LMS Content Module

I have a new appreciation for Moodle course designers. In the past I have been irritated with the layouts or links not functioning, or something being illogically laid out (from my point of view). Now I understand that things are that way due to the limitations of either the course designers’ knowledge or what Moodle is capable of handling. Moodle does not function as intuitively as I would have expected. It is not possible to simply cut and paste images neither from Word, nor from other sections on the same page. Text can be cut and pasted but images need to be imported. Equations also do not transfer over easily. I built a Math 10 course so there were quite a few equations I had and wanted to display. They would not transfer over easily from word. I used a work around by creating an image of each equation and importing them into Moodle. I am sure, with more research, I could find a much more simple method.

Other aspects of Moodle were quite easy to pick up. Moodle Docs for the page found at the bottom of each page was very helpful as was Moodle 2.0: How-To. The forums, quizzes and assignments were quite simple to create. Moodle basically walks you through the process. There was of course some trial and error but on the whole, things worked as I would have expected.

One of the biggest challenges I had was creating a splash page. I had completed what I wanted to include in the unit, with collapsed topics so the front page was very clean and neat looking and then realized I needed a splash page. For some reason I really struggled with this. I think I created a function one in the end but I am still not happy with it. I end the button and links in the table working just fine on the page but they would not show up on the front page. Later I realized that recreating the table, with images and links in the description rather than in the page content would have them show up on the front page. Not intuitive.

I struggled at the beginning with making a digital story.  I didn’t know where to start, what story to tell or even what media to use.  I stumbled upon a web page, 50+ Web Ways to tell a Story (Tangient, 2015) helping with digital story telling, setting it up like a clinic. It was extremely helpful in giving me direction and even suggested about 20 different apps to try.  I was going to fall back on my old tried and true iMovie but really wanted to try something different.  I settled on an app called Shadow Puppet Edu by Shadow Puppet Inc, a free download from iTunes for my iPad.

I decided to tell a very brief story of the Earth. Teenagers still have that interest in dinosaurs they had as children even though they never really cover it again in the curriculum. I tried to use creative commons images that related to each date I selected from Earth’s past. Something visual to represent what was written in text. I also chose not to talk and have the information come in short text burst only. This way the music helped to tell the story and also reduced my voice causing a distraction. I used the digital story in the unit on measurement for scale. At the end of the unit I included a project where the students watch the digital story and then create a scaled timeline.

On the whole the app was extremely easy to use.  It includes an Educational image search from the Library of Congress, NASA, Met Museum of Art and the Web search looks for Fair use and Creative Commons images!!  The app even keeps track and lists all the image credits at the end for you.  Simply click on the desired image and it is added to your list.  Moving the slides into order is very simple as is adding text.  Simply click on the common icons, type, change colours and fonts, done.

The one major draw back I found when using this app was the record or adding sound function.  Once sound was added I could not go back and edit any text.  Adding sound was the last and final step.  It was simply an annoyance for me as I didn’t add voice comments but I can see how the would be a MAJOR issue if someone wanted to talk at the same time as having background music.

There also was not a preview option.  I couldn’t watch what I had done so far without it being completed.  Nor did I find an option to set how long a slide played for.  Now this must have been a miss on my part.  Manually progressing the slides while recording the music doesn’t sound like an efficient method.  I felt like I was a teenager again, trying to tape-record my favourite song off the radio.

I can see many uses in the classroom for this app.  It would be great for student projects.  I am not sure, as teacher, I would use it for instruction again, but I will be trying it for student projects.

My Digital Story: A Brief History of Earth

References:

Ciampa, K. (2013). Learning in a mobile age: An investigation of student motivation. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 30(1), 82–96. Retrieved from http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcal.12036/epdf

Mabrito, M., Medley, R.  (2008) Why professor Johnny can’t read: Understanding the Net generation’s texts.  Innovate, 4(6), August/September.  Retrieved from http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.299.8529&rep=rep1&type=pdf

Moodle 2.0: How-To. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q3RJOAA9zdF7DB7oQTjaTV2Vk6uu2nlEKVlpXLg2DxM/edit

Moodle Docs for this page (2014). https://docs.moodle.org/26/en/

Tangient LLC.  (2015). 50+ Web Ways to tell a Story.  Retrieved from http://50ways.wikispaces.com/StoryTools

Wesch, M. (2007a). A vision of students today (& What teachers must do). Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/blogs/2008/10/a-vision-of-students-today-what-teachers-must-do

Wesch, M. (2007b). Web 2.0. The Machine is Us/ing Us: Web 2.0 in just under 5 minutes.  Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLlGopyXT_g

Assessment

Using Moodle to write a quiz was quite simple for me. In my experience I have that Mathematics lends itself quite well to the multiple choice/on line assessing. I picked the types of questions that were asked for in the assignment requirements and picked the subject matter that I felt best suited that type of format. For example absolute value and like term questions lend themselves well to matching questions. They are straightforward yes or no type questions. True /False would also work well for these but a matching question allows you to ask more questions at a time. Multiple choice style questions work well for one step algebra questions where the question is really testing one operation being completed at a time. I used the short answer options for the longer two-step algebra questions so the student can “show their work” and I would be able to see where they may be going off track and needing some redirection. For essay questions I set up “problems” a student has to work out mathematically and explain why/how they did which operations they chose.

 

I do agree with Gibbs and Simpson when they say that multiple choice test can lead to surface studying rather than studying for a deep understanding (2005).   For this introduction, unit I believe that a quick assessment to see if the students understand the basics of Math 9 and ready to move onto the Math 10 course, a surface view will suffice.

 

Gibbs, G., & Simpson, C. (2005). Conditions under which assessment supports students’ learning. Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 1(1), 3-31. Retrieved from http://www.open.ac.uk/fast/pdfs/Gibbs%20and%20Simpson%202004-05.pdf

 

 

Intro Module

This was my first experience building a course in the Moodle platform. I have supervised many students working through courses on Moodle over that last few years so I have had the opportunity to see aspects that I like and do not like; things that I found were user friendly for the students and things that were not. The Moodle platform has progressed a lot with the new update. I really like the Book format. I like the ability to chunk up information and dole it out in smaller pieces.

This is a course I would like to use in my school one day so I stuck to a format very similar to the courses we already have. I have found that the students prefer layouts that are familiar and thereby easy to use. They know where to go for information and how the program works. Courses that required students to hunt for information, or did not follow a linear path, led to frustration and an inclination to quit.

I found the actual creation components quite limiting. I ended up doing most of my layout in Word and the copying it over once I was satisfied. There must be a more efficient method of working within the Moodle platform, but that is what I ended up doing. I am very familiar with Word and like how easy it is to move things around, change table boundaries, and play with fonts. I am sure that the same formatting tools are available inside of the Moodle platform. I just couldn’t find them quickly. ie Is it possible to change the column boundaries inside of a table? Can you merge cells? Can you insert questions that the student needs to answer correctly before they can move onto the next page? Is that a feature of a Lesson? These are all questions I would like to explore more.

I would like to explore the Lessons option more with the next section. It seems like it will have more of an interactive feel to it. I only discovered it as I was nearing the end of this assignment and didn’t want to start over.

I added in a discussion forum and will create a section for each unit. I like the discussions that we have in this course so thought it might be a good mode of communication for help to problems for students. I am not sure how it would actually work in my situation, as the way we use Moodle at my school is very interactive with the students already. The students come to the supervising teacher with their questions in a face-to-face manor. If this were a 100% online course then I can see how the discussion forum could be very helpful (Anderson, 2008a).

I have decided to incorporate little quizzes with each lesson that a student must pass before they can move onto the next topic. I believe this option is possible as a feature of Lesson. Math is a very sequential subject with one concept being built upon the one before. Mini quizzes and unit tests should provide a formative assessment of how the student is progressing through the course. A midterm and final will provide summative assessment of how much was learned over all (Gibbs, 2005). Foundations and Pre-calculus Mathematics 10 has a Provincial Exam as well that is completely separate from the marks generated in this course. The final exam in this course will hopefully help to prepare students for the Provincial Exam as well as show them concepts or areas they need to go back and review.

Anderson, T. (2008a). Towards a theory of online learning. In T. Anderson & F. Elloumi (Eds.), Theory and practice of online learning. Edmonton AB: Athabasca University. Retrieved from http://www.aupress.ca/books/120146/ebook/02_Anderson_2008-Theory_and_Practice_of_Online_Learning.pdf

Gibbs, G., & Simpson, C. (2005). Conditions under which assessment supports students’ learning. Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 1(1), 3-31. Retrieved from http://www.open.ac.uk/fast/pdfs/Gibbs%20and%20Simpson%202004-05.pdf