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In the current unprecedented global economic downturn, a community associated with a learning management system ( LMS) called Moodle for global educators is growing at an exponential rate. It is becoming extremely popular partially more so in this economy, but most likely because of its open source nature with high performance/cost ratio. The number of moodle sites has been growing following the Moore's law since 2003, and the total known moodle sites (most of them are created by academic or corporate educators) have reached 60000 in March 2009 (http://moodle.org/stats/). So far, after a few weeks of climbing up my learning curve on how to get it to work, I have enjoyed Moodle’s overall functionality and its hard-to-break user friendly interface (UI). I've installed it a few times on both Windows and Linux platforms, and integrated it with Apache, MySQL database after a few days' cram sessions on PHP programming and worked with administration functions as well as adding modules to make it meet the expectation of our organization. It is a very powerful and robustness platform that I haven’t seen for years with very few hassle along the way.
Moodle stands for Modular Object-Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment. In the technical terms, Moodle is Open Source Learning Management System (LMS) which enables learning professionals (educators) to create engaging online learning courses. Moodle is the brainchild of Martin Dougiamas, who designed the program while working on his Ph.D. at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Australia. He developed it as an Open Source application for his dissertation using a social constructivist's approach to learning. As a result, Moodle is developed with features which facilitate this approach to education, particularly with interactive community components such as blog, forum, survey, and virtual conference. Dougiamas programmed Moodle in PHP, a programming (or scripting) language that can create web pages based on user input and data-based information. Moodle's Philosophy of learning is its focuses on collaboration, activities and critical reflection. This social-constructive approach involves a strong community of learning orientation rather than simple online computting courses and exercises. In general, a constructive amount of connected activities within a learning community is a very powerful stimulant for learning, not only bringing people closer together but promoting synergy among educators and learners.
In today's internet connected world, virtually every educational institution or corporation, one way or another, has by now adopted a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) or CMS (Course Management System) for use either as an aid to its traditional courses (often called a "integrated" or "hybrid" course system), or as a tool for its distance or off-campus education program via some commercial CMS, of which are expensive to license and which are rather rigid in the ways that they can be used. Moodle is different, rather than just publishing , assessing and reporting the information educator think learners need to know, it create a platform on which each participant in a course, no matter if he or she is an educator or learner, can switch role in between. Your job as an educator can change from being originator of knowledge to being an influencer and role model of class culture, connecting with learners in a personal way that addresses their own learning needs, and promoting and facilating discussions and interactive activities in a way that collectively leads students towards the learning goals of the class achieving multi-threaded knowledge transfer.
Moodle has a very active community cross over 200 countries with 670k member. With a user base of this size situated around the world, it is common for moodle user to receive help within a matter of hours from different countries, some time with different language, regardless of the local time of day. Moodle community members not only give help, but have also continue to add new module or plugins codes to help a user to modify a current feature or create a new one. Now let us take a closer look at some of the top key features, blocks and modules of Moodle which are of the interest of academic and software developer training community.
Entering "Moodle”, an open-source platform, which is not only free but also highly adaptable for computer science education, universities and corporation education organization are quickly discovering that they can spend far less on down payment by implementing Moodle, and then use some of the savings to tailor it to work precisely the way it is needed for a tight fit. And evidence have shown that moodle ( LMS) is no longer a tool used by low budget on-line or distance learning institutions. In stead, more and more universities wih PhD and MS curriculum and professional training organization have finished their transition of traditional instructor lead class into moodle based dynamic online class, integrated with community ingredients, such as California Tech Computer Science Curriculum, Virginia Tech Computer Science Curriculum , Oregon Inst. of Tech. Curriculum for Computer Science and Tech and International conference such as Super Computing Education moodle which is sponsored by ACM and IEEE. At the same time, more universities have been systematically evaluating and piloting Moodle as the online learning management system. For example, at University of North Carolina at Charlotte (http://www.lmseval.uncc.edu/ ), In 2008, 10 faculty participated the pilot and taught classes based on Moodle, and created a focus group to discuss their Moodle experiences, and in the following term in earlier 2009, the pilot extended to 18 new faculty members selected based on a variety of criteria, including college representation, course types, experienced vs. new users, fully online vs. hybrid, and face to face courses and concluded that moodle offers advantages include ease of use and mastery, minimal support, collaboration with the open source community, flexibility, and adaptability to the needs of faculty and students.
On technical side, Moodle can run on virtually any machine, Windows, Macintosh or Linux, as long as the followings are installed: 1) an Apache web server, 2) the page generation freeware, PHP, and 3) a database application, usually, but not limited to MySQL. All are open source. Applications exist for all platforms and are listed under "Installing Apache, MySQL and PHP" at http://moodle.org/doc/. Some basic fact about moodle is listed below:
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Name: |
Moodle |
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Originator: |
Martin Dougiamas |
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Web Site: |
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Product type: |
Course management system |
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Platform: |
Any platform with Apache, PHP and a database system such as MySQL installed |
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Price: |
Free |
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Best Features |
Can easily have every feature you want as there is always someone around willing to program it |
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Registered community member (Moodle.org) |
672,965 ( as of 4/24/09 and growing) |
It is not yet to know how long Moodle can keep its exponential growth. For sure, it will help academic or corporate educators connect with learners, but in the larger scope, perhaps it will connect and optimize the fragmented knowledge and resource in different institutions, and eventually make the knowledge transfer process in an orchestrated and connected way, especially in the United States, where people expect more from universities and employer, while at the same time the available tax dollars are dropping.
I am a Moodler since 2009 and building a Moodle platform for Intel academic community. Currently, I am actively working on every details of the project. If you have any suggestion or comments that you want to share with the reader of this blog, you can add them here. I would also love to hear from you if you choose to email me at tao.b.wang@intel.com.
| April 25, 2009 10:49 PM PDT
Michael |
Hi, We use it at a k-12 college, multi-site college in Melbourne, Australia for about 1900 students and 300 staff. It really meets most of our needs, and staff and students have come to rely on it heavily to deliver course material. Nice article. Regards, Michael |
| April 27, 2009 8:30 AM PDT
Donna Williamson |
Mountain Brook Schools will be launching our K-12 Moodle site Fall 2009. We are beginning training for our teachers the spring and summer. I would appreciate any information or training materials that would help our teachers get started as they are developing their courses. Specifically, I am interested in how most teachers do their courses at the secondary level where one teacher may be teaching a single course multiple periods of the day and/or may be teaching multiple courses during the day. For anyone that would like to share, please email me at wild@mtnbrook.k12.al.us Donna Williamson Technology Director Mountain Brook Schools |
| April 28, 2009 2:14 PM PDT
Tao B Wang (Intel)
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With Dr. Gregory's permission. I would like to share some of her notes to this blog: I believe in helping learners examine their own assumptions and biases. I try to nurture as much as possible a constructivist environment within my graduate courses. I find it challenging to do so. To me what makes it challenging are two things: Some students are so used to being spoon fed, so to speak that they find it difficult and in some cases impossible to learn in an environment that requires them to assume more responsibility for learning, interacting with others, self evaluation, peer evaluation, critical thinking and reasoning, etc....I could go on...those students who do finally take the plunge into becoming active learners are richly rewarded by the degree of new knowledge and inspiration they acquire with this new approach. Some universities are not supporting instructors in a way that encourage them to offer, design, deliver and create social constructivist courses because they worry about lawsuits or criticisms from people who might object to students expressing challenging view points....university does not like for faculty to link to blogs, web 2.0, etc ... However, this defeats the original purpose of Web 2.0 which I believe is to build a community of learners that are eagerly seeking greater truth and meaning. .... Regards, Diane Gregory Go confidently in the direction of your dreams--Live the Life you've imagined! Henry David Thoreau, Walden Dr. Diane C. Gregory Associate Professor of Art Education Director, Undergraduate & Graduate Studies in Art Education |
| April 29, 2009 6:08 PM PDT
monika |
great post sir. i teach at a high school in loveland co. we have had moodle this school year and are planning to make it district wide for next year. i finally have a class site - on moodle - that kids are accessing regularly. your comment from dr gregory is right on. i believe we need kids to become self-regulated, self advocates. my best find this year - after reading what would google do - my kids submit good interactive practice sites, i put them on the site - then they get credit for every hit. i love that moodle allows that capability - to check hits - where when and how long. i get to teach one class next year where all the kids will have lap tops. first class in the district. i'm very excited. but it's a shame as well. i wish we could quit spending so much time and money on text book adoptions and put it toward notebooks for kids. web- based learning is huge. i do have a question for you (any of you). in my pursuit to get laptops for all kids - i've found that the whole wireless issue is more maintenance than safety issues (ie: a kid hacks the system, the teacher's grades, info - all lost) and so the way to proceed is a separate wireless account for students. i'm going to be asking our local wireless and google if they would consider making our city wireless - and i would also like to request laptops from somewhere. my first choice is intel. my question - can you direct me somewhere to make that request? thank you. |
| May 25, 2009 6:49 PM PDT
LMS | Moore's Law is a great analogy for Moodle's exponential uptake as an e-learning solution. Moodle and Intel reads like a good marriage. |
| July 16, 2009 12:54 AM PDT
Mark Drechsler |
Thank you for this post - great to read a perspective on Moodle from an environment like Intel, and I look forward to hearing more about your project within the Intel academic community. Kind regards, Mark. |

Daniel Chow
Daniel Chow
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