Book Image

Moodle 3.x Teaching Techniques - Third Edition

By : Susan Smith Nash
Book Image

Moodle 3.x Teaching Techniques - Third Edition

By: Susan Smith Nash

Overview of this book

Moodle, the world's most popular, free open-source Learning Management System (LMS) has released several new features and enhancements in its latest 3.0 release. More and more colleges, universities, and training providers are using Moodle, which has helped revolutionize e-learning with its flexible, reusable platform and components. This book brings together step-by-step, easy-to-follow instructions to leverage the full power of Moodle 3 to build highly interactive and engaging courses that run on a wide range of platforms including mobile and cloud. Beginning with developing an effective online course, you will write learning outcomes that align with Bloom's taxonomy and list the kinds of instructional materials that will work given one's goal. You will gradually move on to setting up different types of forums for discussions and incorporating multi-media from cloud-base sources. You will then focus on developing effective timed tests, self-scoring quizzes while organizing the content, building different lessons, and incorporating assessments. Lastly, you will dive into more advanced topics such as creating interactive templates for a full course by focussing on creating each element and create workshops and portfolios which encourage engagement and collaboration
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Moodle 3.x Teaching Techniques Third Edition
Credits
About the Author
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Project-based assessment


Think about the ways that you assessed student work, as well as student participation in the Workshops that you built in the last chapter. Do you remember how you assigned a grade for the way that students assessed each other? It may not have seemed like a very important detail at that time, but what you were doing was, in reality, fundamental to the successful operation of a portfolio or gallery type of assignment.

In assessing student performance in a project, keep in mind that you are assessing much more than the final project that has been submitted. You are assessing the way students demonstrate whether they achieved learning objectives that include collaboration, creative problem-solving, synthesis, and application of knowledge. If you are familiar with Bloom's taxonomy, you'll recognize right away that they are in the higher-level cognitive skills in Bloom's taxonomy.

The best uses of project-based assessment

Project-based assessment is most effective when it...