIRST TERM) Adityaroy110
This document provides an introduction to a student handbook on fundamentals of computers. It outlines the contents of the handbook which covers 11 sessions on basic computer concepts such as introduction to computers, parts of a computer system, types of computers, operating systems, file operations, the internet, world wide web, digital technology and computer security. The handbook aims to develop relevant knowledge and skills through exercises and assessments in each session. It acknowledges contributions from various partners who provided content for the handbook.
This document layouts out an introduction to Microsoft's DigiSeniors Curriculum and gives information to prospective instructors/trainers for how to leverage it in their classrooms.
This document provides guidelines for teachers on the flipped classroom method. It discusses introduction to the flipped classroom concept, software tools for recording and sharing videos like BB Flashback, CamStudio and Camtasia. It also discusses learning management systems like Blackboard Collaborate. The document then shares 15 best practice examples of flipped classrooms in different subject areas and levels. It concludes with rules and advices for teachers, web resources and a glossary of terms related to flipped classrooms.
Sloodle integrates the virtual environment of Second Life with the learning management system Moodle. This allows educational tools and content from Moodle to be used within Second Life's 3D virtual world. Some key features include discussion forums, quizzes, and drop boxes that span both platforms. Sloodle aims to enhance online education by providing an immersive virtual setting with the integrated functionalities of a learning management system.
Ed tech 503 instructional design - final projectSarah Miller
Setting up a Google+ account allows you to connect with friends and family through the social networking site. The summary involves the following steps:
1. Go to plus.google.com and click "Join Google+" to sign up with your Google account credentials.
2. Fill out your profile by adding a photo, background, about section, and connections.
3. Customize your privacy settings to choose who can see your profile, posts, and connections.
4. Explore Google+ by joining communities, following interests, and interacting with posts from your connections.
This document describes using a Moodle workshop activity to facilitate peer assessment of student project proposals. Key features include:
1) Students will submit anonymous project proposals through the workshop for peer assessment, allowing the tutor to provide rapid feedback without hard-copy submissions.
2) During the assessment period, students will peer review three randomly assigned proposals and submit comments on criteria set by the tutor.
3) The tutor will then review peer assessments and provide overall feedback to improve students' understanding of expectations before final projects are due. The goal is to enhance feedback and increase the quality of student work through this online mechanism.
This document provides an introduction and guide to using Moodle, an online course management system. It defines key Moodle concepts and terms like activities, resources, blocks, courses, blogs, assignments and wikis. It explains how teachers, students and administrators can use Moodle and provides step-by-step instructions for common tasks like logging in, adding course content, creating blog posts and assignments, and enrolling in courses. The document aims to help all users at the International School of Management and Economics understand how to navigate and make full use of the Moodle platform.
A Mentored Project Management Curriculum Theme Building 21St Century Projec...Tye Rausch
This document outlines a mentored project management curriculum for secondary school students. The 8-week course uses a project-based learning approach where students apply project management principles to real-world projects. Students will learn the nine knowledge areas and five process groups of project management. They will develop project plans, monitor progress, and give presentations on their projects. The goal is to prepare students with 21st century skills for college and careers, especially as many baby boomers retire in coming years. Local project management professionals will mentor students twice a week.
Moodle is an open-source learning management system that allows users to create online courses with lessons, assignments, quizzes, and other tools. It runs on most web servers and platforms, supports customization through plugins, and is free to use. Invictus Consulting offers customization and maintenance services for Moodle, including module and feature integration, without charging for the open source product itself. Their proposed staff augmentation solution uses Moodle for online skills training and would manage clients, recruiters, candidates, tasks and other recruitment processes through a web application.
This document contains a summary of Demetra King's graduate coursework portfolio. It includes 14 sections summarizing 11 courses taken over 2 years, focusing on instructional technology, online learning, and instructional design. The courses covered topics like using Microsoft Office, integrating technology into teaching, virtual worlds in education, and online course design. Assignments included projects like wikis, blogs, and multimedia productions. The final section describes a culminating project and capstone portfolio where Demetra compiled and reflected on her work, demonstrating the knowledge and skills gained throughout her master's program in learning technologies and instructional design.
Flipped-Blended Learning A Case Study for Teachers(CAI,CBL & CBL)DR. Ram Kumar Pathak
This document discusses various technologies used in education including computer-assisted instruction (CAI), computer-managed learning (CML), and computer-based learning (CBL). It also discusses blended learning models and how they combine online and in-person learning. Some key points:
- CAI refers to using computers/digital tools to supplement instruction, like watching online videos before class.
- CML encompasses broader digital interactions and resources to facilitate learning, like online discussions.
- CBL focuses on computer-based learning activities done independently, like simulations before class.
- Blended learning combines traditional and online methods in models like rotation, where students rotate between online and in-person.
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1. Cloud computing allows users to access software and documents stored on remote servers rather than a personal computer, providing access from any device with an internet connection.
2. Key aspects of cloud computing include large networks of interconnected computers that extend beyond a single organization, and applications and data available to authorized users via the internet.
3. Moodle is an open source learning management system that allows for creating online courses with content and tools to engage learners, including assignments, quizzes, discussions, and collaborative activities.
Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) that can be used to create effective online courses. It provides educators with tools to manage courses and promote learning. Key features include activities like assignments, forums, chats and quizzes to engage students. Moodle also offers features for learner management, including profiles, calendar events, file sharing and grading. It is a flexible system that can be used for blended, fully online or supplemental courses across different educational institutions. Over 1,150 organizations in 81 countries currently use Moodle.
Study about the cost of MOOCs and possible business models to sustain their development. Comparizon between the costs of the traditional approach, of SPOCs and MOOCs.
Moodle is a free and open-source course management system (CMS) that can be used to create online courses and websites for blended learning. It has many features for instructors to manage courses and student learning including activities, assignments, quizzes, grading, tracking participation, and communication tools. Moodle also allows students to access coursework anywhere and provides translation into many languages to promote a global learning community.
This document provides information about an intensive learning design workshop. The workshop aims to help participants make pedagogically informed decisions about using digital technologies in course design. During the workshop, participants will learn about conceptualizing learning design, applying design tools and methods, critiquing pedagogical approaches, and developing a storyboard for their course. The workshop covers seven components of the 7Cs learning design framework and includes several hands-on activities for participants to work through.
This document provides information about an instructional design workshop for faculty at Moraine Valley Community College. The workshop will consist of a design component lasting 8 weeks and a development component lasting 9 weeks. Participants will receive $1000 upon completing workshop requirements. The workshop will help faculty develop skills for teaching online or in blended courses. It outlines policies, requirements, and a schedule for the design modules that participants will complete during the workshop as they design their own online course.
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Fab17 panel: "Working Group FabCare "; Jimbaran Hub, Bali, Indonesia, October 18th, 2022
The UN SDGs are a globally accepted reference framework for socio-economic issues including health and care, they set common goals for all countries for the year 2030 and they are provided with indicators and a system of monitoring to track progress.
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Mindmapping via a “hand tool” is great. With data becoming more and more important it is time to automate it. We developed a simple command language and interpreter (Corel/Mindmanager Macro) to do so.
For more than 20 years mindmapping has been my personal productivity booster. It helps to organize my thoughts, to play on different fields, to plan, to develop and to write. With data becoming more and more important, it is time for a next round.
Spending time with mindmapping software as part of a creative process, planning or writing is a pleasure. But spending time to visualize information is becoming more and more a load. It certainly is possible, but it takes often too much time and energy. As an example, look at the Figure 1. It is very simple in structure; it has a central topic, 13 main topics (picture only) and an additional main topic with some statistics.
Figure 1 - Simple mindmap, nevertheless a lot of work
In this example the creative part of the process to produce the map is rather limited. Maybe you need two minutes to set-up the main idea. But be honest, how many minutes will it take to produce the complete map? and even worse: this map is about UN Sustainable Development Goal #09. There are 17 such goals, so producing such a map for each of these goals will cost you 17 times that amount of time. All this time you can not spend to creative and more engaging processes!
Mindmapping software is like a Swiss Army Knife, a fantastic tool in all kinds of situations. However, this tool needs the hands of a human all the time. So there is an upper limit to the fun you can have with it. In complex applications (eg a map with 100 nodes, decorated with images, markers, hyperlinks etc.), using the tool is too laborious. In series production (eg a series of 17 maps), the repetition becomes boring.
We have to distinguish creative work from creating graphics. The latter should become more and more data driven and automated.
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Moodle Introduction: Develop Your Own Online Course Today
1. eLearning Africa 2012 - Preconference 23 May 2012
Moodle Introduction
Develop Your Own Online Course Today
Pieter van der Hijden (Sofos Consultancy)
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2012 - Pieter van der Hijden (pvdh@sofos.nl) - This work is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution- Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
1
2. Table of contents
Synopsis ................................................................................................................................................... 4
1 Introduction 9:00-9:45 - 45' ................................................................................................................. 5
Exercise ................................................................................................................................................ 9
Login and change your password .................................................................................................... 9
Update your profile ......................................................................................................................... 9
Work with the a forum .................................................................................................................... 9
2 Definition phase 9:45-10:30 - 45' ....................................................................................................... 10
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 11
Specify course metadata ............................................................................................................... 11
Update the settings of your course ............................................................................................... 11
Add course title to top of course page .......................................................................................... 11
Add a section title.......................................................................................................................... 12
3 Design phase (global) 10:45-11:30 - 45' ............................................................................................. 13
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 14
Specify educational activities ........................................................................................................ 14
Link educational activities to Moodle activities ............................................................................ 15
Specify group work ........................................................................................................................ 16
4 Design phase (detail) 11:30-12:30 - 60'.............................................................................................. 18
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 22
Specify activity settings ................................................................................................................. 22
Simulate an assignment ................................................................................................................ 22
Simulate a choice........................................................................................................................... 22
Give intermediate feedback .......................................................................................................... 22
5 Realization phase 13:00-13:45 - 45' ................................................................................................... 23
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 23
Simulate a forum discussion.......................................................................................................... 23
Add a section summary, a learning resource and direct text ....................................................... 23
Add a learning activity ................................................................................................................... 23
Insert a picture .............................................................................................................................. 23
Insert a video clip .......................................................................................................................... 24
Enroll students to test your course ............................................................................................... 24
6 Implementation phase 13:45-14:30 - 45' ........................................................................................... 25
2
3. Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 25
7 Evaluation phase 14:45-15:30 - 45' .................................................................................................... 26
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 26
Simulate the gradebook ................................................................................................................ 26
Add a new scale ............................................................................................................................. 26
Add a feedback form ..................................................................................................................... 26
8 Conclusion 15:30-16:00 - 30' .............................................................................................................. 27
Exercise .............................................................................................................................................. 28
Fill the evaluation form ................................................................................................................. 28
Appendices ............................................................................................................................................ 29
Course components .......................................................................................................................... 29
Sofos Consultancy and Moodle ......................................................................................................... 37
More about Moodle .......................................................................................................................... 39
3
4. Synopsis
Moodle Introduction - Develop Your Own Online Course Today
Target audience: Teachers, managers and administrative staff and ICT professionals who want to get a
practical introduction to Moodle, the free and open source e-learning system.
Description and During this workshop (a one day summary of a five day training programme) we will practise
learning goals: the principles of social and authentic learning: together you will develop today your own
online course.
Participants can bring their own course ideas and will work towards a course design and the
first steps of course realisation. They receive a personal account for access to a running
Moodle system. After the workshop they can still use this account during three months.
Proposed Agenda:
• Morning session – We will start with a short introduction on educational innovation
and Virtual Learning Environments. Then, we will get into gear and pass through
the subsequent phases of the development process of online courses: definition
phase, design phase, realisation phase and implementation phase.
• Afternoon session – You take a seat at a computer workstation and log in to a
Moodle server. Consecutively, you will play the roles of student, teacher/tutor and
course developer. The latter role will receive most attention. We will alternate
individual work, working with your neighbours and plenary instructions.
• Follow-up – After the workshop you will continue to have access to the Moodle
server on the Internet during three months. You can complement your own course
and/or communicate with the other participants and your trainer. You will be able
to download your work and re-use it on another server.
At the end of the morning session you will have your global design finished. At the end of
the afternoon session parts of your course are indeed online already. You will have an
overview of the impact of the Moodle Virtual Learning Environment on students and
teachers. You will know your way through this free and open source VLE. After the
workshop you can continue to work on your online course during three more months.
Activities and One day in computer lab with a lot ogf hands-on activities; all materials and activities may
resources: be found at the Sofos site.
Workload and The course takes one day. Impact will be larger, when the participant continues working
assessment: with Moodle, right after the workshop. It is also important to stay in touch with other
participants.
Authors and legal This workshop has been developed and delivered by Pieter van der Hijden.
issues:
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States
License.
4
5. 1 Introduction 9:00-9:45 - 45'
Synopsis
Classroom teachers starting to use a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) often feel helpless when
learning the details of their VLE only. There is a gap between their own learning needs and the
contents of a regular VLE course. A dedicated training for classroom teachers to use a VLE fills this
gap. This training normally takes 5 full days. The one day workshop is a compressed version of this
training. The participants can bring their own course ideas and will work together towards a course
design and the first steps of course realisation. The Learning Management System used is Moodle.
Although classroom teachers may be eager to know the technical operation of their Virtual Learning
Environment (VLE), their focus is mainly educational. A software oriented users course as might be
provided by their computer centre does not fulfil their needs. Therefore, a dedicated five day training
has been developed that combines cooperative classroom sessions and computer workshops.
Mapping didactical concepts into functional VLE components is one of its critical components. This
workshop can be considered as a compressed version of the five day training program.
The intended audience for the training are teachers who have some notion of a Virtual Learning
environment and are motivated to be trained. We assume they have some conventional teaching
materials and want to upload them to the VLE. During the training they will learn how to convert
their existing teaching materials into interactive learning experiences.
In full training each of the five training days focuses on a single phase of the learning materials
development process: definition phase, design phase, realisation phase, implementation phase and
use & maintenance. In the morning the classroom sessions take place. The participants learn some
indispensable concepts and apply them immediately to their own materials while preparing their
later online activities. In the afternoon the training continues in a computer room. There, the
participants execute what they learned and prepared during the morning session.
At the end of the full training, the participants have a detailed design of their VLE course, they have
experienced all necessary operations, they are halfway in implementing their own course and they
have a clear inventory of the tasks to be completed yet. They can finish them by themselves or with
some help of their peers.
During the condensed one day workshop a selection will be presented of the training elements that
have most added value for the participants. The participants can bring their own course ideas and
will work together towards a course design and the first steps of course realisation. The Learning
Management System used is Moodle.
5
6. This workshop
Author and trainer
Pieter van der Hijden MSc (Sofos Consultancy) is an international management consultant on ict for
development. His specialties are e-learning, e-government, gaming/simulation, the Virtual Learning
Environment Moodle, the game engine for online role playing Cyberdam and Fab Labs (easily
accessible workshops for digital fabrication). He has assignments in North and South, mostly by not-
for-profit clients.
Pieter did projects at strategical, tactical and operational level. In Suriname (South America), he co-
founded ECOIS, the Centre of Expertise on Education and ICT Suriname. Another expertise is setting-
up and initially boarding (international) professional associations. That happened with Saganet
(gaming), Ned-Moove (Moodle), ISAGA (gaming), CUG (Cyberdam), and IFLA (Fab Labs) so far.
Pieter also contributes to innovation in the fields he covers, e.g. dynamic learning paths &
collaborative exercises in Moodle, localization of educational games, and curriculum development
for a Fab Academy.
Contact: pvdh@sofos.nl
See also:
• LindedIn profile: http://nl.linkedin.com/in/pietervdh
• Sofos Consultancy: http://www.sofos.nl
• ECOIS Suriname: http://www.ecoisonline.org
Agenda
The frontpage shows the agenda for today. It follows the stages (phases) in course design and
delivery: definition, design, realisation, implementation and evaluation.
6
7. Moodle
Education Production Process
Supporting Software Systems
Registered Moodle sites in Benin
• elearning.uac.bj
• Plare forme d'E-learning du Centre d'Education à Distance du Bénin
• Portail e-Education Benin
• Système de gestion des cours
• Universite de Parakou - elearning
Examples of home pages
Universités nationales du Bénin
7
8. Sofos Consultancy
Moodle short
Moodle (Modular Object Oriented Distributed Learning Environment) is a free and open source
system that runs on a web server. Users communicate with a Moodle web site via an Internet
browser. Moodle is a trademark of Moodle Trust.
What is a Moodle web site?
• A web site like any other web site (a collection of pages with text, images, multimedia,
hyperlinks, etc., written in HTML)
• User friendly (no HTML knowledge needed, it is all What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get, no
complex upload procedure, but going "live" as soon as you click OK, no worrying about lay-
out, colours and fonts, Moodle maintains your house style)
• With many extra's (for each community / project / course, whether it is meant for
autonomous distance learning, homework support for classroom courses or computer
support during classroom sessions, you can create its own home page with direct text,
hyperlinks to resources and activities and a range of widgets; see the separate list of course
components in the Appendix.
• Intended for collaborative learning (by default Moodle distinguishes system administrators,
course developers, course managers, teachers and students; teachers may rate assignments,
forum contributions, and glossary entries, students have access to their personal gradebook,
teachers can form groups of students in various ways, some activities have a group mode
(plenary, separated groups, visible groups), the teacher can predetermine materials and
activities to certain groups, the teacher can specify the conditions to consider an activity as
completed, ibidem the conditions to make a certain activity visible)
• Easy to maintain (The system administrator administers the Moodle web site via Moodle
itself, e.g. can register new users (manually, by uploading a file, by linking with another
system and by letting candidate users fill in a web form themselves), define roles, allocate
permissions to roles, select and fine-tune a house style, adjust the system messages (75
languages)).
• And possible to outsource the technical part of system management (Part of the system
management, i.e. technical system management, and hosting the web server that is running
8
9. the Moodle software can be outsourced cheap and simply to dedicated Internet Service
Providers).
Exercise
Login and change your password
a. The trainer will give you a two-digit ID number.
b. Go to http://www.sofos.nl/moodle.
c. Enter your login name; it is "user??" where "??" should be replaced by your 2-digit ID number.
d. Enter your password; it is "changeme".
e. Press the login button.
f. Moodle will ask you to change the password. You may use the new password you prefer. The
system keeps it secret and stores it in a scrambled way. Even the system administrator cannot
decypher it. They only can give you a new one eventually.
Update your profile
a. Your firstname currently is "firstname??" and your lastname "lastname??" where "??" should be
replaced by your 2-digit ID number.
b. Once you have logged in, click on your fullname (currently "firstname?? lastname??") in the
upper right corner of the screen.
c. Moodle displays your personal profile.
d. Click on Edit Profile in the settings block; the system displays a form you can update.
e. Replace the firstname, lastname and e-mail address by your real firstname, lastname and e- mail
address.
f. Fill in your City and your Country.
g. Fill in the Description field. Give a on line description of yourself, e.g. your position. Note, that
this information might be public.
h. Upload a picture of yourself, if you have one at hand.
i. Click the Update Profile button.
Work with the a forum
a. Go to the start page of course "ELA12: Moodle Introduction - Develop Your Own Online Course
Today". Tip: Go to http://www.sofos.nl/moodle; Log in; Click on course category "eLearning
Africa" (center column, almost at the bottom); Click on "ELA12: Moodle Introduction - Develop
Your Own Online Course Today".
b. Moodle displays the home page of our course. Note, that it consists of three columns. The
centre column is subdivided into sections. It starts with a general section (without number) and
continues with a series of numbered sections. Go to the first section: Introduction and click on
the offered/wanted forum.
c. The offered/wanted forum contains two questions. Click on one of them, answer the question
by composing and sending a reply. Do the same for the other question.
d. Once you have answered both questions, you may browse this forum to read the responses by
the other participants. If you want to comment, feel free to give a Reply to a Reply.
9
10. 2 Definition phase 9:45-10:30 - 45'
Synopsis
The first phase of the course development process is the definition phase. At the end of this phase it
must be clear which "problem" this development process is going to solve and in which direction a
"solution" will be created.
During this phase, the educational requirements for the course are specified. Which is the learning
challenge the course is addressing? Which are the characteristics of the learners? How much support
should the online course offer to the participants? Is it really a distance course or not?
Further, the course developer has to explore the organisational context of the online support. What
is more appropriate, synchronous or asynchronous activities?
In fact, the definition phase leads to the first draft of the metadata of your course.
Meta data
Sooner or later, educational institutes will have hundreds of courses online. To use them in an
efficient and effective way, descriptions of the online courses will find their way to search engines,
catalogues and a variety of listings. These metadata, data on data, have been standardised. One such
a standard is the IMS Learning Resource Meta-Data Information Model, an open standard published
by the IMS Global Learning Consortium. In our training we use a subset of the IMS Meta-Data model.
Course structure
A typical course home page in Moodle consists of three columns. Two smaller columns to the left and
to the right and a wider column in the centre. The smaller columns can be filled with static direct text
and dynamic widgets (blocks). The central column is used for the real course content: direct texts
plus hyperlinks to learning resources and learning activities. They may be ordered in a chain of
sections, e.g. for the different topics or weeks in a course..
The home page of a course in Moodle consists of three columns:
1. the small left column is mainly used for advanced navigation; it contains static direct text
and/or dynamic widgets for that purpose;
2. the wider central column is used for the course contents; it contains a general section and
possibly more (numbered) sections, e.g. for each of the major course topics or weeks. Each
section may contain direct text and/or hyperlinks to learning resources and learning activities
(see the separate list of course components in the Appendix).
3. the small right column is mainly used for alerts and other actual information; it contains static
direct text and/or dynamic widgets for that purpose.
10
11. Exercise
Specify course metadata
Item Value
1. During this workshop, you will
develop your online course (at
least make a fair start with it).
Which title has your course?
2. Give a one sentence descriptions
of your course.
3. How many topics (or sections or
weeks) does your course have?
4. During this workshop, which topic
would you like to develop further?
Please, enter sequence number
and topic title.
Update the settings of your course
a. Go to the home page of your own course. It is called "ELA12: Moodle Introduction - Empty
Course ??" where "??" has to be replaced by your 2 digit ID number. You have the teacher role
for this course.
b. Moodle displays the home page of your course. We have filled in a few details already. However,
most of the page is still empty.
c. Go to the left column: Settings block: Edit settings.
d. The system displays a form with course settings.
e. Replace the full name of the course by the title of your own choice.
f. Go to the Description entry field. Switch fill screen mode on.
g. Fill in the metadata (for the moment only the title, a one sentence description and your name).
h. Switch full screen mode off.
i. See where you can set the number of topics in your course. Change it if you have reasons to do
so.
j. Do not change any other fields.
k. Save your changes.
l. The system displays the course home page again.
Add course title to top of course page
a. Note that the title of the course is not visible on the course home page. This depends on the
selected theme.
b. Turn editing on.
11
12. c. At the top of each section there is some reserved space for a section summary. Look for the
icons "Edit Summary".
d. Click on "Edit Summary" in the top section (also called General Section or Section 0).
e. Untick "default section name".
f. Enter in the field "Section name" the full title of your course.
g. Click on "Save changes".
h. Check the result.
Add a section title
a. Go to the home page of your course.
b. If you did not already before: Click on the "Turn editing on" button (upper right corner).
c. The central column contains a sequence of empty sections. Go to the section you want to
develop today, click the "Edit Summary" icon.
d. Enter the title of this section.
e. Save the changes.
f. Check the result.
12
13. 3 Design phase (global) 10:45-11:30 - 45'
Synopsis
The second phase of the course development process is the design phase. The results of the
definition phase form its starting point. At the end of this phase the course has to be specified
completely. Other people (programmers, graphic designers, text writers) have enough information
to be able to really build it. The design is tested for internal consistency and for a consistent
application of the definition phase results.
Designing an online course is not a mechanical process. Numerous questions have to be dealt with.
To give a short impression:
• what is really needed to fulfil the mission of the course?
• what is needed to accommodate a variety of learning styles?
• what is needed to compensate for the drawbacks of asynchronous (distance) learning?
• what should be fixed as part of the online course, what should flexible in the hands of the
teacher during course delivery?
13
14. Exercise
The following exercise is meant for designing a complete course. During this workshop, we will
concentrate on one section (topic, week) only.
Specify educational activities
a. Look at the "course story board form". This form is a tool to design a whole course. One sheet
has space for 1-5 topics containing 1-5 items each. If this is not enough, use more copies of the
form.
b. Place a yellow sticker in the left cell of each row. Write the title of the topic on it.
c. Now, fill each topic with 1-5 activities (red, yellow, or green stickers).
d. Choose a colour for each learning activity (see table below)
e. Write on the upper half of each sticker: the activity plus the eventual subtopic. It is important to
concentrate on what you want to happen, not on how you are going to use Moodle, e.g. Reading
O'Brien, Chapter 5.
f. Compare your "global design" with your peers. Change it when appropriate.
Colour Meaning Examples (from student point of view)
Red Individual activities Reading, working individually, being tested individually.
Yellow Synchronous group Synchronous activity, either offline (face-to-face
activities meeting) or online (like chat).
Green Asynchronous group Asynchronous group activity, like working collectively,
activities communicating, presenting, receiving feedback, testing.
14
15. Link educational activities to Moodle activities
a. Link each educational activity to one or more Moodle activities. Use the following mind map or
the table (below) to search for possible links. Both "graphics" differ in form, but their content is
the same.
b. Write your solution in the lower half of the stickers.
15
16. learning Book, Folder IMS URL Assign Chat CAI Choice Feedb Forum Datab Journa Quiz SCOR Survey Wiki Work- …
Page , -ment ack ase. l M shop
File form Glossa
-ry
reading / viewing x x x x x x
communicating x x x x x
working x x x x x
individually
working x x x x x
collectively
presenting x x x
receiving x x x x x x x x x x
feedback
being tested x x x x
...
Specify group work
a. For the green and yellow activities: add a symbol to indicate:
• plenary activities,
• separated subgroup activities,
• visible subgroup activities.
16
18. 4 Design phase (detail) 11:30-12:30 - 60'
Activity settings
Once we have completed our global course design, we have a global overview of the (digital)
didactics of our course. We continue with the detailed design.
The detailed design implies the specification of the Moodle learning resources and activities. To
create such a resource or activity, you have to fill a dedicated form in the Moodle system. What we
do during the detailed design phase is in fact preparing to fill this form by filling a paper version of it.
Why are we following this paper stage while we also could go directly to the online course?
• we focus on the design first without worrying about Moodle details we do not oversee
completely;
• we create a paper file with written documentation where we easily can add our notes about
the design decisions we made (Moodle does not ask for such notes);
• we could eventually apply labour division by leaving the work of realizing the resource /
activity to student assistants etc.
In the following paragraphs we copied the settings forms of Forum, Assignment, Choice and Chat.
Forum
The social learning activity "Forum" enables learners and teachers to hold structured, thematic
conversations in the form of posted messages. They do not have to be online at the same time.
Within a forum there can be several discussion topics and related threads of reactions. All posted
messages may have files attached to them.
All learners and teachers of a course can contribute to a forum, i.e. post a new topic, react to topics,
read them. They may subscribe/unsubscribe to the automatic e-mail notifications for the forum as
they like. In any case, all messages remain archived for later reference.
Learners and teachers can search a forum topic by using the "Search all forums" widget. They can
also browse one of the forums. All messages are listed in a nested form so that they easily recognize
the structure of the conversation. They also can order them from new to old or in a threaded way.
When setting-up a forum, the teacher may select one of the following forum types:
1. A single simple discussion - A single discussion topic which everyone can reply to.
2. Each person posts one discussion - Each learner can post exactly one new discussion topic,
which everyone can then reply to.
3. Q and A forum - Learners must first post their perspectives before viewing other learners'
posts.
18
19. 4. Standard forum displayed in a blog-like format - An open forum where anyone can start a new
discussion at any time, and in which discussion topics are displayed on one page with "Discuss
this topic" links.
5. Standard forum for general use - An open forum where anyone can start a new discussion at
any time.
The fifth type, the standard forum for general use, is the most generic one.
There is one more forum type: the News forum. The Moodle system creates such a forum
automatically in every new course. Teachers cannot create a Newsforum themselves. A News forum
does not allow a real two way discussion. In fact, it is a mechanism to broadcast news and
announcements to all learners and teachers of a certain course.
Form
The following form is copied from Moodle 2.2.3.
19
21. Assignment
The individual learning activity "Assignment" consists of an instruction for an activity, the execution
of the activity by the learner and the commenting, grading and/or rating of its outcomes by the
teacher.
The assignment might imply the submission of a set of files, a single file only, a text entered in a web
form or even no submission at all. In the latter case the assignment is called an offline assignment.
Examples are a classroom presentation, a physical exercise, an outreach activity.
Form
The following form is copied from Moodle 2.2.3. It is the form for creating an assignment to upload a
single file. There are more assignment forms in Moodle 2.2.3. From Moodle 2.3 they will be
integrated into a single form.
21
22. Exercise
Specify activity settings
a. Look at your storyboard form for a forum activity. If you found one, fill in the detail form for that
activity.
b. Do the same for an assignment activity, a chat activity, and a choice activity.
Simulate an assignment
a. Go to the Moodle Intro course.
b. Make the assignment in Section 3.
Simulate a choice
a. Go to the Moodle Intro course.
b. Fill in the Choice in Section 3.
Give intermediate feedback
a. Go to the Moodle Intro course, section 4.
b. Fill the feedback form.
22
23. 5 Realization phase 13:00-13:45 - 45'
Synopsis
The realisation phase follows the design phase. Now, the real construction of the course (finally) can
start. It consists of programming course activities as well as creating, collecting or purchasing content
materials and all kinds of components like pictures, animations, and video fragments. Finally, all
these pieces have to be fit together in the course.This has to be tested, both by the developers and
by other people, e.g. a sample of the intended audience.
In the case of asynchronous learning, the course activities and content documents are the only links
between the distant learner and the institute. It is therefore very important that course materials are
visually appealing and attractive.
Exercise
Simulate a forum discussion
a. Go to the Moodle Intro course.
b. Go to the social forum for general use in the general section.
c. React to 1-2 postings.
d. Experiment with the various views on forum contributions.
Add a section summary, a learning resource and direct text
a. Go to section of your course, you are developing.
b. Add some clarifying text in the section summary.
c. Add a learning resource, e.g. a page with fake information.
d. Add direct text (label).
e. Save the changes.
Add a learning activity
a. Go to your own course.
b. Create the forum, you prepared before.
c. Create the assignment, you prepared before.
d. Create the choice, you prepared before.
e. Create the chat, you prepared before.
Insert a picture
a. Goto www.flickr.com.
b. Search for pictures that describe your course.
c. Select one of the pictures; are the copyrights OK?
d. Choose the appropriate size.
e. Download the picture from Flickr to your computer.
f. Upload the picture from your computer to Moodle.
23
24. g. Place the picture in the Summary of Section 0 of your course.
h. Add a copyright notice.
Insert a video clip
a. Go to www.youtube.com.
b. Search for videos about a topic in your course.
c. Select one of the video's; are the copyrights OK?
d. Copy the code to embed the video in your own Moodle page.
e. Go to your own Moodle course.
f. Create an empty page.
g. Edit the page content, switch t o HTML mode, paste the YouTube embed code.
h. Add a copyright notice and save the changes.
i. Now, repeat inserting a video via the Moodle file picker.
Enroll students to test your course
a. Ask your neighbours to test your course; register them as students in your course.
b. Other participants may ask you to test their course. Look at the Courses block in the left column
of your course. It will show the courses you have access to. Click on them and have a look.
24
25. 6 Implementation phase 13:45-14:30 - 45'
Synopsis
The realisation phase ends with the creation of the master copy of the new course. Now it is time to
really organise the effective and efficient use of the course. It has to be reproduced for use in other
institutes and/or published for use by students. This phase ends when the course passes acceptance
tests by the client organisation, by the intended users (staff) and by the organisational unit that will
be responsible for the systems management.
The success or failure of an online course depends heavily on information and communication
technology. In this phase the online course has to be transferred to the organisation that is going to
exploit it. This requires technical documentation, an acceptance test and possibly training sessions.
Exercise
Work with individual conditions
a. It is possible to work with individual learning paths that are implemented automatically. In that
case the teacher specifies a condition for enabling a resource ore an activity for an individual
learner. Such a condition might depend on completing an earlier activity.
b. The trainer will show how this mechanism works. Copy it for your own course.
Work with parallel groups
a. It is possible to work with parallel groups of learners. They all use the same resources and
activities. However, instead of being plenary, some activities might be executed in group mode.
In that case, Moodle behaves as if every group has its own version of that activity. This
mechanism is called group mode. The teacher may toggle between plenary, separated groups
and visible groups.
b. The trainer will show how this mechanism works. Copy it for your own course.
Work with different groups
a. Normally each resource or activity is available for all learners. However, it is possible to restrict a
resource or an activity to a specific grouping, i.e. a set of groups. In this way the teacher can work
with learners at various levels with appropriate resources and activities for each level.
b. The trainer will show how this mechanism works. Copy it for your own course.
25
26. 7 Evaluation phase 14:45-15:30 - 45'
Synopsis
Scales
Teachers can create new custom scales to be used in a course for any grading activities. The name of
the scale should be a phrase that identifies it clearly: this will appear in scale- selection lists, as well
as on context-sensitive help buttons.
The scale itself is defined by an ordered list of values, ranging from negative to positive, separated by
commas. For example: Disappointing, Not good enough, Average, Good, Very good, Excellent!
Scales should also include a good description of what it means and how it is expected to be used.
This description will appear in help pages for teachers and students.
Finally, there may be one or more "Standard" scales defined on your site by the system
administrator. These will be available in all courses.
Exercise
Simulate the gradebook
a. Go to the gradebook of your course and see how it looks for you as teacher.
b. Go to the gradebook of a course where you are a student and see how it looks there.
Add a new scale
a. Teachers can define their own (or shared) scales for use in rating processes.
b. The trainer will show how this mechanism works. Copy it for your own course.
Add a feedback form
a. Go to your course.
b. At a feedback form to the last section.
c. Fill the feedback form with three questions.
d. Invite your test "students" to fill in the form.
e. Go to he course you are a student in. Fill the feedback form there yourself.
26
27. 8 Conclusion 15:30-16:00 - 30'
What is left?
This workshop could not spend time to widgets and a few other concepts. For reasons of
completeness we list them here.
Widgets
Moodle course pages usually have three columns. The left and right columns may be filled with static
direct text and/or dynamic widgets, i.e. information blocks with automatically changing content.
Here is a list of all these widgets:
a. Activities
b. Admin bookmarks
c. Blog menu
d. Blog tags
e. Calendar
f. Comments
g. Community finder
h. Course completion status
i. Course overview
j. Course/site description
k. Courses
l. Feedback
m. Flickr
n. Free text (HTML)
o. Global search
p. Latest news
q. Logged in user
r. Login
s. Main menu
t. Mentees
u. Messages
v. My private files
w. Navigation
x. Network servers
y. Online users
z. People
27
28. aa. Quiz results
bb. Random glossary entry
cc. Recent activity
dd. Recent blog entries
ee. Remote RSS feeds
ff. Search forums
gg. Section hyperlinks
hh. Self completion
ii. Settings
jj. Social activities
kk. Tags
ll. Upcoming events
mm. Youtube
Other concepts
Other concepts that could not be dealt with during the one day workshop are:
• blogs, notes, comments and messages
• roles and permissions
• user registration options and student enrolment options
• managing rss feeds (incoming and outgoing)
• moodle system administration
Afterthought
The main lessons participants of the full training learnt were:
• When moving to online courses or online support for face-to-face courses, teachers should keep
in mind that there is a clear difference between course development and course delivery.
• During course development, designing the course and realising the course are two different
activities, maybe even different phases.
• Whatever support the computer will offer you, you have to plan and prepare your computer
activities before.
• Going online is more than replacing your classroom with an Internet connection. It implies a new
way of course development and a new way of course delivery.
Exercise
Fill the evaluation form
a. Go to the Moodle Intro course, section 8.
b. Go to the Evaluation Forum and give your reply to the three postings there.
28
30. Learning resources
Learning resources are passive; they can be opened, read and/or watched. That is it. No user data is
fed back to the Moodle system; only the fact that the resource was clicked upon.
Book
The learning resource "Book" consists of a set of pages and a table of contents. The table of contents
is up to two levels deep. The pages each have a title plus rich text. Typically, a teacher produces the
book, a learner only reads/views it. Eventually, learners may print single chapters and/or the whole
book.
Teachers prefer the book rather than a series of separate pages, because the book costs only one line
of space in the central column, is automatically accompanied by its table of contents and can be
printed by chapter (page) or as a whole. Further, the book can easily be extended without
consequences for the central column of the course. Compared with a Word document, a book is
better integrated into the Moodle environment and may contain multimedia. On the contrary,
preparing a book takes more time than uploading a Word document.
Direct text (label)
The learning resource "direct text (label)" simply implies placing direct text (rich multimedia) directly
in the central column of the course. The central column often is considered as the table of contents
of the course (as it mainly contains a long series of clickable hyperlinks). Not only can direct text help
to better structure the central column (labels), but also could it be used to add rich content like
pictures or video clips directly to the central column.
File (Resource)
The learning resource "File", simply is a computer file that can be downloaded to the user's device or
opened or played via a plugin in the user's internet browser or via an appropriate player application.
Whatever the options are (and whether the file can be opened / played at all) mainly depends on the
facilities available on the user's device and is therefore beyond teacher's control.
A typical format for files is PDF (portable document format). It requires a PDF browser plugin or a
PDF reader. These are freely available for all kinds of devices.
Folder with files
The learning resource "Folder" (with files) is a location where a teacher can make more than one file
available for opening / downloading by their learners. The folder also may contain sub-folders at
various levels. Typically, a teacher produces the folder with files, a learner only downloads / opens
them. Eventually, learners may zip various files before downloading them.
Teachers prefer the folder rather than a series of separate files, because the folder costs only one
line of the central column, offers additional navigation via folders and sub-folders, and enables
30
31. downloading of separate or zipped files. Adding extra files to an existing folder does not have any
consequences for the central column of the course.
IMS content package
The learning resource "IMS content package" allows for packages conforming the IMS Content
Packaging specification to be played in the course. No scores or other data are fed back to the
Moodle system upon completion.
Page
The learning resource "Page" consists of is single page. It has a title plus rich content. Typically, a
teacher creates and/or updates the page content; a learner only reads/views it.
URL
The learning resource "URL" opens an external resource. It is good practice to open external
resources in a separate tab or window of your browser. If it is opened in the course window, the user
cannot return to the course easily when closing the external resource.
Learning activities
Compared to learning resources, learning activities require more activity from the learner. They
learner have to respond to them and their input is used by the system. Eventually the learner's
efforts may be graded or rated, either automatically, or by their peers or by the teacher.
External tool
The learning activity "External tool" is a bridge between the Moodle course and an external
website.The bridge handles the learner authentication for the external site. The external site might
return performance data to be fed back into the Moodle system. It depends on the nature of the
external site whether the bridge can be considered as an individual or a social learning activity.
The external tool bridge has been based on the IMS LTI (Learning Tools Interoperability) standard.
Moodle is a so called LTI consumer. The external website has to be configured as a so called LTI
producer. By the way, Moodle also can act as a producer itself. Therefore, a Moodle course can easily
connect to a course on another Moodle system.
Individual activities
Individual learning activities are learning activities of a single learner. Other learners might do the
same, however there is no interaction between them.
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32. Assignment
The individual learning activity "Assignment" consists of an instruction for an activity, the execution
of the activity by the learner and the commenting, grading and/or rating of its outcomes by the
teacher.
The assignment might imply the submission of a set of files, a single file only, a text entered in a web
form or even no submission at all. In the latter case the assignment is called an offline assignment.
Examples are a classroom presentation, a physical exercise, an outreach activity.
CAI (Lesson)
The individual learning activity "CAI (Lesson)" is a traditional Computer-Assisted Instruction activity. It
consists of a set of pages connected by questions, answers and answer dependent branches. The
learner starts on page 1, reads the text and is tested via a multiple choice question at the bottom of
the page. If the answer is correct, a next page is displayed. If the answer is not correct another page
is displayed, e.g. one with extra exercises or help information.
This activity is meant for drilling the learners in mastering a well defined topic. It can also be used for
a simple simulation, e,g, an adventure game (branched story). Compared with the other learning
activities, developing a CAI (Lesson) can be very time consuming.
Choice
The individual learning activity "Choice" is a simple questionnaire with only one multiple choice
question. The teacher may set a maximum of learners that might choose a certain option. The
teacher also determines whether, when and how the outcomes of this mini poll are published to the
learners.
Feedback form
The individual learning activity "Feedback" opens a form with open and closed questions and
corresponding entryfields, the learner may fill. The teacher may determine whether filling the
questionnaire is anonymous or not. They also indicate whether the outcomes are visible for the
students.
The teacher builds the questionnaire. The activity can show a summary report immediately. The
outcomes also can be exported, e.g. to Excel.
Journal
The individual learning activity "Journal" offers the learner an instruction to reflect on certain issues
and to enter them on a dedicated page. This page is only visible for the learner and the teacher. The
journal may be "open" for a certain amount of days (or for ever). During this period, the learner can
come back and update the journal.
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33. Quiz
The individual learning activity "Quiz" can be used for self-study by the learners and for testing them.
The teacher may specify the conditions to take the test and the way it will be rated automatically.
They can further specify, when, how and for whom the feedback and the results of testing will
become available.
The questions to be used in a quiz are not part of the quizzes themselves. Moodle maintains a
question database for every course. The teacher fills this question database (over the years) or
imports questions from other sources. The questions are categorised and completed with feedback
information for the learners. When adding a quiz to a Moodle course, the teacher only has to select
the required questions from the question database.
SCORM package
The learning individual activity resource "SCORM package" allows content packages that follow the
SCORM standard to be delivered via the Moodle system. It is possible to feed scores or other data
back to the Moodle system upon completion.
Survey
The individual learning activity "Survey" is a ready-made questionnaire that the learner can fill. In
fact, the teacher may choose between a few different questionnaires. Once the learners have filled it
in, the system prepares a report for the teacher.
Social activities
Social learning activities are learning activities of a single learner interacting and collaborating via the
online activity with other learners. Interaction is either synchronous (at the same time) or
asynchronous (not necessarily at the same time).
Chat
The social learning activity "Chat" is a tool for simultaneous communication. In fact it is an interactive
web page where learners and teachers alike can type text messages online, which can be seen by
other people in that same chat room in real time. Several users may be texting at once in the same
space.
The teacher may restrict the opening times of the chat room. They also can indicate whether the
session is logged, how long the log is kept and whether learners may see the log or not, even if they
not participated to the chat session.
Database
The social learning activity "Database" gives the learners access to a structured collection of data
(records) that contain a fixed collection of fields, e.g. library cards describing books (records) with
33
34. title, author and year of publication (fields).The learners can add new records, search for existing
records, browse a condensed list of records etc.
The teacher determines the structure of the database (which fields are used) and the lay-out of the
different views to display the data, i.e. list view, detail view, entry form.
Forum
The social learning activity "Forum" enables learners and teachers to hold structured, thematic
conversations in the form of posted messages. They do not have to be online at the same time.
Within a forum there can be several discussion topics and related threads of reactions. All
posted messages may have files attached to them.
All learners and teachers of a course can contribute to a forum, i.e. post a new topic, react to topics,
read them. They may subscribe/unsubscribe to the automatic e-mail notifications for the forum as
they like. In any case, all messages remain archived for later reference.
Learners and teachers can search a forum topic by using the "Search all forums" widget. They can
also browse one of the forums. All messages are listed in a nested form so that they easily recognize
the structure of the conversation. They also can order them from new to old or in a threaded way.
When setting-up a forum, the teacher may select one of the following forum types:
1. A single simple discussion - A single discussion topic which everyone can reply to.
2. Each person posts one discussion - Each learner can post exactly one new discussion topic,
which everyone can then reply to.
3. Q and A forum - Learners must first post their perspectives before viewing other learners'
posts.
4. Standard forum displayed in a blog-like format - An open forum where anyone can start a new
discussion at any time, and in which discussion topics are displayed on one page with "Discuss
this topic" links.
5. Standard forum for general use - An open forum where anyone can start a new discussion at
any time.
The fifth type, the standard forum for general use, is the most generic one.
There is one more forum type: the News forum. The Moodle system creates such a forum
automatically in every new course. Teachers cannot create a Newsforum themselves. A News forum
does not allow a real two way discussion. In fact, it is a mechanism to broadcast news and
announcements to all learners and teachers of a certain course.
Glossary
The social learning activity "Glossary" gives the learners access to a collection of data (records) that
contain three fields, "concept" (a short text), "definition" (a long text that might include multimedia),
34
35. and categories. Originally, it is meant to create, maintain and publish a list of definitions. It may be
used for other types of data as well, a simple catalogue, a collection cartoons.
The widget "random glossary entry" displays one entry (card) from a glossary in a block in the left or
right column of a Moodle course page. The teacher may set how often this random selection takes
place, i.e. the selected entry will change. This can be used to create automatically a cartoon-of-the-
day, a tip-of-the-week, etc.
Wiki
The social learning activity "Wiki" gives the learners the opportunity to build together a simple web
site, consisting of pages with text, multimedia and hyperlinks from one page to another. It may also
be used for each student individually (visible for teachers) or for the teacher alone (visible for
students). A wiki keeps a record of all changes and enables the users to go back to earlier versions of
a certain page when appropriate.
Workshop
The social learning activity "Workshop" is a combination of assignment and peer review. The
learners submit an assignment and then have to assess each others submissions. The ultimate rating
depends on how they have been rated by their peers and how their own rating was assessed by the
teacher. The activity has a large amount of options, is therefore very powerful, but also rather
complex to practice.
35
36. Cross reference
The following table lists for each course component:
• whether it can be allocated exclusively to a certain grouping (set of groups),
• wether group mode is available (toggle between plenary, separated groups and visual groups),
• which criteria can be used to determine automatically whether the activity has been
completed.
Type Name Grouping Group Completed?
mode
Resource All Y viewed (before possible deadline)
Activity Assignment Y Y viewed and being rated (before possible deadline)
Activity Chat Y Y viewed (before possible deadline)
Activity Choice Y Y viewed and/or submitted (before eventual deadline)
Activity Database y y viewed and/or rated (before eventual deadline)
Activity Feedback form Y Y viewed and/or submitted (before eventual deadline)
Activity Forum Y Y viewed, being rated, n times new discussion or reaction, n
times new discussion only, ntimes reaction only (before
potential deadline)
Activity Glossary Y N viewed, being rated, n times new entry (before possible
deadline)
Activity Journal Y Y rated (before eventual deadline)
Activity Lesson Y N viewed and/or rated (before eventual deadline)
Activity Quiz Y Y viewed and being rated (before possible deadline)
Activity Scorm Y N viewed and/or rated (before eventual deadline)
Activity Survey Y Y viewed (before possible deadline)
Activity Wiki Y Y viewed (before possible deadline)
Activity Workshop Y Y viewed, being rated, n times new entry (before possible
deadline)
36
37. Sofos Consultancy and Moodle
Overview: Moodle
Moodle is a free and open source Virtual Learning Environment for class-room support and
distance learning. It offers authoring, content management, course administration,
communication and the delivery of learning resources and individual and social learning
activities.
Intro: • Moodle - an overview, presentation, 1½ hour
• Moodle for education managers, workshop, ½ day
• Moodle for HR managers, workshop, ½ day
• Moodle for students, workshop, 1½ hour
Training: • Moodle - update, workshop, ½ day
• Moodle 2.0 for system administrators, training, 2 days
• Moodle 2.0 for teachers, training, 2 days
• ICT skills for knowledge workers, training, 3 days
Services: • Critical walkthrough of a Moodle site, advise, ½ day
• Design your own Moodle course, workshop, ½ day
Applications: • Tactec-plus - organizational change, workshop, 1 day
Projects: • Implementing virtual learning environment (Moodle); Polytechnic College,
Suriname; 2011
• Workshop on policy and management of virtual learning environment; Stad Gent,
Belgium; 2011
• Small assignments on Moodle and Cyberdam; various; 2011
• Implementing collaborative work environment & public web site for WHATER
project (EU); VUA, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 2011
• Implementing e-learning at Petroleum Geology Dept.; Anton de Kom University of
Suriname, Suriname; 2011
• Consulting on implementing e-learning and training in Moodle for System
Administrators; Bethlehem University, Palestine; 2010-2011
• Implementing a Virtual Learning Environment (Moodle); Institute of Social Studies
of the Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Hague, The Netherlands; 2008-2010
• Establishing Ned-Moove, the Dutch Moodle Association and acting as secretary of
the board; Moodle community in Dutch speaking countries; 2007-2010
• Training for lecturers on online course development, training for administrative
staff on online course delivery, training for ICT professionals on Moodle systems
37
38. management.; MSB - Mona School of Business, Jamaica; 2007-2007
• Training for lecturers on online course development and delivery; UNESCO/UWI
CUPIDE project, Jamaica; 2006-2002
• Introducing e-learning to support business training, implementing LMS, instructing
staff and trainers.; GITP - training company, The Netherlands; 2006-2006
Publications: • The future with Moodle; Paper presented at Moodlemoot Ireland & UK, Dublin,
Ireland, 2-4 April 2012; Pieter van der Hijden;
http://www.slideshare.net/pvdhyden/12pvdh-futuremoodle
• Dynamic courses: individual learning paths and online collaborative exercises in
moodle 2; Paper presented at Moodlemoot Ireland & UK, Dublin, Ireland, 2-4 April
2012; Pieter van der Hijden; http://www.slideshare.net/pvdhyden/12pvdh-
indlearningpaths
• Critical Walkthrough of a Moodle Site; Half day session with a small group of
stakeholders to assess their Moodle site from various perspectives; Pieter van der
Hijden; 2011; http://www.slideshare.net/pvdhyden/moodle-walkthrough-
handout
• Moodle 2.0 themes; Overview of the standard Moodle 2.0 themes and the
parameters accessible for system administrators; Pieter van der Hijden; Sofos
Consultancy, 2011; http://www.slideshare.net/pvdhyden/moodle-20-themes
• Moodle and Gaming 2.0; Proposal to adapt Moodle for Policy Exercises, Business
Simulations and Experiential Learning Games; Pieter van der Hijden; Presentation
at Moodlemoot UK, London, 2010.
• How to implement an e-learning system; i.e. Moodle; Pieter van der Hijden;
Online Educa, Berlin, Germany, 2008.
• From learning design to game design and back; the Cyberdam example; Pieter van
der Hijden; ISAGA, Kaunas, Lithuania, 2008.
• Gaming/simulation and the Virtual Learning Environment; Pieter van der Hijden;
ISAGA, Nijmegen, The Netherlands, 2007.
See also: • Moodle.org - International Moodle Community
• Ned-Moove - Nederlandstalige Moodle Vereniging
Rights: The name Moodle™ is a registered trademark of the Moodle Trust.
Sofos Consultancy / Pieter van der Hijden - 2011 - This work is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.
38
39. More about Moodle
• Look at the community web site at http://moodle.org for extended documentation and for
forums on every Moodle component.
• Read "Using Moodle - 2nd Edition"; based on Moodle 1.9!; Free Download (4MB).
• See the Overview of Moodle 2.0 books.
• See the growing number of books (25+) and e-books on Moodle published by Packt Publishing;
table of contents and often also a sample chapter are available free.
• Moodle books at Amazon, instructional movies on YouTube and Vimeo.
• Visit Moodlemoot conferences in various countries and regions.
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