Taking Stock

June 2nd, 2009 by carolt

It’s been over a month since the end of the MSc and having had a much needed break, time to consider where and what and how to blog on.

So first a round up of what I have been doing.

I have been setting up my own hosted domain and a Moodle installation which has been very useful experience. (I got the Moodle on a stick thing working ok for my coursework submission.)

I have a number of purposes in mind for my Moodle. To archive my MSc work, and other courses I have developed at work over the past couple of years. To continue to develop my admin skills for Moodle. To keep a record of ongoing e-learning project developments at work.

My original plan was to also host a Wordpress install and transfer my blog to there. That’s a possible project for the summer, however I am getting as much personally out of writing and recording in Moodle as I did out of keeping this blog. The only difference here was the aspect of posting into a community. That seems to have run its course.

So barring finding another community to join,… all suggestions welcomed,  and probably popping back to read one or two blogs I still follow. This might be the last post so to speak.

If so goodnight and thanks for all the fish, if not see you next time.

CompendiumLD part 2

March 8th, 2009 by carolt

Discussion activity

 

 

 

 

  Staff Moodle course beginner

 

advanced course 

 

 

 CompendiumLD maps of the second stage course design.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

School Moodle development update

March 5th, 2009 by carolt

Time to update the blog on the progress of the school Moodle.

Recent developments have continued the stone gathering speed metaphor from the last update.

I have continued to gradually develop my “pet” test areas on Moodle, notably the Eco schools course. There is a lot of activity in this area in school and plenty to write about and update content little and often. This in turn has helped feed the ICT co-ordinators dogged campaign to make all the pupils log into Moodle each ICT lesson. One of the reasons for this is to help the children learn their username and passwords.

Needing a some regularly updating content for the pupils to check up on in these short activity sessions, the Eco schools course has been a useful target.

Moodle made the agenda of a recent management meeting and for the first time some targets were set for development. The results have shifted the school into the next gear. Yesterday the teaching staff were given the staff meeting time to go and work on their subject courses. This morning I arrived at school and by 10 am three different groups of staff had approached me for either refresher training or basic training in Moodle.

By lunchtime we had booked in two training sessions for admin staff and I had decided to go ahead with a germinating idea for a “Moodle club” for staff to drop into a weekly workshop.

After school I met with a small group from local schools working on our first collaborative project on the main LEA Moodle site.

In addition I am getting a steady trickle of parents applying for their moodle log ins. This in turn will mean that once the admin staff are trained and start to feed and update public facing courses further momentum will be generated.

The pace has definitely picked up and the significance of the management team setting an agenda cannot be underestimated. The workload connected with Moodle has shot up for me since Christmas, but I can also see that “ownership” of different areas is growing. 

I must make some backups of different areas at this point and compare them in say six or twelve months to see what stages we go through as the learning community grows and finds it’s feet.

Brief overview of twilight session

February 17th, 2009 by carolt

Just wanting to capture a few notes on the twilight session by making some very generalised observations. I will be looking in detail at the avalanche of feedback over the next couple of weeks.

 I had two hours to introduce the course to the target group. Half worked in the ICT suite on computers the other half on laptops via a wireless connection in the room next door. We began the session with some introduction and explanation of the project for the benefit of new staff.

 The school has a 2Mb Internet connection.

Testing

I was not able to test with an inexperienced user before the training session. This would have highlighted some of the issues which arose on tne night. In effect the training session became a usability test by the target group. I now have data from a wide range of users in terms of ability, age and experience.

 Logistics

 The group of over 20 was too big to manage on the night working in two rooms, and I could not keep up with the number of issues that were going on simultaneously.

One new laptop was missing software needed for the activity. 

One person attended unexpectedly and did not have a log in.

 Bandwidth

It is not clear if the Moodle server is correctly setup for streaming video. Testing prior to the training night revealed widely varying download results. With multiple downloads on the night the alternative smaller flash movie was needed. More info needed to follow up further.

 Moodle

Found an unexpected (untested) aspect of the chat room that the participants were identified by initial not name, leading to confusion.

Course Content

I had way too much material for the 2 hour session and did not need any of the extension exercises I built in. I think there is scope for dividing the material up in to a beginners and advanced course.

 On the whole the group worked much more slowly than I had anticipated. Over familiarity with the content had led to an underestimate of the time needed to complete different topics. Failure to achieve the first assignment objective, was mainly due to lack of time.

The journaling reflective activity seems to have been useful.

There was positive feedback about the interactive tutorial which was a novel learning experience for the group. The group saw the benefit of active learning in that activity.

More basic instructions were required on navigation and orientation in the Moodle environment. (too much for the 2hr training but to be developed further for the course ongoing.)

 It is too soon to make any judgements about how the training went overall until the data is analysed. There is a wide mixture of experiences and feedback. There were bugs or technical hitches in almost every area of the course on the night and the materials were thoroughly tested, pretty much to destruction!

It was an exhausting experience, and not an easy one for the subjects, but I do belive that I can see ways to solve most if not all of the issues which arose. 

I think a number of principles were tested in the different activities in the course and many proved useful for further development. The discussion acitivy was the least sucessful on the night. There were too many unknowns for the participants to deal with for them to properly engage with the task I set, but hopefully an experience to build on in the future.

 More to follow… 

   

Progress Report main project and “Sticky Moodle”

January 24th, 2009 by carolt

Posting has been delayed recently due to efforts to complete and put aside activity for part 1 assessment.

I have been working on the literature review for the main project and now have a draft that I can put aside while I focus on completing the work for the course.

Out of this review came two main themes which have influenced the planning of the course I am developing. Firstly the importance of situating the learning within the learners experience, and secondly the value that teachers place on collaborative learning.

It should be possible to ensure both these aspects are well focused in the CPD course I have planned.

I found the CompendiumLD planning tool very helpful for thinking through the course structure and the order and content of learning activities. I find myself constantly referring to this map now as I start to build the course for real.

I have now built the skeleton course structure, most of the instructional linking materials, and now am working on the learning objects, video, quiz modules etc.

After a very hectic time up to submission of part 1 assessment which went on over the school Christmas holidays, and an even more hectic start to the school term. Things are finally settling down enough to allow for a little personal reflection.

I am glad to have stopped juggling three different threads of course activity, weekly activity, and two assessments running simultaneously. Though there is less interaction with my course colleagues now there is so much work to do I am not feeling the loss as much as I feared.

My motivation levels have been fluctuating due to stress and distraction and the holiday season. I feel my focus beginning to return now a number of these have been put aside.

One enthusiasm which is growing is for Moodle on several levels. I see the developing awareness of the staff I am working with to the potential of Moodle. It is slow but sure and like a rolling stone I feel is gathering momentum. Apart from impact of training for the staff, my colleague and I have both started to develop courses in areas of interest to ourselves eg, using animation for social stories and a celebration of the school Eco Schools week. The ICT Co-ordinator is now getting her classess to log in and out of moodle each lesson and as more material is developed and they get to see courses which are fully functioning their enthusiam rises. The number of log ins by the pupils from home is increasing slowly as this process develops.

I have been researching  how we might bridge the digital divide for our pupils as previous posts describe. Just in the last few days I have realised that Moodle might have an answer for us there. It will be fairly easy to provide a laptop for pupils to loan, what would be much more difficult is to provide internet access to a home. Now I have begun to investigate Moodle installations on USB sticks. Such a sticky Moodle and a laptop could provide a complete learing package which replicates the on line version.

I am very excited about the potential of this idea, but still grappling with the installation in a steep DIY learning curve. However I am learning a lot and hope to have a demo implemented shortly. Watch this space for the report.