Hello, Warren,
Some quick thoughts to clarify my earlier statements --
When it comes to "know-how", talent, skill, drive, motivation, ambition, etc, these things don't know borders. They are human qualities, inherent in all of us (at least on our good days :) ).
However, there is an aspect of teaching and learning that thrives as a result of face to face interaction -- this is part of what makes blended learning environments (something Drupal is really unmatched at creating) such a good learning tool.
As to your use case, have you looked at the quiz module? It could be useful for what you are trying to build. You should also look at http://drupal.org/project/assignment_studio and http://drupal.org/project/course_manager -- they are under active development, and could be useful for what you describe.
Cheers,
Bill
Warren Vail wrote:
Bill,
I hope you understand my comments were only intended to show that I was looking for something different than what you very well demonstrated in your book. I will be consulting the book again, to be sure.
I heard many positive statements about how outsourcing would never result in replacing really talented American know how, long before it actually began to happen. Even though it defied all logic, the dollar (and the bonus programs that drove decision making) pushed many jobs to India, China and Russia where there was a pretty good, if not adequate, talent pool to be had. When a manager could get a bigger bonus by hiring cheaper (maybe not quite as good) talent, the result was inevitable. I sincerely hope it doesn't happen, but I can almost guarantee that somewhere in states where education budgets are suffering heavy cuts, the idea is being considered. There are snake oil salesmen in every organization, it would seem.
What I was actually looking for was a system that would take course content and build a tutorial flow that would manage a training session, text, video, slideshows, with questions, pop quizzes and reinforcing exams, exercises, with evaluation of results, etc. It should also be able to evaluate quiz questions based on student distribution of wrong responses, etc. to help refine material.
Warren Vail
-----Original Message----- From: Bill Fitzgerald [mailto:bill@funnymonkey.com] Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 9:35 AM To: support@drupal.org Subject: Re: [support] Class modules
Hello, Warren,
Some notes inline below:
Warren Vail wrote:
Good sources, I have the book, found it lacking but didn't give any
thought
to why.
There are definitely things not to like -- in particular, I cringe at the sections on file/media handling, which has changed entirely since the book was written. I also cringe at the section on the text editors, as the WYSIWYG API is now a better choice if one must actually use a text editor.
The CCK, Views, and OG sections, however, have all aged pretty well.
Closer look at this indicates a difference between what I am looking for and Mr. Fitzgerald's
Ach! Please, call me Bill.
focus. The book seems to focus on supplementing the classroom process, instead of trying to find an alternative to that process.
The beauty of Drupal is that it can be used to do both. In writing the book, I used the language of the classroom to describe the site build, as the vocabulary of the classroom will be more familiar to educators. However, the core building blocks discussed in the book (CCK, Views, OG) will work just as well in a more traditional classroom setting as in a learning environment with no hierarchy at all -- or, in any social context whether it's education-related or not. Although the book is geared toward education, the concepts apply equally well across the board.
My personal preference is for a system of learning that is student/process driven, but that's a different conversation.
As a software developer, I have been part of, and victim of, a global
effort
to imbed knowledge in software to make it unnecessary to keep lots of developers on staff, allowing for offshore (cheaper) talent to supplant
what
I do.
My limited vision of what I needed would allow someone to create courses
to
teach the special knowledge of the courses author, then, the teaching
would
continue without the teacher's active participation.
Use OG. Override the presentation of group content via the theming layer. Depending on your specific needs, this could get you all of the way there. If not, it will highlight where you need custom code/additional modules.
Much of what I know about Drupal development was learned this way, from books just like Mr. Fitzgerald's, perhaps not as well done as formal teaching, but not as
costly
as formal classrooms.
This raises the question, will educators become the next victims of globalization?
No. People might try, and there will be lots of people attempting to sell us on a "more efficient educational system" but they should be rejected as the snake oil salesmen that they are. Learning takes time; reflection takes time; understanding takes time. Time can't be outsourced.
Cheers,
Bill
Warren Vail
-----Original Message----- From: Tony Zielinski [mailto:tony@webavant.com] Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 9:45 PM To: support@drupal.org Subject: Re: [support] Class modules
Bill Fitzgerald wrote a 400 page book about using Drupal for education actually http://www.packtpub.com/drupal-for-education-and-e-learning/book . You should read back through the posts on the Drupal in Education group at http://groups.drupal.org/drupal-education .