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Using Moodle as a Learning Management System in the ELA Classroom

Using Moodle as a Learning Management System in the ELA Classroom . By: Debby Caven Digital Touch Education. What is Moodle?. M odular O bject- O riented D ynamic L earning E nvironment

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Using Moodle as a Learning Management System in the ELA Classroom

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  1. Using Moodle as a Learning Management System in the ELA Classroom By: Debby Caven Digital Touch Education

  2. What is Moodle? • Modular Object-Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment • Moodle is an Open Source Course Management System (CMS), also known as a Learning Management System (LMS) or a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). It has become very popular among educators around the world as a tool for creating online dynamic web sites for their students. • Moodle is free to download, change, share, improve and customize to whatever YOU want it be.

  3. What is Moodle? (cont.) • Moodle has features that allow it to scale to very large deployments and hundreds of thousands of students, yet it can also be used for a primary school or an education hobbyist. • Many institutions use it as their platform to conduct fully online courses, while some use it simply to augment face-to-face courses (known as blended learning).

  4. What is Moodle? (cont.) • Many of our users love to use the activity modules (such as forums, databases and wikis) to build richly collaborative communities of learning around their subject matter (in the social constructionist tradition), while others prefer to use Moodle as a way to deliver content to students and assess learning using assignments or quizzes.

  5. Web 2.0 and Bloom’s Taxonomy

  6. What Are Some Activities Available in Moodle 2.0?

  7. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom • Debby Caven-6th Grade Lake Shore Middle School in Mequon, Wisconsin • • Book study: Focusing on “Strategies that Work” while doing various read-aloud activities, understanding “netiquette”, applying the Habits of Mind of Art Costa.

  8. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  9. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  10. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  11. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom Paula Wick, Stoner Prairie Elementary School, Grades 4/5, S.S./ELA, “Wis-Concentrating” • Integrate social studies and literacy to learn and teach about Wisconsin. eClass4learning (262) 644.4300

  12. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  13. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  14. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom eClass4learning (262) 644.4300

  15. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  16. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  17. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom • Teresa Voss-10th Grade, Verona High School, Library/ELA “Veil of Roses” • • Book discussion: Read, discuss, research the setting, investigate a controversial issue.

  18. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  19. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  20. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  21. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  22. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  23. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  24. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  25. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  26. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom • Kris Cody-Johnson, 11-12 grades, Verona Area High School, English, “Cody Englishfor Transition” • • Focus on the writing and research process

  27. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  28. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  29. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  30. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  31. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  32. Examples of Moodle Within the ELA Classroom

  33. Moodle & Lit Circles • Moodle.org: • Basic literature circles have a number of jobs. Mine have 4 core jobs and an accessory job: Discussion Director, Illustrious Illustrator, Literary Luminary, and Creative Connector. (Students also complete Word Wizard.) • When students complete their weekly job, they go to the Moodle site to post their job in a forum. Once that is complete, students must post comments.

  34. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  35. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  36. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  37. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  38. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  39. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  40. Moodle & Lit Circlesfrom “Online Literature Circles: An Engaging Way to Learn”

  41. Moodle & Blogs • Create a forum question and students can respond to the question – all can see. • Create an “online text activity” or “journal activity” and students individually respond – only the teacher will view this entry.

  42. Moodle & Blogs • Web 2.0 Tools; • Kidblog(kidblog.org) • Edublog(edublogs.org) • Edmodo(edmodo.com) • Kids Learn to Blog (kidslearntoblog.com)

  43. Questions?More Information? • debbycaven@mac.com • Digital Touch Education • 262-347-7254-Cell • http://www.eclass4learning.com/hosting/

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