Ray Le Couteur (Head of ICT, King Edward VI Grammar School, Chelmsford,

Essex, England).

Having read Jim Fanning’s article about their choice of Virtual Learning

Environment (VLE) at Tideway School, I felt an alternative experience might be

useful.

We have had a Moodle (Open Source) learning platform in place since 2003. It

has since become an integral part of school life.

However, our approach was significantly different to that of Tideway. The whole

content is staff-generated (no content support technicians/dedicated web

content makers). I believe that the key to success is ease and reliability of use –

unless these are guaranteed it will not be used by staff. Our site can be viewed

at and is mostly open to guests (controlled by individual

teachers).

Moodle is a relatively new VLE (first released in 2000) and is developing

extremely rapidly as a quick look at: will

attest – it has recently had blogging, Wiki and chat facilities added, although

currently we don’t make much use of these.

Described below are some of the results of my research carried out into the

introduction and use of Moodle at our school.

Moodle is a sophisticated, easy to use, flexible and totally free (Open Source)

VLE (Virtual Learning Environment). The Moodle VLE can be run anywhere in

the world on any computer with a modern web browser (such as Internet

Explorer).

Like most VLE’s, a major advantage is that it is truly community software –

ownership is shared. All teachers can have their own online ‘classrooms’,

individually or shared within a department, and can add and edit their own

resources. Pupils too, as well as accessing documents, programs and web links

provided by teachers, can participate in discussion forums, journals, quizzes

and surveys which are all built into the Moodle interface. Our VLE is not used to

host commercial content.

The use of Moodle allows organic growth of online learning as and when

teachers perceive a need; schools that invest in expensive commercial VLE’s

are likely to put teachers under pressure to get ‘value for money’; unless there is

a perceived need by teachers, the educational benefit may be limited (putting

materials online because they’ve been told to put them online).

The Moodle VLE was first setup in our school (King Edward VI Grammar

School, Chelmsford Essex, UK) in early 2003, in response to individual staff

requests for an online platform for the school. Although selective, we are a State

school and have class sizes and staff timetables similar to most

comprehensives. During 2004, a little over a year after its introduction, I carried

out research into the use of the VLE and a summary is provided below.

My aims were:

· To determine the effectiveness of Moodle in enabling teachers to implement

online learning in a secondary school situation.

· To introduce the software to the staff at my school, to support their use of

the software, monitor their successes and failures, and investigate the effect

it has on teaching and learning.

· To look at the differences in the use of and usefulness of a VLE between the

secondary and tertiary sectors.

I used two questionnaires to gather information: one for students and one for

staff and supplemented this with a focus group meeting/discussion with the

most frequent staff users of the VLE, which was partly recorded electronically

for later analysis.

The student questionnaires were used with a sample of students (those who

were likely to have had a reasonable exposure to the VLE during the year), with

19 responses from Year 10 and 45 from Year 12. Staff were asked to complete

a short survey on the VLE; 32 responses (around 65%) were received.

Students who used the VLE as part of their studies were almost universally

positive about the VLE and indicated ways in which they had been helped in

their studies (see below).

Students who completed the questionnaires also benefited from the ability to

feed back on their educational experiences (a relatively rare event) and to help

formulate future policy from which they will benefit. It was interesting that,

although the questionnaires were anonymous, all the students who participated

took the activity seriously and produced responses that were worthy of

consideration. This may reflect the motivational impact of involving students in

their own learning.

My Findings

Since a VLE in a school is likely to be an additional tool for teachers (as

opposed to the only tool in distance learning), it was not surprising that some

features of the VLE such as forums, quizzes and assessment modules were

less used than in the tertiary sector.

By the end of the year, about 1/3 of staff were using the VLE from time to time,

about half of these frequently. Another 20% showed initial interest, but never

pursued it. Almost all staff cited lack of time as a constraint on the use of the

VLE. Currently (February 2006) almost all departments use the VLE, about 50%

of staff use the VLE from time to time and about half of these are frequent

users. The site, at kegsnet.org.uk, is now a core part of our school ICT facilities

– teachers use it as a matter of course, and it is probably one of the most active

school sites in the UK.

How was the VLE used and found useful by teachers (focus group comments)?

· To post own tasks online, linked directly to relevant websites.

· To provide lesson information, resources, syllabus for long term absentees.

· To provide an ordered list of course requirements; gave structure to

students work (and helped organise the teacher). Also supported NQT -

materials are dated and helped to guide teaching speed.

· To post exemplar work/model answers for pupils online.

· Ease of use of Moodle enabled regular updating of links/materials. Teacher

could edit/add new links in lessons, immediately they are suggested by

students.

· Skills ‘toolbox’, essay planners etc posted online.

· Revision materials posted online – for pupils with identified problems.

· General paperwork, syllabuses, trip letters, health and safety forms posted

online to save admin.

· Homework posted online – no excuse for forgetting/misinterpreting tasks.

Generally, teachers used the VLE as an extension of their classroom practice. It

was only rarely used to develop new teaching approaches.

Main Benefits for Students (cited in questionnaires - % citation)

· Helped with revision (50%).

· Extended my learning (39%).

· Helped me keep up with difficult topics (33%).

· Enabled me to keep up with work when absent (25%).

· Helped me manage my own learning (eg. move ahead at my own pace)

(19%).

· Note: One unexpected outcome - a student new to the school felt that the

VLE had helped him feel part of the school and helped embed school

systems.

Note on Forum use

Discussion forums appeared less useful than is the case in the tertiary sector.

They were used occasionally in some subjects for specific tasks, but pupils had

to be ‘coerced’ into using them. General ‘help’ or ‘revision’ forums were little

used by students. An exception was for clubs where the VLE acted as a

‘meeting’ point for the group. Forums were then well used. Teachers in charge

of these activities found the VLE very useful.

Why Moodle?

So why isn’t everyone using it? Well, free software doesn’t have a marketing

budget – there are no colourful circulars or high powered sales staff. And some

technical expertise is required by the administrator of the VLE (Head of ICT?

Technician?), involving setting up the software on a server, then customising it

for your school. Some administration is also required to maintain the user

database and prevent abuse.

Moodle was chosen because it seemed to fulfil a number of criteria which I felt

were necessary for successfully implementing online learning in our school:

1. The software is extremely easy to use with a minimal learning curve. Even a

totally new user can be up and running with the software in no more than about

half an hour.

2. The relatively low cost involved in the use of Moodle would mean that staff

would not be under great pressure to make use of Moodle - instead, staff would

use the software where they see a need. This would result in it being seen as

an opportunity, rather than a threat.

3. This gradual introduction to the use of online learning complements the

evolutionary approach to change, which reflects the ethos of the school.

4. Finally, Moodle is essentially a mind tool. It allows teachers to develop

resources for their students in whatever way they wish but it is content free.

Moodle was implemented at our school in response to a perceived need by

teachers to be able to easily incorporate the internet into their teaching. Moodle

was seen as a potentially effective but low risk strategy: effective because of its

great ease of use, which means that it could remove barriers to internet use by

many teachers; low risk because the software itself is free and could therefore

be introduced in a gradualist way in response to teachers needs, without

involving the school in large capital investment. It was also, in part, a reaction to

a fantastic piece of software, that is not content based but has the features to

empower enthusiastic teachers to use the internet in a range of different and

innovative ways.

Technical Issues

Although Moodle is open source software and as such entirely free to use, it is

necessary to either install the programme on your own server or to rent space

on an external server. The former choice probably gives greater flexibility but

requires significant investment in terms of time and technical expertise. Whilst

Moodle has proved to be very stable and largely free of bugs, it does place

significant demands on the host server and this needs to be taken into account

by any potential users.

I chose to install Moodle initially on a low cost shared remote server. This can

be achieved automatically if the server has a 'Fantastico' installer included with

the package, and this is an excellent way to test out the software.

Unfortunately, such a server could not support a whole class of students

accessing the site at the same time - this caused the site to crash on a few

occasions.

The solution, which has been very successful to date, has been to host the site

via a dedicated Moodle hosting service at a cost of about É500 (approximately

$1800) a year, but this will vary with the size of the school and the site itself.

This has proved to be a very reliable solution, and the software itself is installed

by the server owner and technical support provided for free. This in itself has

saved me many hours of work. For anyone considering the use of Moodle in

their school, I would recommend a low-cost shared server (I have found

to be very good, but there are many others) for testing and

piloting purposes only. If you want a whole school solution then I would

definitely recommend a specialist Moodle hosting provider (a list of these, at

least one UK based, is provided on the website).

The popularity of Moodle is rapidly increasing, and has recently received a

significant boost when it was announced in late 2005 that the Open University

was partnering with Moodle to provide their online courses. This increased

popularity is evidenced by the extremely active and very helpful support forums

at Moodle.org.

Certainly, Moodle is considered a success at our school. For staff, ease of use

is the key making the transition to online learning as near seamless as possible.

The author, Ray Le Couteur, is Head of ICT and teaches both ICT

and Science at King Edward VI Grammar School, Chelmsford, UK. If

you wish to know more about the use of Moodle at the school then

visit our Moodle VLE at or email the author at

. Current areas of interest, apart from the use of Moodle,

includes research into the prevalence and prevention of plagiarism, especially

regarding the early years of secondary school and the use of software Mind

Tools. Ray may be contacted on .