Quote:Original post by londonman y did nobody reply to what i said
i am in
pleas reply |
londonman,
Because no reply is necessary. In fact, you don’t need to let us know "u r in." When the program starts on June 1, merely begin reading the textbook to get involved.
In response to your first post, whichever textbook we use will likely be around $30 USD. You don’t need to purchase the textbook to participate, but as the threads will be based on the chapters, likely with references to page numbers and specific lines of code, it will be easier for you to follow if you have the book.
Quote:Original post by Fruny It think you might want to add ACCU Reviews.
|
Thanks Fruny. I'll definitely check each of the books on that site as well.
Quote:Original post by Michael Tanczos Moodle is a piece of software that you install on a server. Like, say you have a few teachers for a course.. for the course you could post web pages, graded assignments that require participants to submit a file, polls, quizzes, collaborative workshops where peer evaluation takes place, a course wiki where users can edit, discussion forums that can either be single-threaded discussions or anything goes (including peer review of individual posts). The newest version also supports participant blogs, so participants can post about their progress.
Moodle is a social constructionist software, meaning that the course itself ultimately gets built by the collaboration of the teacher as well as all the students. Since it sounds as though you want to have the participants actively involved in sharing in the learning process, this is why I recommended it.
It also allows participants to actually "enroll" themselves in the course with a click of a button, allowing you to better track the actual participants.
|
Definitely sounds cool, but I'm beginning to think this is your way of suggesting we take this idea elsewhere. [lol]
For what it's worth, I'm self-employed, married, and a veteran of the game industry with about 15 years experience with C/C++ - so I don’t mind taking the initiative and running any forums which may be created to see this project happen. I'm fine with finding a suitable textbook, reading over the chapters with the students, answering questions, creating my own list of questions, posting additional resources, and creating projects for the students to undertake for learning.
Unfortunately, I don’t have time to wiki a textbook, create web pages and a site design, create and grade people's assignments, create polls, create and grade quizzes, or pay attention to who's 'enrolled.' My idea is really just an extension of what GDNet already does so well. By narrowing in on a specific topic, in this case C++, and using a common textbook it allows a subset of the GDNet community to help each other learn the topic. Which is why, in a way, a forum is a pretty good method of presentation.
Projects which involve all of what Moodle allows (lessons, quizzes, study guides, wiki textbooks, etc...) require a lot of work and it's often difficult to keep people involved in such projects. In contrast, something as simple as what I've outlined in my updated proposal requires little extra work by the tutors then what they already do here on GDNet, and yet benefits so many people at the same time.
With all of that said, if you want to set up a new website that hosts Moodle for people to pursue a larger project I think that's great and would certainly be willing to contribute.
Cheers!