This page shows you how you might choose to implement the expectations from the Moodle Baseline and Baseline+ in your own blended learning course, for students who are being taught face to face and their learning is being supplemented with e-learning resources and activities.
For distance learning courses you can take a look at what could a distance learning course look like?
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Structure
See the screenshot of a Moodle course homepage below, showing main headings, sub-headings and section headings. A short course overview and section overview to provide context. And also a page and book to keep information off the course homepage.
Further information on structure, navigation & clarity.
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Orientation
See how you might include:
See the screenshot of a Moodle course homepage below, for examples of contact details, optional activities and effort indicators.
Further information on inducting and supporting students.
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Communication
See the screenshot of a Moodle course homepage below, for examples of a communication statement (also see the pop-out containing the text students see when they click the link and view the page). There is a news forum (for one way announcements to students), with a forum outline provided in the news forum description, with the setting to show this on the course homepage selected, so students can understand how this discussion forum is to be used.
Further information on communication.
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Assessment
Further information on electronic submissions.
Further information on assessment.
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Resources
Further information on providing electronic resources.
Further information on incorporating Twitter and RSS feeds to provide context to students.
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Cross platform compatibility
Further information on which file types to use when.
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Accessibility
Further information on course and resource accessibility.
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Intellectual property
See the screenshot of a Moodle course homepage below, for examples of a link to module ReadingList (using the Library Resources block), and embedded ReadingList items, so students can go directly to the readings for that topic.
Further information on copyright.
Further information on data protection.
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Student Active Participation
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Quality Assurance
See the screenshot of a Moodle course homepage below, for examples of anonymous feedback points. The suggestion box uses the Advanced forum with anonymous posting enabled, so other students can see the suggestions that are posted. The Course Feedback Questionnaire uses a Questionnaire, so students can confidentially provide anonymous feedback and save and resume their answers. A third option, the feedback activity, would allow students full anonymity, as (unlike the Questionnaire) nothing is recorded in the Moodle logs when they respond (however it doesn't support save and resume).
Further information on module and programme evaluation.