Moodle site - basic structure
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Template:Moodle site - basic structure
How does Moodle work?
The Front page
- The Front page of a Moodle site - the page you reach from your browser - usually includes information about the establishment itself and can be highly customised.
- It is also possible to lock the front page down so that all a user sees when they click on the Moodle URL is a log in screen.
Inside Moodle
- Moodle's basic structure is organised around courses. These are basically pages or areas within Moodle where teachers can present their learning resources and activities to students.
- Courses can have different layouts according to teacher preference or establishment policy, but they usually have a number of central sections where materials are displayed and side blocks offering extra features or information.
- Courses can contain content for a year's studies, a single session or any other variants depending on the teacher or establishment. They can be used by one teacher or shared by a group of teachers. Students can self -enrol, be enrolled manually by their teacher or automatically by the admin.
- Courses are organised into categories. Physics, Chemistry and Biology courses might come under the Science category for instance.
Teachers, students and other Moodle users
- You don't enter Moodle with the "teacher" or "student" role.
- Everyone who logs into Moodle has no special privileges until they are allocated roles by the administrator according to their needs in individual courses or contexts.
Finding your way around
- A logged in user can access areas of Moodle such as their courses or profile from the Navigation block and Settings block. What a user sees in these blocks depends on their role and any privileges granted them by the administrator.
- Each user has their own customisable page, accessed from the Myhome link.