Book Image

Moodle 3 Administration - Third Edition

By : Alex Büchner
Book Image

Moodle 3 Administration - Third Edition

By: Alex Büchner

Overview of this book

Moodle is the de facto standard for open source learning platforms. However, setting up and managing a learning environment can be a complex task since it covers a wide range of technical, organizational, and pedagogical topics. This ranges from basic user and course management, to configuring plugins and design elements, all the way to system settings, performance optimization, events frameworks, and so on. This book concentrates on basic tasks such as how to set up and configure Moodle and how to perform day-to-day administration activities, and progresses on to more advanced topics that show you how to customize and extend Moodle, manage courses, cohorts, and users, and how to work with roles and capabilities. You’ll learn to configure Moodle plugins and ensure your VLE conforms to pedagogical and technical requirements in your organization. You’ll then learn how to integrate the VLE via web services and network it with other sites, including Mahara, and extend your system via plugins and LTI. By the end of this book, you will be able to set up an efficient, fully fledged, and secure Moodle system.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Moodle 3 Administration Third Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

A high-level overview


To give you an overview of courses, users, and roles, let's have a look at the following diagram. It shows nicely how central the three concepts are and also how other features are related to them. Again, all of their intricacies will be dealt with in due course, so for now, just start getting familiar with some Moodle terminology.

Let's start at the bottom-left and cycle through the pyramid clockwise. Users have to go through an Authentication process to get access to Moodle. They then have to go through the Enrolments step to be able to participate in Courses, which themselves are organized into Categories. Groups & Cohorts are different ways to group users at course level or site-wide. Users are granted Roles in particular Contexts. Which role is allowed to do what and which isn't, depends entirely on the Permissions set within that role.

The diagram also demonstrates a catch-22 situation. If we start with users, we have no courses to enroll them in to (except...