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Keywords: glossary, dictionary, terms and conditions, FAQ, jargon.

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It can be a very useful tool, for instance, where subject specific words and definitions are used 'loosely' in a given field but need to be agreed on for the purposes of group discussion – in this case a tutor may stipulate definitions within a glossary or use the tool to ask students to reach a consensus. Options include being able to moderate student entries and allowing student students to comment upon on entries.

Who can use it?

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Meeting the baseline

The UCL E-Connected Learning Baseline suggests suggests the following for for Orientation :

  • 2.2 Explain participation requirements:
    • Identify which activities are compulsory and optional.
    • Provide an indicator of effort (such as timings or page counts) for all compulsory tasks.
    • Explain how students are expected to use UCL and any external e-learning tools . This PowerPoint Induction template provides a starting point. as part of programme or module induction. Wholly online courses might provide this information as a screen-cast video, with a voice over.
    • Link to instructions for any e-learning tools that students are expected to use.
  • 2.8 Outline the Intended Learning Outcomes for every activity and resourcepurpose and workload for each section in the description and provide a clear overview of what the student is expected to do.

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  1. To add a glossary to your course, Turn editing  turn Edit mode on, then click on the Add an activity or resource link and select Glossary.
  2. Enter a Name and Description (which you can display if you wish).
  3. Most of the time you can leave all the option settings as they are by default. However, you should consider these important settings in under the Entries heading:
    • Automatically link glossary entries - if an instance of a term appears in your course, it is highlighted with the option to click and to see a pop-up definition.
    • Approved by default - student entries will appear immediately and don't need to be approved by a tutor first.

  4. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click Save and display.


Info
titleFurther help

Further guidance on Glossary settings is available from moodledocsMoodle Docs.

If you find any inaccurate or missing information you can even update this yourself (it's a communal wiki).

If you have a specific question about the tool please contact the Digital Education team.

Caution

  • If your course contains a Moodle quiz to test student knowledge, you might want to turn off the auto-linking in just this quiz. You do this by turning off Glossary auto-linking in the quiz settings .
  • If the Display format settings are set to Simple, dictionary style, you will not be able to add or delete categories in the Glossary. To enable this, change the Display format to any other type.

Examples and case studies

  • Provide a 'Quote of the Day' or a random picture gallery that changes each time the page is refreshed, using the Random Glossary block. Guidance on the Random glossary entry block is available from moodledocsMoodle Docs.
  • A reference for common terminology contributed by staff and/or students.
  • A way to display a searchable list of FAQs.
  • Different glossary entries can be accessed using the link, allowing for quick access to other glossaries in the course.
  • Staff ask all students to submit their definition for a particular term and either marks the responses, or chooses the best to publish to the group.
    • Note: This requires multiple instances of the same term to be enabled in the settings.

Questions & Answers

Q. How do I print a printer-friendly version?

A. Click on edit settings and under Appearance, In the Glossary settings, under the Appearance heading, set Allow print view should be on to Yes.

Further information

Glossary entries can be searched or browsed within the Glossary activity, as well as set to appear as pop-up definitions whenever the term appears in texts created within a given Moodle course, e.g. emails in forums and Moodle web pages (not in uploaded PDFs or Word Docs).