Archive
Archive for the ‘Learning-activity-is-any’ Category
Moodle streaming video recording assignment glitch 9
2012/03/16
Leave a comment
- Are all things Moodle Kaltura on Windows better than on iMacs?
- I don’t think so (Windows 7, IE9): Webcamera cannot be activated, hourglass. Looks like the Flash security dialogue does not make it into the foreground.

Protected: Moodle-Kaltura webcam recording assignment results
2012/02/20
Enter your password to view comments.
Categories: assessments, assignments, audience-is-teachers, Beginner, e-languages, German, iMacs, lms, multimedia-recording, Practice&Demos, Speaking, Videos
kaltura, moodle
How a student uses the Sanako Recorder Voice Insert mode for Moodle comparative recording exercises
2012/01/25
2 comments
- to load a file
- from Moodle:
- Find your assignment with the model audio file, presumably in your Moodle course.
- download the model audio file
- open the Sanako Student Recorder (introduction).
- go to menu: file / open, and open the file you downloaded
- from student recorder playlist: double-click the file.
- from Moodle:
- enable voice insert:
- press the green play button to listen until you reach the point (your teacher may have inserted a pause or aural cue) where you can repeat or respond.
- Then click the red speak-button
to repeat after/respond to the source/teacher - When you are done repeating/responding, press the green play-button.
- At the end, press the blue stop-button.
- Rewind and review your recording (e.g. compare your pronunciation with the teacher’s model).
- When done, click file / save as and save only your, the student track, as mp3 or wma.
- Additional notes:
- TBA: you can overwrite your pronunciation where you deem necessary.
- Fixed in Sanako 7:
you cannot show the voice graph when in Voice insert mode – both are incompatible. - To see in action how to record with voice insert and save the student track, view
- The previous is just a step-by-step for our environment based on the Sanako Study 1200 documentation which follows here:


How to do writing assignments in Moodle with deadlines, file and response file upload and MS-Word tracked changes
2012/01/20
Leave a comment
- Benefits
- Keep the cohort in shape and focus it on studying by enforcing deadlines.
- You can have students automatically receive reminders of the upcoming deadlines from their calendar (in NINERMAIL, no need to even look at the Moodle Calendar)
- You can save time managing the assignment.
- Moodle does it for you; you will save even more time once you begin recycling your assignment across terms) and rather provide more timely feedback, and improve changes that your feedback arrives during a teachable moment.
- Automatic email notifications, which are available in Moodle for teachers (if you do not prefer to grade student submissions in a batch) and students to (automatic correction and grading is not ready for prime-time when it comes to essay writing; you may however consider teaching some more basic writing skills using it with close-exercises in Moodle).
- Costs
- You need to TBA:create a Moodle file upload assignment for writing (once)
- You need to grade a Moodle file upload assignment for writing (any time you assign; depending on your preference as submissions arrive or conveniently as a batch from the gradebook past the deadline)
- I prefer the MS-Word reviewing features for grading writing assignments,
- but other tools have other affordances, e.g. like recently described here for Adobe Acrobat Professional.
- Moodle does not automatically add unique usernames to student submitted files like Blackboard. It also does not afford the TBA:convenience of a shared network storage that the WebDAV-based Blackboard Content system provides. However, as long as you do not need to maintain a local archive of student submissions, you can rely on the Moodle gradebook managing the archive of assignment files (student submissions and teacher response files).
- How? These 4 posts guide you through the entire workflow from teacher to student back to teacher to student:
Categories: assignments, audience-is-teachers, e-languages, lms, office-software, Writing
1.9, gradebook, moodle, MS-Word, reviewing, simple-file-upload
How a student takes a Moodle Single file upload assignment
2012/01/13
2 comments
Categories: assignments, audience-is-students, e-learning, lms
moodle, single-file-upload
How a teacher grades a Moodle simple file upload assignment
2012/01/13
1 comment
- When you initially createdyour single file upload assignment, there were no student submissions:

- Once there are, the link in the upper right of the assignment will tell you and take you right to the gradebook:
- Here you have an (1) overview who has submitted, and can click (2) to grade;
- In the grading dialogue, you can (1) download and open the file submission (see techniques of grading student audio submissions with Audacity), (2) write comments as you assess the file, (3) assign a final grade and (4) save and move on to the next submission (fastest, when you do batch grading, the notify student of your grading feedback is still useful under these circumstances, but even more so when you your self asked to be notified by email of student submissions as they come in: faster feedback)

Categories: assignments, audience-is-teachers, e-learning, lms, Speaking
audacity, moodle, simple-file-upload
How a teacher creates a Moodle Single file upload assignment, with optional attached file
2012/01/13
1 comment
- turn editing on
- add activity / simple file upload

- Write the assignment instructions

- For your students to be able to download a fle with additional information (e.g. the model recording), select some text pointing to it and click the link icon on the editor menu

- (1) button: “browse”, (2) click your file uploaded into your moodle course earlier, have the window close and (3) your URL appear (or type one manually, if the file is from the WWW), (4) click button: “ok”:

- Voilà, your link:

- set the other assignment options according to your needs :

- click button: “save and display”, you are done:


