Book Image

Drupal for Education and E-Learning - Second Edition - Second Edition

Book Image

Drupal for Education and E-Learning - Second Edition - Second Edition

Overview of this book

As social networks become more popular, their role in the classroom has come under scrutiny. Drupal offers a wide variety of useful tools for educators. Within a single Drupal site, you can set up social bookmarking, podcasting, video hosting, formal and informal groups, rich user profiles, and other features commonly associated with social web communities. "Drupal for Education and E-Learning - Second Edition" teaches you how to create your own social networking site to advance teaching and learning goals in the classroom, while giving you complete control over features and access. Communicate with students, share learning resources, and track assignments through simple tasks with this hands-on guide.In this book you will learn to install and configure the default Drupal distribution and then extend it to include blogs, bookmarks, a media sharing platform, and discussion forums. The book also covers how to organize your site to easily track student work on the site, and how to control who has access to that information. Additionally, it teaches you how to make the site easy to use, how to maintain the site, and how to ask for and receive help in the Drupal community.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Drupal for Education and E-Learning - Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating content types


As we build this site, we will build a range of content types for different functions. Although these different content types will have varied uses throughout the site, the basic process for creating content types remains consistent.

Tip

A content type and a node type mean the same thing. In most situations, a node is a piece of content.

For this example, we will create a content type for storing and sharing bookmarks.

Adding new content types requires the following steps:

  1. Create the content type.

  2. Add fields to the content type (this is optional: not all content types require additional fields).

  3. Assign a taxonomy to the content type (this is optional: not all content types will be organized using taxonomy).

  4. Assign permissions to the content type.

Of these four steps, only step one and two need to happen for all the new content types. As we will discuss, some content types do not require additional fields and some content types are not associated with a taxonomy.

Step 1 – creating...