Book Image

Moodle 2.0 First Look

Book Image

Moodle 2.0 First Look

Overview of this book

Moodle is currently the world's most popular E-learning platform. The long-awaited second version of Moodle is now available and brings with it greatly improved functionality. If you are planning to upgrade your site to Moodle 2.0 and want to be up-to-date with the latest developments, then this book is for you.This book takes an in-depth look at all of the major new features in Moodle 2.0 and how it differs from previous Moodle versions. It highlights changes to the standard installation and explains the new features with clear screenshots, so you can quickly take full advantage of Moodle 2.0. It also assists you in upgrading your site to Moodle 2.0, and will give you the confidence to make the move up to Moodle 2.0, either as an administrator or a course teacher.With its step-by-step introduction to the new features of Moodle 2.0, this book will leave you confident and keen to get your own courses up and running on Moodle 2.0. It will take you on a journey from basic navigation to advanced administration, looking at the changes in resource management and activity setup along the way. It will show you new ways tutors and students can control the pace of their learning and introduce you to the numerous possibilities for global sharing and collaborating now available in Moodle 2.0
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Moodle 2.0 First Look
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Managing blocks


Moodle has a great number of useful blocks that may be added to the front page, an individual course or made "sticky". In Moodle 1.9, it was also possible to add blocks to certain activities and resources if the administrator enabled this setting. Blocks are a very neat way of displaying information. The standard blocks include an online users block, an RSS feed block, and a random glossary entry block. Many more contributed blocks are available from the Downloads and Plugins tab of http://moodle.org/ New to Moodle 2.0 are the Comments block, the Private Files block, the Community block, and the Completion block, all of which we'll investigate later on in the book.

So, what's so different about them in Moodle 2.0. We need to first realize that blocks can be placed on pretty much any page in Moodle and that any block can be made "sticky".

Note

The option in 1.9 Site Administration | Modules | Blocks | Sticky blocks no longer exists in Moodle 2.0.

Let's test out the new blocks...