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The Whole Kit and Caboodle on Moodle. Jonathon Sweetin & Tina Farmer Pitt Community College. Agenda. Introduce Moodle Share our migration experiences Highlight some of our favorite features of Moodle. What’s in a name?. M odular O bject O riented D ynamic L earning E nvironment
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The Whole Kit and Caboodle on Moodle Jonathon Sweetin & Tina Farmer Pitt Community College
Agenda • Introduce Moodle • Share our migration experiences • Highlight some of our favorite features of Moodle
What’s in a name? • Modular Object Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment • Also a verb that describes the process of lazily meandering through something, doing things as it occurs to you to do them, an enjoyable tinkering that often leads to insight and creativity • Anyone who uses Moodle is a Moodler
Moodle might be fine for small schools, but it’s not powerful enough for an institution as large as mine. • BUSTED • CONFIRMED
About Moodle • Is an active and evolving work in progress • Started in the ‘90s, first released in 2002 • Moodle.org user community • Moodle.com company website • Moodle Stats as of June 16, 2008: • 45,271 registered sitesin 199 countries • 1,985,661 Courses • 20,535,286 Users • 1,912,476 Teachers
Martin Dougiamas • Background in Information Technology • Began developing Moodle while working as a System Administrator for Web CT • Web CT and Blackboard frustrated him “There had to be a better way” • Went on to complete a Masters and PhD in education. Moodle was his thesis project. • “It is crucial to me that this software be easy to use - in fact it should be as intuitive as possible. “ Martin Dougiamas
Moodle Architecture • Designed to support a social constructionist framework of education • Learning is more effective when constructing something for others to experience • Students learn from each other and the teacher • Moodle is not constrained by what will sell well, so the code that is developed is often at the cutting edge of educational thinking
Once Moodle is stable, it will be put under license. If it were any good, they’d already be charging for it. • BUSTED • CONFIRMED
Is it really free? • Moodle is provided freely as Open Source software • "I'm committed to continuing my work on Moodle and on keeping it Open and Free. I have a deeply-held belief in the importance of unrestricted education and empowered teaching, and Moodle is the main way I can contribute to the realization of these ideals." - Martin Dougiamas
Open Source • The software itself is free, but the company makes money from it in other ways • Server hosting • Customization • Users are guaranteed the right to copy, modify and redistribute the software • The software is supported and updated by the company • More importantly though, it’s also supported by a huge online community of enthusiasts – Moodle.org
There’s no documentation, training or technical support available for Moodle – you’re on your own • BUSTED • CONFIRMED
Moodle.org • Currently over 452,000 registered users (June 08) • Averages over 500 new users each day • All of these people have a vested interest in finding and fixing errors and making improvements to Moodle. • Due to community effort Open source software tends to be more secure, more stable and more quickly developed than equivalent closed source (proprietary) software
PCC Background Info • PCC adopted Blackboard in 1999 • Currently, 550+ active Blackboard courses with 5000+ students • Summer 2007, PCC joined the North Carolina Moodle Users Group sponsored by the Community College System Office • Moodle to date, 27 courses with 670 students
Students find Moodle very user friendly. • BUSTED • CONFIRMED
Student Feedback • Student feedback has been very positive • Students just “get it”
Faculty Feedback • Overall very positive • Once they get started they love it • Course conversion is not easy • Moodle is a mind-set shift; some handle it better than others • Instructors that tend to use discussion boards, chats and group projects seem to be the most enthusiastic
Moodle: Layout List of Blocks
Moodle: Participants Participants Screen Can filter by time since last activity. Can sort by all column headings. Displays pictures, if added to profile. Gives quick access to student’s profile & blogs. Can quickly send messages to selected students from this screen.
Moodle: Resources & Activities Moodle Activities Moodle Resources Moodle gives you two types of items to add. Resources are things for students to look at or read. Activities are things for students to do.
Moodle: Reports Reports screen WOW, WOW, WOW!!! Can see details about every click made. Can sort, filter and view in greater detail.
Moodle: Message Incoming message A hybrid between instant messaging and email If a student is online, when you send a message an instant message box alerts them to your message immediately If they are not online an email is sent You can message students in bulk from the Participants screen. A Message History log is saved of all messages you send through Moodle. Messages are automatically sent to student whenever you post grades.
Moodle: Calendar Big WOW! Displayed prominently on the main course page. All due dates are auto-linked directly into the calendar. Mouse over highlighted date for more info. Students absolutely love this feature. Events can be set at the school, class, group & participant level.
Moodle: Glossary Your students can post glossary entries or you can restrict this privilege to instructors only. If a term in the glossary appears with-in the course, it is auto linked back to its definition. You can turn this feature on and off.
Web Links • Moodle.org • Moodle’s user community site • jsweetin.wordpress.com • NC Moodle User’s Group Blog, download our presentations & handouts • http://www.pittcc.edu/distance-learning/faculty-resources/ • Pitt’s DL Faculty Resources page. Will soon have a collection of Moodle documentation posted.