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History: Difference between revisions

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Moodle grew quickly: the first ever Moodle Moot was held in Oxford in 2004 and companies  started applying to become [http://moodle.com/partners/ Moodle partners.] 2005 marked the move to [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=32727 dedicated premises] with Martin and 4 others; the [http://www.flickr.com/photos/moodler/sets/72157623325227250/ current HQ,] at Lord Street Perth, houses 16 with 11 working remotely.
Moodle grew quickly: the first ever Moodle Moot was held in Oxford in 2004 and companies  started applying to become [http://moodle.com/partners/ Moodle partners.] 2005 marked the move to [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=32727 dedicated premises] with Martin and 4 others; the [http://www.flickr.com/photos/moodler/sets/72157623325227250/ current HQ,] at Lord Street Perth, houses 16 with 11 working remotely.


With improved documentation and  new certification , Moodle had established itself  by 2007 as a leading and [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=68408 award-winning open source LMS].  From 1000 registered sites in 2004, it had gone to half a million users in 2008 and  over a million users in 2010, with over 50 Moodle partners. Its translation repository [[AMOS]] held over 100 languages. The long awaited [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=162906 Moodle 2.0]  came out in November 2010  and now, regular releases bring enhanced features every six months. The current focus is on mobile technology: an [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=227988 official HTML5 app] was released in 2013 and the latest version of Moodle, [[New_features| 2.5]], includes a customisable theme suitable for all screen sizes.
With improved documentation and  new certification , Moodle had established itself  by 2007 as a leading and [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=68408 award-winning open source LMS].  From 1000 registered sites in 2004, it had gone to half a million users in 2008 and  over a million users in 2010, with over 50 Moodle partners. Its translation repository [[AMOS]] held over 100 languages. The long awaited [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=162906 Moodle 2.0]  came out in November 2010  and now, regular releases bring enhanced features every six months. The current focus is on mobile technology: an [https://moodle.org/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=227988 official HTML5 app] was released in 2013 and the latest version of Moodle includes a customisable theme suitable for all screen sizes.


The inauguration of the [http://research.moodle.net/ Moodle Research conference] in 2012 served as a reminder that, however advanced the technology, Moodle design and  development is guided by [[Philosophy| social constructionist pedagogy]]. Educators everywhere are encouraged to share their experiences, just as did Martin over a decade previously.
The inauguration of the [http://research.moodle.net/ Moodle Research conference] in 2012 served as a reminder that, however advanced the technology, Moodle design and  development is guided by [[Philosophy| social constructionist pedagogy]]. Educators everywhere are encouraged to share their experiences, just as did Martin over a decade previously.

Revision as of 15:53, 6 November 2013

Growing up in the Australian outback in the late 1970s, Moodle's Founder and Lead Developer Martin Dougiamas took lessons from the School of the Air, giving him from a young age an insight into distance learning.

As an adult, he worked and later studied at Curtin University, where his experience with WebCT prompted him to investigate an alternative method of online teaching. In 1999 he started trialling early prototypes of a new LMS, the experiences of which formed the basis for his paper Improving the Effectiveness of online Learning.He registered the word 'Moodle' as a trademark of the Moodle Trust. and explained his choice of name in a forum post some years later.

Research continued: the first ever Moodle site was Peter Taylor's http://smec2001.moodle.com/ at Curtin University , with Martin making the first post on his own Moodle.com site in November 2001. The pair published An Interpretive analysis of an internet based course constructed using a new courseware tool called Moodle.

By the end of 2001, Moodle could be downloaded via CVS (Git arrived in 2010 and replaced CVS in 2013) and basic installation documentation was available. It was still very much one man's vision, with Martin setting up the tracker in May 2002 "so you can see what I am working on."

Moodle 1.0 was released in August 2002. Users were discussing Moodle on a new forum, translating Moodle into different languages and creating themes. A year later, the first contributed module (workshop) was released and Moodle.org became the community arm of Moodle, with Moodle.com representing the commercial aspect.

Moodle grew quickly: the first ever Moodle Moot was held in Oxford in 2004 and companies started applying to become Moodle partners. 2005 marked the move to dedicated premises with Martin and 4 others; the current HQ, at Lord Street Perth, houses 16 with 11 working remotely.

With improved documentation and new certification , Moodle had established itself by 2007 as a leading and award-winning open source LMS. From 1000 registered sites in 2004, it had gone to half a million users in 2008 and over a million users in 2010, with over 50 Moodle partners. Its translation repository AMOS held over 100 languages. The long awaited Moodle 2.0 came out in November 2010 and now, regular releases bring enhanced features every six months. The current focus is on mobile technology: an official HTML5 app was released in 2013 and the latest version of Moodle includes a customisable theme suitable for all screen sizes.

The inauguration of the Moodle Research conference in 2012 served as a reminder that, however advanced the technology, Moodle design and development is guided by social constructionist pedagogy. Educators everywhere are encouraged to share their experiences, just as did Martin over a decade previously.