Human

For fellow teachers…

Archive for August, 2008

2 Minute Moodles - Evaluation tools in Moodle

Posted by Tomaz Lasic on 26th August 2008

The fourth batch of 2 Minute Moodles is finally cooked and ready for anyone on the Moodle Tutorials (2 Minute Moodles) page. It covers the basic set up and use of choice, quizzes, assignments and polls in Moodle. These are simply the main and often most used evaluation tools in Moodle, explained step by step for the and the not-so tech savvy.

But Moodle would not be Moodle if these were the only evaluation tools. There are many other options available either as standard features (lesson, workshop) or added modules, activities, blocks or plugins. Check the Moodle database of these goodies, there is bound to be something to please you there.

As always, feedback is welcome. Happy moodling!

Posted in Moodle | No Comments »

Giving all students a voice - Moodle forum

Posted by Tomaz Lasic on 18th August 2008

flyAfter an amazingly insight-rich, highly enjoyable and very well-received online forum across four senior classes at our school on the theme ‘What would you improve at our school?” this week, I simply had to put in a big plug for forums in Moodle. I write this as a combination of teaching and tech tips and strategies for using forums in Moodle. Most of all, I write this with my students, their voice and their learning in mind.

Like many teachers, I often run class discussion. A problem or a question is presented with individuals invited to call out with answers. Sometimes students are in groups for all or part of the discussion with more than one topic to discuss.

What I have ideally wanted is for each student to contribute in some way to either the group or class discussion. In reality, I often get a few regular contributors to call out with some quality answers, a few attention seekers with not such high quality answers and the rest of the class likely to switch off.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Moodle | 3 Comments »

How can Moodle change a school

Posted by Tomaz Lasic on 6th August 2008

Before starting to work as a part-time technology integrator at our school this year, the principal asked me to come up with one ‘thing’, one key strategy for staff and students to ICT to improve their teaching and learning. After seeing the flexibility, robustness and ‘organic’ nature of Moodle the choice was pretty simple to make.

The video, shown here in two separate clips, is not so much about the technical features of Moodle but about people using it. I am forever indebted to our wonderful network administrator Russell Clarke, my colleagues from Moodle champions to Moodle beginners, and the students, who have taken to it so well (well, a healthy majority of them at least). Without them, none of the things shown in the clip would happen.

The focus of the first clip (9:58 min) is on the ways different, mostly standard features of Moodle have been used by various teachers and students at our school. If you can’t see this video (Part 1) please click here.

The second clip (5:43 min) shows the positive and in some cases very significant changes the establishment of Moodle has brought to our school in terms of using ICT to improve our core business – teaching and learning while modelling, establishing and maintaining healthy human relationships. If you can’t see the clip (Part 2) please click here.

I end this post with an anecdote from a teacher at our school. Over the last couple of weeks of holidays, my colleague Kim Bebbington built a fantastic course on Australian History, now shared by four other Year 8 classes. The course includes an assignment, due in week 3 of the upcoming term.

Deliberately or not, Kim left the course open to students to enrol and look at as he was building it. Imagine his (pleasant) surprise when he received a fully completed assignment (due in week 3) by one of the students in his class two days before the start of term.

But as wonderful and useful as Moodle has been, it is the people who are making the difference. It is not the technology itself - it is what we do with it.

If you are a ‘moodling’ teacher yourself, looking into it, or a person responsible for getting (particularly) teachers up to speed with Moodle and ICT in general I would love to hear from you - there is much to share and learn from each other.

Posted in Change?, Moodle, Professional development, Teaching | 30 Comments »