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Overview
A lesson is made up of a number of pages and optionally branch
tables.
A page contains some content and it normally ends with a
question. Thus the term Question Page.
For Essay Questions, there is no answer, just a score, feedback, and a page jump.
Each answer can have a short piece of text which is displayed if the answer is
chosen. This piece of text is called the response.
Also associated with each answer is a jump. The jump can be relative -
this page, next page - or absolute - specifying any one of the pages in the
lesson or the end of the lesson.
By default, the first answer jumps to the next page in the lesson. The subsequent
answers jump to the same page. That is, the student is shown the same page of the
lesson again if they do not chose the first answer. If you have already created a
cluster with an end of cluster, and the question is within it, you can also choose
to jump to an Unseen Question within the cluster. This option will not be shown if
you are not in a cluster. You can surround a set of questions with cluster and end
of cluster at any time.
The next page is determined by the lesson's logical order. This is
the order of the pages as seen by the teacher. This order can be altered
by moving pages within the lesson.
The lesson also has a navigation order. This is the order of the
pages as seen by the students. This is determined by the jumps specified
for individual answers and it can be very different from the logical order.
(Although if the jumps are not changed from their default values
the two are strongly related.) The teacher has the option to check the
navigation order.
When displayed to the students, the answers are usually shuffled. That is,
the first answer from the teacher's point of view will not necessarily be
the first answer in the list shown to the students. (Further, each time the
same set of answers is displayed they are likely to appear in a different
order.) The exception is sets of answers for matching-type questions, here
the answers are shown in the same order as input by the teacher.
The number of answers can vary from page to page. For example, it is allowed
that some pages can end with a true/false question while others have questions
with one correct answer and three, say, distractors.
It is possible to set up a page without any answers. The students are shown
a Continue link instead of the set of shuffled answers.
If custom scoring is off: for the purposes of grading the lessons, correct answers are ones which
jump to a page which is further down the logical order than the current page.
Wrong answers are ones which either jump to the same page or to a page
further up the logical order than the current page. Thus, if the jumps are
not changed, the first answer is a correct answer and the other answers are
wrong answers.
If custom scoring is on: grading of an answer is determined by the point value
of the answer, the total points earned serves as a fraction of the total point value
of the lesson, up to 100%.
Questions can have more than one correct answer. For example, if two of the answers
jump to the next page then either answer is taken as a correct answer. (Although
the same destination page is shown to the students, the responses shown on the way
to that page may well be different for the two answers.)
In the teacher's view of the lesson the correct answers have underlined Answer
Labels.
Branch tables are simply pages which have a set of links to other
pages in the lesson. Typically a lesson may start with a branch table which
acts as a Table of Contents.
Each link in a branch table has two components, a description and the title
of the page to jump to.
A branch table effectively divides the lesson into a number of
branches (or sections). Each branch can contain a number of pages
(probably all related to the same topic). The end of a branch is usually
marked by an End of Branch page. This is a special page which, by
default, returns the student back to the preceding branch table. (The
"return" jump in an End of Branch page can be changed, if
required, by editing the page.)
There can be more than one branch table in a lesson. For example, a lesson
might usefully be structured so that specialist points are sub-branches
within the main subject branches.
It is important to give students a means of ending the lesson. This might
be done by including an "End Lesson" link in the main branch
table. This jumps to the (imaginary) End of Lesson page. Another
option is for the last branch in the lesson (here "last" is used
in the logical ordering sense) to simply continue to the end of the lesson,
that is, it is not terminated by an End of Branch page.
With custom scoring off, when a lesson includes one or more branch tables it is
advisable to set the "Minimum number of Questions" parameter to some reasonable
value. This sets a lower limit on the number of pages seen when the grade is
calculated. Without this parameter a student might visit a single branch in the
lesson, answer all its questions correctly and leave the lesson with the maximum
grade.
With custom scoring on, a student is graded based on the number of points they have
earned as a percentage of the total points for the lesson.
Further, with custom scoring off, when a branch table is present a student has
the opportunity of re-visiting the same branch more than once. However, the grade is
calculated using the number of unique questions answered. So repeatedly answering
the same set of questions does not increase the grade. (In fact, the reverse is
true, it lowers the grade as the count of the number of pages seen is used in the
denominator when calculating grades does include repeats.) In order to give students
a fair idea of their progress in the lesson, they are shown details of how many
questions they are answered correctly, number of pages seen, and their current grade
on every branch table page.
With custom scoring on, a student may revisit a question if the navigation path
allows it, and re-earn the point(s) for that question, if attempts is greater than
1. To prevent this, set attempts to 1.
The end of the lesson is reached by either jumping to that location explicitly
or by jumping to the next page from the last (logical) page of the lesson. With
custom scoring off, when the end of the lesson is reached, the student receives a
congratulations message and is shown their grade. The grade is (the number of
questions correctly answered / number of pages seen) * the grade of the lesson.
With custom scoring on, the grade is the points earned as a % of the total points
(e.g. 3 points earned for a 3 point lesson = 100% of 3 points).
If the end of the lesson is not reached and the student just leaves,
when the student goes into the lesson again they are given the choice of
starting at the beginning or picking up the lesson where they answered their
last correct answer.
For a lesson which allow re-takes, the teacher has the choice of using the
best grade or the average of the grades as the "final" grade from
the lesson. That grade is shown on the Grades page, for example.
Cluster pages: a cluster represents a set of questions from which one or more
may be randomly chosen. Clusters should be completed with an End of Cluster page for
best results (otherwise they treat the End of Lesson as the EOC). Questions within a
cluster are randomly selected by choosing "Random Question within a Cluster" as a
jump. Questions within a cluster may either link to the EOC to exit the cluster, or
jump to an unseen question within the cluster, or jump to any other page in the
lesson. This also enables the creation of scenarios with a random element using the
lesson module.