Moodle Habitudes Presentation at TechFiesta09

Today, Tonya Mills and I will be presenting at TechFiesta 2009, a regional conference in San Antonio, Tx. The presentation is based around my article, Moodle Habitudes: Constructing Online Learning Environments, and copies of that will be shared. Tonya’s portion will focus on Moodle Theme customization, which she’s become quite adept at.

Here’s the presentation with ALL the slides (I’ve deleted some of them from the actual preso due to time concerns), and there’s even a Moodle you can join–or visit as a guest–to ask questions. Just go to TechFiesta 2009 Moodle.

I also sought to include some of the information I picked up at the TxDLA 09 Conference (check the slide entitled “Suggestions”).

Relevant Links:


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2 comments

  1. This is a fantastic resource. I am so appreciative that you have shared it and that in this post you pulled together so many good reference materials. This spring, I just started using Moodle for the courses that I teach, and I have been very pleased at its interface, ease of use, and rich feature set. It helps me do a better job of communicating with my students. I love having discussion boards and wikis easily available to my students (previously, I used separate wiki and discussion board sites), and I find it helps me keep better track of assignments and grades.I am currently paying for Moodle hosting and don’t believe that I can convince my school administration and tech people to host Moodle onsite, so I am looking into setting up a Linux server at my house over the summer and being able to host my own course content by next fall. I will definitely use the resources you have here as I learn to install, develop, modify, and administer my own Moodle. I also plan to share this resource with our school’s ed tech person, as I think she will be interested in the ways you are modifying PBS TeacherLine courses to make them more accessible to teachers.Thanks!

  2. This is a fantastic resource. I am so appreciative that you have shared it and that in this post you pulled together so many good reference materials. This spring, I just started using Moodle for the courses that I teach, and I have been very pleased at its interface, ease of use, and rich feature set. It helps me do a better job of communicating with my students. I love having discussion boards and wikis easily available to my students (previously, I used separate wiki and discussion board sites), and I find it helps me keep better track of assignments and grades.I am currently paying for Moodle hosting and don’t believe that I can convince my school administration and tech people to host Moodle onsite, so I am looking into setting up a Linux server at my house over the summer and being able to host my own course content by next fall. I will definitely use the resources you have here as I learn to install, develop, modify, and administer my own Moodle. I also plan to share this resource with our school’s ed tech person, as I think she will be interested in the ways you are modifying PBS TeacherLine courses to make them more accessible to teachers.Thanks!

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