Hi, Ron,
If this is taking place when you are creating resources, I suspect that you are sometimes choosing TEXT page resource, as opposed to WEB page resource from the drop down menu.
Hope that helps.
Regards,
Art
Art Lader
Posts made by Art Lader
Hi, Ron,
Yep, you can easily grab resources from other courses. Take a look at http://docs.moodle.org/en/Import_course_data
Hope that helps.
Regards,
Art
Yep, you can easily grab resources from other courses. Take a look at http://docs.moodle.org/en/Import_course_data
Hope that helps.
Regards,
Art
Just a wild guess: out of disk space?
Regards,
Art
Regards,
Art
Our K-12 school district is quite afraid of anything technological, particularly anything that could expose the district to liability. The administration has resisted having anything to do with student messaging systems. Simply installing Moodle is a professional risk for the teacher doing it, because anything untoward that students do on Moodle will be seen by Administration as facilitated by that teacher.
Yes, Jade, and this is not uncommon in the US, I think. Here in Aiken, we do go to great lengths to tell our students and parents that NOTHING that happens on our site is truly anonymous or confidential. It creates a bad taste in my mouth, but it is an unfortunate necessity.
You know, we have American football in our schools and players are routinely injured. In some places, players have actually died as a result of such injuries. In our driver education classes, we put inexperienced kids behind the wheels of 2,000 bullets, basically. Our chem labs are full of poisons. And so on. (My God, it is just a matter of time until a cheerleader is killed doing those insane flipping things they do!) The bottom line is that risk abounds in our schools.
We tolerate this situation because the benefit outweighs the risk in these cases. Or that is the general consensus, at least. As soon as the general public realizes that this is the case with elearning, too, most of this foolishness will simply go away. In the meantime, we play with the cards we have been dealt.
The upside for me is that I am learning to be more patient and to try to see the big picture. I guess that is a good thing.
Keep up the good work, Jade.
Regards,
Art
Yes, Jade, and this is not uncommon in the US, I think. Here in Aiken, we do go to great lengths to tell our students and parents that NOTHING that happens on our site is truly anonymous or confidential. It creates a bad taste in my mouth, but it is an unfortunate necessity.
You know, we have American football in our schools and players are routinely injured. In some places, players have actually died as a result of such injuries. In our driver education classes, we put inexperienced kids behind the wheels of 2,000 bullets, basically. Our chem labs are full of poisons. And so on. (My God, it is just a matter of time until a cheerleader is killed doing those insane flipping things they do!) The bottom line is that risk abounds in our schools.
We tolerate this situation because the benefit outweighs the risk in these cases. Or that is the general consensus, at least. As soon as the general public realizes that this is the case with elearning, too, most of this foolishness will simply go away. In the meantime, we play with the cards we have been dealt.
The upside for me is that I am learning to be more patient and to try to see the big picture. I guess that is a good thing.
Keep up the good work, Jade.
Regards,
Art