Book Image

Moodle 2.0 for Business Beginner's Guide

Book Image

Moodle 2.0 for Business Beginner's Guide

Overview of this book

Many people will recognize Moodle as a Virtual Learning Environment that can be used in schools to teach lessons and organize student information. Fewer people will realize that Moodle can be used in businesses to dispense training, share important documents, and encourage teamwork. Moodle 2.0 for Business Beginner's Guide will show you how to set up Moodle in your corporation. By introducing a system within your company that will allow for a centralized, accessible repository of knowledge, staff training will become a lot more streamlined, and the retention of skills will improve, leading to huge productivity benefits. An easy-to-access, user-friendly system is crucial to keep communication flowing in any successful business. By putting your H.R. documents, newsletters, discussions, and training documents all in one place, which is accessible from the office or from home, you are giving your employees all the information that they need to be productive and become integrated members of your company. This book will show you how to get your important business documents online, as well as the recruitment and training processes. You will learn how to move any existing processes to Moodle, as well as set up new ones that will have you wondering what you did before Moodle came along!
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Moodle 2.0 for Business Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Time for action – creating page jumps


You have now added a content page and a question page, but you're not done yet. Now we need to link the question page to the content page using a page jump. The page jump is simply the link between pages. We need to go back to the Jump field we skipped previously:

  1. Go back to the content page you created by selecting the edit icon to the right of the Building is on fire page. The edit icon looks like a hand holding a pencil.

  2. Scroll down to Content 1 and from the Jump drop-down menu, select the question page you created. For our example, it was Why is this a bad idea?.

  3. Set the jump for Content 2 to the End of the Lesson. If the user selects this option, they will end the lesson.

  4. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click on the Save page button. You will now be back at the edit lesson page and the Jump 1: field will now read Why is this a bad idea?.

What just happened?

We have now linked our pages together using page jumps. In a lesson module, page jumps...