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Conducting a Seminar Online through a Moodle Discussion Forum

This is one of our series of guidance notes to ensure the continuity of education and the student learning experience during the current rapidly evolving Coronavirus situation. Its focus is on suggesting basic ways a seminar can be run online using a Moodle discussion forum.

Netiquette PDF

You can download this PDF and add it to your Moodle discussion forums as a reminder for students and staff to collaborate professionally and politely. Etiquette guidance.pdf

Part 1: Converting a seminar plan to an online seminar

A seminar plan is often made up of questions for students to discuss, or activities for students to complete. The simplest approach to delivering this online is to keep those same questions/activities, and use a Moodle discussion forum to:


From your existing seminar plan, choose the questions/activities which


Using these questions/activities, you can vary how students engage with them.


For any of these activities, you should request a specific output, for example:


When the activity is complete, you can:

Part 2: Further considerations for online seminars

Preparation


Student contributions

Set expectations


Timing

This guidance does not dictate the duration of the seminar. You could run a seminar:

As a shorter, more synchronous seminar carried out over the time of an ordinary seminar, or slightly longer (to allow for slower communication and familiarity with the technology).
Pros: This more closely follows original seminar format, and the timeslot is as expected for students.
You would be able to moderate all online discussion.
Cons: This could be difficult for students in different time-zones. There is less time for students to learn the interface and fix technical problems.

As a longer asynchronous seminar carried out over a day or longer. You would join the forum at specified times to give instructions and respond to student contributions, but are not continuously 'present'. Fore example, you could also post three questions in separate forums, and leave students to discuss for 24 hours (possibly with additional instructions re: length of posts, number of posts per student, or a requirement to respond to one other person's post).
Pros: Students have longer to think and post and respond to one another. It may help students in different time zones to participate, and there is more time for students to understand the interface and fix technical problems.
Cons: There is less concentration of student interaction. The forum could go unmoderated for long periods while you are not present. Students may not be available for a longer period.