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WebCT news at SFU

navigating SFU’s learning management system

Archive for the 'mashup' Category

What your colleagues from U Carleton are doing.

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

The University of Carleton has a teaching and learning blog, with some postings on WebCT use.

This postings discusses the use of educational technology as a means of acheiving (or at least approaching) a paperless classroom.  Instructors at the University of Carleton and at SFU post classroom materials online: syllabus, lecture outlines, links to readings and weblinks and assignment descriptions and guidelines online. This gives the student just one place to look for these materials (instead of coming through past emails, or stacks of paper). Online quizzes can also be a means of implementing regular assessment (graded or self-testing) and feedback into the course without contending with mountains of paperwork.

Another posting is more general, talking about creating learning opportunites using technology.  This is an opportunity to look at three different courses who use the WebCT online environment to:

  • create long term resources
  • reducing trivial emailed students from students
  • fostering an online learning community
  • create a common look and feel for the course
  • using images on the course content home to reinforce key ideas and concepts from the course
  • importing other tools (Google Calendar or Picasa photo management) into WebCT, to combine those tools ease of use with a central online location for the course materials and community.

We are planning on having some SFU faculty demonstrate their use of WebCT in the new year. Keep an eye on the LIDC calendar of events for dates and times.

Add lecture recordings to your WebCT course

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

Create a seamless link between large class lectures and your WebCT course container to provide learning opportunities for students outside the classroom.

If your lecture hall lectures are recorded, you can now place a quick link to the recording in your WebCT course. Check here for instructions: http://wiki.sfu.ca/webct/index.php/External#adding_SFU_lecture_recordings

    or:

  1. Open the BUILD tab in your WebCT course container
  2. Add the WebLinks tool (go to Manage Course, click on Tools, select “WebLinks” and click save).
  3. From Home Page or any Learning Module or Organizer Page, Expand “Add Content Link” drop down menu
  4. Select “Web Link”
  5. Click “Create Web Link”
  6. Enter a title (e.g. SFU Digital Lectures)
  7. Enter the URL: http://podcast.sfu.ca/mylectures

Integrate more into WebCT

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

ADETA has a list of the top 10 free tools that can be integrated into WebCT. Many of the tools provided will provide some HTML code or script that you can add to an HTML page for a direct link between the two applications.

There are some really good ideas here - I am going to start playing with Hot Potatoes, and link to a few google tools. Hmmmm, and what about Flickr? The theme here is to use the tools that you are comfortable with, and making things accessible to your students. These are opportunities to supplant lectures and readings with images, movies, sounds, maps and collaborative documents.

Add RSS feeds to your WebCT course section

Friday, July 20th, 2007

For more information on what an RSS feed is and it’s role in education, download the Seven Things you Should Know About RSS], or go to http://www.weblogg-ed.com/ and click on the RSS tab near the top to download Will Richardsons introduction to RSS. For quick browsing, go to the ”Finding and Adding Feeds section”

How to add an RSS Feed Reader to your WebCT course section.

  1. Log in as a Section Designer and go to the section.
  2. From Course Content Home, click Add Content Link and choose RSS Feed Reader from the dropdown menu.
  3. Click Create RSS Feed Reader.
  4. Add the RSS URL in field #3
  5. Click save and preview in the Student View

The settings
The easiest way to add an RSS feed is to use the default options available. Just remember to add your RSS URL in field #3. For more information on how to find an RSS URL, please consult the resources listed above.

Advanced setting changes

If you are an advanced user of RSS feeds, there are other settings that you can change for your own needs.

The proxy tool settings consist of the following:

  1. Title: The proxy tool title that appears in the Course Content Home.
  2. Operational Timeout: Leave this set to the default (10).
  3. RSS/RDF URL: This must be set to the URL of the RSS feed. (e.g. http://feeds.macworld.com/macworld/all, http://rss.cnn.com/services/podcasting/newscast/rss.xml))
  4. XSL Transform Can be set to:
    • Default RSS: use the built-in RSS transform to convert the RSS to HTML. If this is selected, the XSL URL setting is ignored.
    • Default RDF: use the built-in RDF transform to convert the RSS to HTML. If this is selected, the XSL URL setting is ignored.
    • Custom: use a custom transform to convert the RSS to HTML. If this is selected, you must also set the XSL URL setting.
  5. XSL URL: If XSL Transform is set to Custom, this setting must contain the URL of an XSL transform capable of converting the RSS feed to HTML.
  6. CSS URL: Can be used to specify a custom cascading stylesheet (CSS) file. If empty, the built-in CSS is used.
  7. Window title: The text to display in the title bar of the popup window (when applicable).
  8. Title contains HTML: Set this to true if item titles in the RSS feed contain HTML (otherwise the HTML code is displayed).
  9. Description contains HTML: Set this to true if item descriptions in the RSS feed contain HTML (otherwise the HTML code is displayed).
  10. Custom parameter x: These five settings can be used to set parameters for the XSLT engine. This is only useful if you have a custom transform.-The format of each Custom parameter setting is:
    <parameter_name>=<parameter_value>
    -So if you want to pass the current username and the learning context name to the transform, you would enter
    Custom parameter 1: username=$USER$.name
    Custom parameter 2: lcname=$LC$.name
    -In your XSL transform, you’d have something like this:
    <xsl:param name=”username”/>
    <xsl:param name=”lcname”/>

    <xsl:template match=”channel”>
    <p class=”channeldescription”>Hello, <xsl:value-of select=”$username”/> from <xsl:value-of select=”$lcname”/>!</p>
  11. Open in new window

Embed a YouTube video in WebCT

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

My newest objective is to figure out how to embed content from other web-based applications in WebCT.

I started with You Tube, since they make it pretty easy. All you have to do is grab the code they provide, and put it in some body tags on an HTML page. It’s my duty, of course, to remind you that plenty of content on You Tube is not copyright protected, and some clips are taken down as soon as the original broadcast network can find them*.

Video can be an effective learning tool - it can provide a new perspective on a point you are trying to make in the classroom, provides information in a new format and it’s powerful combination of audio and video can propel some affective learning from your students. The clips on YouTube are generally less than 10 minutes, so they are an effective length to keep the students attention.

  1. Go to http://youtube.com and find the clip you want to embed. If you don’t have an exact title that someone told you about, be prepared to get distracted by just about anything.
  2. To the right of the screen where the video plays is a box with the clip title, tags and other metadata. There is a field called “embed” - copy all the code from that box. The code with start with <object width … and end with </object>. This code sets the size of the window, places a play/pause controls and gives the URL for the video.
  3. Go to WebCT and create a new HTML page.
  4. You need to put your YouTube code in the body of the HTML page. At the top of the page, type: <body>
  5. Paste your YouTube code on the HTML page.
  6. Type </body> at the end of the HTML page.
  7. Save your new page.

In student view, you will now have a link to a YouTube video that will play in the WebCT course container.

.

* this is a whole other debate. My personal opinion is that the clips should be treated like quotes people use in book reviews. Seeing a two minute clip of the Jon Stewart show is only going to remind the fans of how funny it is, and attract new converts. jeesh.