introduction to angel

50
INTRODUCTION TO ANGEL FOR FMCC Basic Training for Use of the ANGEL Learning Management System ABSTRACT Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC is designed to give instructors a high-level tour of the ANGEL Learning Management System as it is used here at FMCC. Users get fundamental training on the technical aspects of using a learning management system to support their courses. Denise L. Passero Systems/Application Technology Coordinator

Upload: denise-passero

Post on 12-Mar-2016

221 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Introduction to ANGEL

INTRODUCTION

TO ANGEL FOR

FMCC Basic Training for Use of the ANGEL Learning

Management System

ABSTRACT Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC is designed to give

instructors a high-level tour of the ANGEL Learning

Management System as it is used here at FMCC.

Users get fundamental training on the technical

aspects of using a learning management system to

support their courses.

Denise L. Passero Systems/Application Technology Coordinator

Page 2: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 1 of 49

Table of Contents Getting Started – Workshop Objectives ....................................................................................................... 3

Workshop A: Fundamentals of Online Teaching ......................................................................................... 4

Tour ANGEL ............................................................................................................................................... 4

Log into ANGEL ...................................................................................................................................... 4

Navigating the Power Strip ................................................................................................................... 6

Nuggets ................................................................................................................................................. 6

Courses Nugget ..................................................................................................................................... 7

Student View - Sunglasses .................................................................................................................... 9

The Guide ............................................................................................................................................ 10

Additional Navigation Tools .................................................................................................................... 12

Communication in ANGEL ....................................................................................................................... 13

Course Email ....................................................................................................................................... 13

Announcements .................................................................................................................................. 15

Discussion Forums .............................................................................................................................. 18

ACTIVITY: Create an Announcement ..................................................................................................... 18

ACTIVITY: Send Course Mail ................................................................................................................... 19

ACTIVITY: Post to Discussion Forum ...................................................................................................... 19

Where to Find Help ................................................................................................................................. 19

Workshop B – Managing Your Course and Creating Content ..................................................................... 21

The ANGEL Gradebook ............................................................................................................................ 21

Adding Content ........................................................................................................................................... 28

Folder ...................................................................................................................................................... 29

Page ......................................................................................................................................................... 32

HTML Editor ............................................................................................................................................ 34

File ........................................................................................................................................................... 36

Link .......................................................................................................................................................... 37

Workshop C – Interactivity Content ........................................................................................................... 39

Drop Box ................................................................................................................................................. 39

Discussion Forum .................................................................................................................................... 43

Assessment ............................................................................................................................................. 44

Conclusion ................................................................................................................................................... 49

Page 3: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 2 of 49

Page 4: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 3 of 49

Introduction to the ANGEL LMS Getting Started – Workshop Objectives Welcome to Introduction to the ANGEL Learning Management System (LMS). This document will

readers gain a fundamental understanding of the technical aspects of online teaching. There are many

aspects to online teaching; technical competency and pedagogy. The intended readership consists

individuals who have never used ANGEL and are interested in learning how to use a learning

management system. It will also serve as a guide to experienced users who need a refresher on the use

of the various basic features of the LMS.

Reviewing this document does not certify an instructor to teach a class in an online or blended format

nor is it designed to teach participants how to develop a course for either of these formats. It is not

intended to supplant more formal training provided to ensure that instructors are ready to develop and

deliver a course in a fully online or blended format. Formal training provided by the SUNY Learning

Network is comprehensive and interactive and cannot be replaced by this reference document. The

document convenient reference and supplement to more rigorous training. Upon completion of this

workshop, students will be in a better position to participate in more formal training designed to certify

them to teach an online or blended course for Fulton-Montgomery Community College.

In addition, this workshop does not replace the ANGEL user manuals. It is designed to help users adapt

to the use of ANGEL here at FMCC. The user manuals available through ANGEL are excellent resources

and have more detailed instructions that are highly beneficial to instructors and students. However,

each instance campus instance of ANGEL may be customized for use by instructors at that particular

campus. This workshop will focus on how ANGEL is used here at FMCC and provide a reference to

participants to help them remember how to use the various features of the LMS.

For more information, readers can contact Denise L. Passero in person, by phone, or email.

Office Location: C023A (basement of the classroom building) Phone: (518) 736-3622 Email: [email protected]

Page 5: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 4 of 49

Workshop A: Fundamentals of Online Teaching

Tour ANGEL This section will provide instruction on logging into ANGEL and give a brief tour of the ANGEL Learning

Management System user interface.

Log into ANGEL Logging into requires everyone – students and instructors – to have appropriate credentials. Here at

FMCC, the username and password are the same as those used for most of the campus resources. It is

the same username and password used for your Windows login, email, and other resources. To log into

ANGEL, open your browser and navigate to https://fmcc.sln.suny.edu. ANGEL is compatible with most

current versions of Safari, Chrome, and Firefox. It is compatible with Internet Explorer up to version 10.

Currently it is not compatible with Internet Explorer version 11. Users on Windows 8.1 must have access

to one of the other compatible browsers to use ANGEL. ANGEL is not compatible with the iPad iOS

version of Safari.

Once you reach the ANGEL home screen, you will notice a nugget or block on the screen entitled, “SLN

Test Your System.” There are three browser checks done by ANGEL to ensure that users are using the

correct version of a compatible browser. If the system test is passed, all three checks will have a green

check mark next to them as shown in the example below.

Verify all three

settings have green

check marks.

Enter your regular Windows

username and password.

Announcements contain important

information. Read each time you log in.

Page 6: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 5 of 49

If any of the system checks fails, the situation must be resolved before proceeding. Also, if you attempt

to proceed, usually you will get a message with red text indicating that your browser does not meet the

requirements for using ANGEL.

The screen encountered when entering the URL (Uniform Resource Locator or address) is the first of the

three ANGEL home pages. The next screen is the user home page. It is created based on each user login

and what they have access to view. This is the screen users encounter once they enter their credentials.

As with the ANGEL home page, this user home page contains various nuggets. The Courses nugget lists

all courses in which a student is enrolled or courses that an instructor is teaching. The Course Mail

nugget shows all course email for all of the courses listed in the Courses nugget. In addition to

announcements from SLN, the Announcements nugget contains announcements created by the

instructor for the courses listed in the courses nugget. As with the ANGEL home page, the user is given

another SLN Test Your System nugget to verify that they are using a compatible browser to access

ANGEL. There are other nuggets on this screen as well that are very useful. The Power Strip provides

additional functionality and will be covered in detail in the next section.

Courses Nugget Course Mail

Nugget

System test (again)

Announcements

Nugget

Power Strip

Page 7: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 6 of 49

Navigating the Power Strip The Power Strip facilitates ANGEL navigation and gives users access to additional

features. The power strip has a list of icons explained below:

The Home icon allows the user to navigate to the user home screen from

anywhere in ANGEL.

The Help icon allows users to access SLN help features.

The Log Off icon allows users to log out of their ANGEL session. It is

important to ALWAYS use this method of exiting ANGEL rather than closing the browser

window. Once logged off, users can and should close the browser window.

The Settings icon is available only to system administrators. Users do not

have access to this area.

The Learning Object Repository icon (LOR) gives users access to an area

where they can create a library of objects they may re-use in multiple sections or

courses. This area is not accessible to students so it is a good place to experiment with

features of ANGEL out of site of the students.

The Preferences icon allows users to customize their personal ANGEL

environment. Users can enter more information about themselves, change their theme or

change their password. (NOTE TO FM USERS: DO NOT change your password in ANGEL.

Password changes are handled in another campus resource.)

The Instant Messenger icon allows users access to the chat functions in ANGEL.

The Power strip is available at all times during your ANGEL session.

Nuggets Nugget is the term used by ANGEL to identify the blocks of contextualized information displayed on the

ANGEL home screens. Each nugget serves a different purpose and often contains access to different

features in ANGEL. The nuggets displayed depend on the level of access each user has. The instructor

home screen may look different from the student home screen. By default, ANGEL may display the

following nuggets:

Student Resources – Resources for learners (SLN Orientation, SLN Knowledge Base, Student

FAQs, and SUNY Learning Network Help Desk).

Faculty Resources – A list of resources for the instructor (SLN101, Interactive Tutorials and

Guides, SUNY Learning Network HelpDesk, SLN Knowledge Base, and Evergreen). This nugget

can be removed but the contents cannot be changed or altered).

SLN Test Your System – the same browser check that appears on the ANGEL home page.

Course Mail – access to the course mail inbox.

My Announcements – announcements created by the instructor as well as SLN announcements.

Today’s Calendar – contents based on the instructor’s use of the calendar feature.

Page 8: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 7 of 49

Repositiories – access to the Learning Object Repository.

Institutional Resources – resources to support distance learning provided by the institution.

Community Groups – similar to courses but more like a resources. Can contain tutorials or other

resources to help faculty with their courses.

There may be other nuggets on this page depending on how it is configured. Hovering over the title bar

on any nugget reveals a set of icons that gives users additional options regarding the specific nugget.

Some can be edited and others cannot. This page is customizable by the user. In the upper left portion

of the screen is the Edit Page link.

Courses Nugget The majority of your time in ANGEL will be spent in one of your courses. This nugget provides access to

the individual course shell for all courses you are contracted to teach. The shell is where all of the

interactions between you and students takes place and where all content relative to a specific course is

placed. It is possible to add or remove available course shells to this nugget. In this example, the image

shows the icons that appear when hovering over the turquoise title bar.

A pencil indicates that the nugget can be edited in some way or its contents can be changed.

Use this to refresh the contents of the nugget.

Use this to minimize or collapse the nugget.

Use this icon to open the nugget in a separate window.

Click the Edit Page link to add or

remove items. Click refresh if

necessary to view changes.

Page 9: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 8 of 49

If you do not see a course that you believe should be there, hover over the turquoise title bar of the

Courses nugget. The pencil icon should be visible at this point. Click the pencil icon to access all of your

available course shells.

Page 10: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 9 of 49

Once these settings are configured and saved, you should see all courses you are scheduled to teach. If

you still cannot see your courses, contact your dean. Do not attempt to add a course on your own.

Student View - Sunglasses The Sunglasses icon allow the instructor to view the course from the student point of view. It is

advisable to use the student view while you are preparing the course in ANGEL to verify that students

see what you want them to see. It is also useful when using teams to verify that all students do not see

items that are limited to specific teams. To use Student view, you must enter a course. Click a course

listed in your Courses nugget. Once inside the course, you will see the third of the three home pages

used in ANGEL. This is the Course home page. This page can also be customized. Some of what you

change here will also be seen by students.

Check or uncheck the items you wish

to appear in the Courses nugget.

Select Show Disabled – Yes. Save

changes

Page 11: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 10 of 49

To use Student view, go into a course and click the sunglasses next to your name in the upper right

corner of the course home page screen.

Since there are a number of views available, you must choose the view you want. By default, the option

labeled, “Student” will be selected. If you want to see the course as all students see it, leave this option

selected and click the button labeled, “Begin Preview.”

When you click these options, you will encounter the course home page as the student sees it. To view

course content you have created, click the Learning Modules tab. From here, view your course content

from the student’s perspective, verifying that they see the things they should see. When you are

finished, click the sunglasses again and then click the button labeled, “Cancel Preview” to return to the

course.

The Guide The Guide is a useful area provided to facilitate navigation of the course. It is especially useful when

teaching as you can view unread course mail, ungraded submissions, or other activities that may have

taken place since the last time you logged in. To access the guide, click the vertical arrangement of four

arrows next to the power strip.

Page 12: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 11 of 49

At the bottom of the screen under the Guide, you can navigate different views of the guide.

The various views also help you to navigate the course:

- Map provides a graphical hierarchy of the file structure in the course. The links may

correspond to the tabs at the top of the course home page.

- What’s new shows the student activity since the last time you logged into the course.

- Tasks show items needing the instructor’s attention. Any tasks not addressed will be

listed each time the instructor logs in until the task has been handled. These could be unread

email messages, ungraded assignments, or other items needing the instructor’s attention.

Guide Closed

Guide opened

Page 13: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 12 of 49

- Search allows you to search for content within the course.

- About provides information about the ANGEL Learning Management System used on

campus. It shows the current version of ANGEL as well as copyright information.

Note that there is a difference between WHAT’S NEW and TASKS. WHAT’S NEW shows student activity

since the last logon and will change each time you log in. TASKS on the other hand show things that you

need to address. Once these items area handled, they will disappear from tasks. They will either not be

there the next time you log in or there will be new TASKS listed.

Additional Navigation Tools There are other ways to move about in ANGEL. Tabs at the top of the screen provide access to the

various areas of your course. The tabs shown depend on your level of access.

Most of your time will be spent in the Learning Modules tab. This is where all of the course content is

stored. The other tabs are:

- Course – your course home page.

- Calendar – the course calendar.

- Resources – resources provided by you or the institution.

- Communicate – course email, chat, office hours, discussions, news and other items.

- Report – various ways to get information about what is going on in the course.

- Automate – tools to automate activities in the course.

- Manage – access to the gradebook, roster, course files, as well as other tools.

Bread crumbs allow you to move back and forth from the various areas in the course. The bread crumb

trail is based on where you were and how you got to where you are now. The appear beneath the tabs

at the top of the screen. Consider the example below:

In this example, I entered an assignment drop box from the home screen, the course home page, the

learning modules tab, then into a folder named FOLDER: Activities – Supplemental Texts, then into

another folder named FOLDER: Module 3 – Windows. I can click any link along that path to get to either

Page 14: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 13 of 49

move back one or two levels, or go all the way back to the home screen or anywhere in between. Use

the bread crumbs or the tabs to navigate the course rather than using the browser back button since the

back button can cause some undesirable events to occur.

Communication in ANGEL There are multiple methods to communicate with students in ANGEL. Those most commonly used are

Course Email, Announcements and Discussion forums.

Course Email Course Email can be accessed from the nugget on the course home page or from the Communicate tab

at the top of the screen. Course mail is for communication within a course only. Students cannot email

outside of course email, nor can email be sent from an external email account into ANGEL course email.

It is used strictly inside of a course.

To enter the email client, click the link labeled, “View Inbox.” The inbox functions similarly to any email

inbox. It shows messages you have been sent using the ANGEL course email.

Page 15: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 14 of 49

Unread messages will be shown with bold-faced text. On the left side of the list of messages are the

familiar tools for Draft messages (composed but saved for sending later), Inbox, Sent (sent messages),

and Trash (deleted messages). As you can see, this Trash folder is empty. In this course ALL EMAIL from

and between students is saved. This provides a trail to document communication especially when

difficulties arise. The communication is stored with the course for future semesters. To send course

email, click the button labeled, “Compose.”

Page 16: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 15 of 49

Click the button labeled, “To:” to locate the recipient’s name. It is not possible to type an email address

into the To: box. The recipient can be located by clicking a letter that appears as the initial of their first

or last name. You can also email the entire class from ANGEL course mail. Mail can be forwarded to an

external email address by selecting the option labeled, “Send a copy to each recipient’s Internet e-mail.”

In this case, the email will be sent to the student’s FM Gmail account. Add a subject line and compose

your message. Once you are satisfied with the message click the button labeled, “Send.”

Announcements Announcements appear on the course home page. Use Announcements to communicate with the

entire class to keep them up to date on course matters. It is also possible to target a specific student or

team with an announcement.

Click the To: button to search for

recipients.

Add subject.

Type message body. Use the HTML editor

tool bar to format message or add media.

Add attachment Forward message

Send, save, or cancel

Page 17: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 16 of 49

To create an announcement, go to the course home page. Hover over the title bar of the

Announcements nugget to get the pencil to appear. Click the pencil to enter the announcement editor.

Page 18: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 17 of 49

All of your announcements will appear. Click the link labeled, “Add Announcement.”

Page 19: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 18 of 49

Inside of the announcement editor screen, or HTML editor screen, create your announcement in the

text box. The tool bar allows you to add images, format text, create bulleted or numbered lists, align

paragraphs, and add other style elements to the text. We will go further into depth about using the

HTML editor later on. Choose a Start Date and an End Date for your announcement if you care to. This

will allow you to establish when you want the announcement to appear and when it should expire.

Sequence is beneficial when you have several announcements and you want to establish where in the

list you want the current announcement to appear. User allows you to target a student or the entire

class. If you are trying to reach an individual student, course email is best. This ensures that the

communication remains between you and that student. Once all your changes have been set, click the

button labeled “Save.” Then you can see your announcement in the list of other announcements you

have created. If you are satisfied, click the button labeled, “Exit Announcement Editor.”

Discussion Forums Discussion forums are a way to have group discussions. Think of Discussion forums as though you are

standing in front of the class having a face-to-face conversation. Students raise their hands in class, and

their remarks are heard by everyone in the room. Email on the other hand, is usually private between

the student and the instructor. We will be creating a discussion forum later on in this workshop tutorial.

You will also have a chance to participate in a discussion as a homework assignment for this workshop

so that you can see what it is like for students.

ACTIVITY: Create an Announcement For homework, log into ANGEL and navigate to your course shell. Use the Announcement Editor to

create an announcement for your students.

Create and format announcement. Use HTML

editor to format and add other content.

Set dates for the message to start and end if

necessary.

Set sequence, target viewer then save or cancel.

Page 20: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 19 of 49

ACTIVITY: Send Course Mail For homework, log into ANGEL and access the course shell for this workshop. Use the Course Email to

send a message to the instructor of this workshop.

ACTIVITY: Post to Discussion Forum For homework, log into ANGEL and access the course shell for this workshop. There will be a discussion

forum waiting in the Learning modules folder. This is a post first discussion. Read the problem posed in

the forum and post your response to the answer. Then you can respond to other students in the course.

Where to Find Help ANGEL is supported by the SUNY Learning Network staff. If things go wrong, they are an excellent

resource. There are also comprehensive manuals available in ANGEL for your use as well as a knowledge

base. Click the question mark on the Power Strip.

You can search the knowledge base or download ANGEL Guides. Also, from the home page (any home

page) you can submit a help desk request directly to SLN. This should be done if you are encountering

technical difficulties – error messages, crashes, or other things that cannot be resolved by FM staff. A

link to the help desk can be seen on the SLN Test Your System nugget:

Page 21: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 20 of 49

Click this link to enter the SLN Help Desk (now called Open SUNY).

From here you can access technical support, submit a help request, or use live chat if someone is

available.

Next, we will talk about adding content to your course.

Access the Open SUNY support

resources.

Page 22: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 21 of 49

Workshop B – Managing Your Course and Creating Content In this section, we will actually begin preparing the environment we need to teach an online course.

Before we begin creating content, it is a good idea to prepare the grade book if you intend to use it. For

a fully online course or a blended course, it is highly recommended that you use the ANGEL gradebook

for grading activities. If you simply intend to support a face-to-face course with ANGEL (web-enhanced),

the ANGEL Gradebook allows you to provide more immediate feedback to students regarding their

standing in the class. While at FM it is possible to keep a gradebook in PowerCAMPUS Self Service, this

tool does not allow students to see their grades on individual activities. They can only see their overall

grade in PowerCAMPUS Self Service if all items with due dates are graded. So the ANGEL gradebook

allows you to improve communication with students regarding their standing in the course at any given

point as well as allow them to see the individual grades that comprise their overall grade.

The ANGEL Gradebook The ANGEL gradebook can be accessed by clicking the Manage tab at the top of the screen in your

course shell. The Management Console is the area where instructors can manipulate settings for the

course. We will not be covering all of the items in the Management Console in this section. We will go

over the basic concepts you need to know to manage your course at a fundamental level. This

illustration gives you a view of the Management Console.

In the Management Console, click the Gradebook link on the Course Management nugget. We will use

this area to configure a gradebook for this course. When you open the Gradebook on a new course

shell, by default the gradebook configuration wizard starts. We typically skip the wizard and set the

gradebook up by hand. Therefore, when the gradebook configuration wizard starts, click the button

labeled, “Skip Wizard.”

Click the Manage Tab

Course Management

nugget is the feature most

used here.

Page 23: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 22 of 49

Now that we are past the wizard, we can begin manual setup of the gradebook. The next screen in the

gradebook management area gives you all of the options you will need to set up this gradebook. If you

have taught the same section multiple times, you can import your gradebook from a previous course

shell. Since this workshop is for brand new ANGEL users, it can be assumed that there is no gradebook

available from a previous course.

Click the Skip Wizard button.

Page 24: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 23 of 49

Under the View section, you can view and or print student grades. Under the Enter/Edit section, you

can enter grades by student or by assignment. Under the Gradebook Management section, you can

create the various objects you need that determine the overall grade as well as individual assignment

grades. Under the Gradebook Tutorial is the ANGEL-supplied tutorial. Consult this tutorial for a more

comprehensive lesson on using the gradebook. Last but not least is the Gradebook setup section. We

will begin our lesson in this section. Click the link labeled, “Preferences” under the Gradebook Setup

section.

VIew

Enter/Edit

Manage

Tutorial

Gradebook Setup

Page 25: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 24 of 49

The decisions made here will depend on what you indicated in your Course Syllabus. Think of the

syllabus as a contract between you and the student. By now, your syllabus should be set up and your

course calendar should be created. This will make it easier to determine what the gradebook will look

like in ANGEL.

Under the section labeled, “General” you need to determine how students will view their grades. Your

options are:

Percent (Letter Grade) – 95% (A)

Score (Percent) – 600 (95%)

Score (Letter Grade) – 600(A)

Score - 600

Percent – 95%

Letter Grade – A

Students seem to appreciate the first option that shows their percentage with the letter grade in

parenthesis. It is a more meaningful way to display the grade.

Next are Options. Usually I personally only select the option to exclude the instructor’s grade from

averages. If you select the option to treat ungraded items as zero, it will fill grades for all items with

zero’s until you grade the assignments. This will result in the student having a grade of F until enough of

the items are graded to give them a better grade. It makes your life easier but can be disconcerting to

Page 26: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 25 of 49

students and will make their mid-term grade abnormally low. The one important decision that must be

made here is the gradebook mode. All graded items are graded with a point value. Under gradebook

mode, you have the option of using Percentage mode or Points mode. Points mode will calculate a total

number of available points for the entire course and the student earns points as they complete

assignments. Using Points mode, their overall grade becomes the number of points earned / the total

number of points available for the course. All items are assigned to a single category. If you choose

Percentage, allows for the grouping of assignments into categories and each category can be weighted.

So as an example, you can set Homework as 30% of the overall grade, Tests as 40% of the overall grade,

and Research Papers as 30% of the overall grade. You will determine the categories to be used and their

weight toward the overall grade. What you do here will depend on what you defined in your course

syllabus.

Under the Average section, you will make a decision regarding whether or not the overall grade will be

displayed or not and how it will be displayed.

Next, you need to set up the Grading Scale. Click the link labeled, “Grading Scale” on the right side of

the screen in the Gradebook Management section. Use the grading scale to set the lowest grade

needed to achieve a specific letter grade. FMCC uses the plus/minus grading system. In the example

below, we see the standard grading scale in use by the institution.

Under the Label you enter the letter grade which is simply a label. Under the Minimum Percent, you

enter the lowest grade needed to achieve that letter grade. Enter the scale beginning with A and

working your way to F. Each time you finish entering the settings for a letter grade, click the link

labeled, “Add New” to add a new row to the table to enter the next values. Repeat this process until all

of the values are entered. When you are finished, click the link labeled, “<< Back To Main Menu.”

Page 27: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 26 of 49

Next click the option labeled, Categories under the main menu. When you enter this screen, you will

find a single category named Default. If you have chosen Points mode for your gradebook, all

assignments will fall into this single category. You can rename the category if you care to, otherwise

there is nothing else to do here.

If you have chosen Percentages for the gradebook mode, you can create your categories here. You can

rename the Default category to one you intend to use for your weighted averages.

To rename the Default category put a check mark in the box next to the name of the category then click

the button labeled, “Edit Selected.”

Page 28: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 27 of 49

The main settings needed are indicated in the graphic. The other settings are beyond the scope of this

training. When you have entered the settings you want, click Save. Click the button labeled, “Add New”

to add your next category. Continue until you have all the categories you need. If you are using the

percentages, the Percent Overall cannot exceed 100%. If you have indicated that a category counts as

extra credit, ANGEL will handle that math for you. When you have finished, click Back to Main Menu.

At this point, you are ready to begin adding content. It is not necessary to add the assignments here if

you are going to have students submit their homework to a drop box in ANGEL. You can add the drop

box assignment to the gradebook when you create it. If you are not using ANGEL to collect and grade

assignments, you can add them here. To add an assignment, click the link labeled, “Assignments” on the

main menu. There will be no assignments available so you will click the button labeled, “Add New.”

Name the

category.

Use all grades in the

category or drop grades.

Uncheck Auto-calculate. Enter the weight,

check extra credit if required.

Page 29: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 28 of 49

Fill in the options as shown in the illustration above. The calculation type is set to manual by default.

This setting means that you are going to manually enter the grade into the gradebook. If you are not

collecting assignments and grading them in ANGEL, use this option. Otherwise your choices are:

Average score – the average grade of multiple graded submissions to a drop box or quiz.

Maximum score – the highest score of multiple graded submissions.

First submission – take the grade of the first of multiple submissions only.

Last submission – take the grade of the last of multiple submissions.

Once you have defined the basic settings for the assignment save your settings. You can continue

adding assignments until all of your assignments are in.

Adding Content There are a number of learning objects available in ANGEL to use in your courses to deliver content. For

the purposes of this workshop, we will cover only a few.

Folders

Pages

Files

Give the assignment a name.

Assign it to a category if you are

using them.

How much is the assignment worth?

Calculation type.

Page 30: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 29 of 49

Links

Folder A folder is a way to organize your course and make it easy for students to locate content. It is a good

idea to keep the content well organized to minimize frustration resulting from students not being able

to find objects in the course. Log into ANGEL if you are not already there and navigate to the course

shell in which you want to work. Click the Learning Modules tab at the top of the screen. Recall that all

content will be stored here. At the top of the screen in each object, is a series of links that allows you to

manage the content in your course. The links that appear depend on where you are in the course. The

Learning Objects item is actually a special folder for containing all the objects you plan to use to teach

your course. This folder should NEVER be deleted.

This row of links includes:

Add Content – add learning objects to the current location.

Rearrange – reorder the objects in the current location.

Reports – statistics on the use of the object.

Utilities – options here depend on where you are.

Submissions – options to view items uploaded to the folder if allowed.

Preferences – options to manage how the object will be used.1

Since we want to organize the contents in the course, we will use folders to help guide students on

finding the learning objects. Click the link labeled, “Add Content.”

It should also be noted that it is most certainly possible to copy or import items from another course or

from the Learning Object Repository. This saves time and prevents recreating items you already have

used previously and wish to use again. For the purposes of this workshop, we will be creating new

content since it is assumed that you have not used ANGEL before and have no content available to

import or copy. Once you have a course set up, if you teach that section in a future semester, you can

import or “pour” the entire course into the Learning Modules folder and then just edit the course

making changes for the new semester and updating content rather than having to reinvent the wheel

every semester.

1 Be very careful with the preferences in the Learning Objects folder. DO NOT change a setting unless you understand the impact it will have on the folder. Changing a wrong setting can result in cutting off access to this folder and will require intervention by the SLN Help Desk to resolve/restore.

Page 31: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 30 of 49

In the Add Content screen, you will see a number of items that can be added to a course. You might

consider adding a folder to your course and marking it with the title, “For Instructor Use Only.” Remove

access by students from this folder It is a convenient way to test the various objects you can use for the

without anyone seeing them. The main items used in the course are:

Folder – holds other folders and objects.

Page – a web page used to present content.

Link – link to an external site.

File – upload a file to the course.

Drop Box – collect content from students.

Discussion Forum – student-to-student and student-to-instructor interaction.

We will click the option to add a folder to the Learning Modules folder.

Page 32: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 31 of 49

At first, the new folder has the default title of New Folder. Under the Page Settings group, you have an

opportunity to change the title. Choose a brief but meaningful and descriptive title for the folder. It

should be a title that will tell students what they should expect to find in the folder. The subtitle text

box can provide more descriptive information or brief instructions. The page text for a folder can be

used for more BRIEF information about the folder contents or some BRIEF instruction on the use of the

folder.

At the top of the folder is a section labeled, “Settings.” Select the Advanced option to provide access to

all of the options available for configuring this folder. Anytime you are configuring a learning object, you

should turn on the Advanced options.

The tabs across the top allow you to create more settings for the folder. The options here change

according to the item you are viewing and configuring. A brief description of each tab is shown below:

Access – set permissions for viewing the object.

Standards – map the object to program standards.

Objectives – map the object to student learning outcomes.

Automate – create actions that happen based on student interaction with the object.

Assignment – map the item to the gradebook.

For now, just give the folder a descriptive name and subtitle. When you finish, scroll to the bottom of

this screen and click the save button to save your settings.

Once you save the folder settings, you will end up INSIDE of that folder. You will see the folder title at

the top of the screen along with the subtitle and other text you created when setting up the folder. You

Brief, descriptive title

Brief, descriptive title

Brief, descriptive comment if necessary.

HTML editor tool bar.

Select Advanced.

Tabs for more settings

Page 33: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 32 of 49

will see this by looking at the bread crumb trail above the folder name and icon. Notice that the trail

shows you entered the folder from the Learning Modules folder.

If you discover you need to change something about the folder, you can click the Settings link below the

title and subtitle so that you can return to the editing area to make changes – for instance to correct a

typing error or make some other change.

Also notice the links under the title and subtitle now allow you to either work with the folder or add

content to the folder. You can add another folder or other content to this folder. While nesting folders

inside of other folders is quite alright, be cautious about nesting items too deep. A good rule of thumb

is this: if you find yourself nesting items more than three folders deep, you should revisit your

organization techniques. Nesting things too deep forces the user to have to perform multiple clicks to

access the content you want them to see and frustrates the user unnecessarily. Try not to nest items

more than three folders deep.

Page A page is merely a web page used to convey information to the reader. In ANGEL, Web pages work

pretty much like any web page on the World Wide Web except it is in the contained space of the ANGEL

Learning Management System. Pages in ANGEL can be used for lecture notes and also to embed

multimedia content from other sites like YouTube. To add a page to your folder (assume we are in the

Course Documents Folder from the earlier example), enter the folder and click the Add Content link.

Bread crumbs show you where you are and where

you came from.

Look at the items you set for this folder: Title,

subtitle, and folder text

Page 34: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 33 of 49

Select the option labeled Page. Once you have selected the page option, you will be in the HTML editor

screen. Be sure to select the Advance option just below the title of the page. Every object includes the

HTML editor tool bar.

Page 35: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 34 of 49

HTML Editor The HTML tool bar has many familiar options to enhance the appearance and usage of the web page

and allow you to incorporate features into the page to make it more engaging.

- Click this icon to expand the editing window to a larger view. Especially useful for pages

with a lot of content.

- Insert/Edit macro. A macro is a little program you can create to automate some action.

This is for advanced users only.

- Paste. The drop down arrow next to the paste icon give you access to more options

like the cut, copy, paste, paste from Word, paste as plain text, as well as the undo and redo

buttons.

- Use either of these icons to format text as bold, italics, underline or all or any

combination of the three. The drop down arrow also gives you access to the strike through,

super script and sub script options.

Be sure to select Advanced.

Add a title and subtitle.

HTML Editor tool bar

Content added here will

appear on the page.

Page 36: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 35 of 49

- Links. Add an external link, or a link to an object or other content in your course.

The drop down arrow gives the options to remove a link or add an anchor to link to content

within the page itself.

- The media links allow you to add an image that you will upload to the course,

add an image from Google images or other media site, or to record and add a YouTube video to

this page if you have a camera. The drop down arrow also has a media option.

- The Insert Equation option allows some math functionality. The drop down arrow

allows you to have access to the Template, special character, line, or page break options.

- The table icon and the drop down arrow allow you to insert and edit a table.

- The form icon allows you to create a form. The drop down arrow allows you access to

the various objects that can be used in the form like a radio button, check box, text field, text

area field (longer note), selection box, or a button.

- The lists icons allow you to add numbered or bulleted lists to your page. Use the

drop down arrow to increase or decrease the indentation on a list.

- The paragraph alignment icons allow you to adjust the alignment of text. You can

right justify, center, left justify, or block justify text by choosing the drop down arrow.

- The Text color and Fill color icons allow you to change the color of the characters in

the text or to backfill the text with color. The drop down arrow on either of these icons gives

you access to the color palatte.

- The style icon allows you to have access to the various ways to change the kind of text

you use in a web page. The drop down arrow includes the choices for description text, heading

text, highlighted text, page title, page subtitle, shaded area, title bar, and tool bar.

- The format icon allows you to change the various headings and sizes of the headings.

The drop down arrow lists the headings in order of size.

- The size icon allows you to change the size of the font for the standard paragraph text.

- This spell checking icon allows you to check for spelling errors in your text.

- The source icon allows you to switch between the HTML sources view or the graphical

user interface view. Use this view if you are comfortable with HTML code. The drop down box

gives you access to the spell checker, show blocks, document properties, preview and save

buttons.

As you work along in your course, you should save your changes often on any object you are editing.

This is helpful in the event you connection to ANGEL is lost. Then you can get back to the last known

good version of your document.

Some of the icons we talked about are familiar to you and others provide more advanced editing

options. Use a folder hidden from your students view to test these features. It is always possible to

delete a page or any object and start over if things go awry.

Page 37: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 36 of 49

File The file option allows you to upload different types of files to your course. You can upload a Word

document, a PDF file, a PowerPoint presentation, or other kinds of web content to your course. Using

this option allows the student to download the file for their use as opposed to opening and viewing the

file as part of the course. To add a file to your course, go to the folder where you want to add a file, in

our case it will be the Course Information folder created earlier. Click the Add Content link and choose

File as the object you want to add to the course.

When you are uploading web content or multimedia content to ANGEL, it usually has to be zipped and

then extracted once it is uploaded. The extracted page will show directly in ANGEL. In some cases, you

may receive a file from a text book publisher called a common cartridge. This is an advanced topic and

is beyond the scope of this lesson. However, if that happens you can email [email protected]

and you will receive assistance on incorporating this content into your course. Below is an example of a

file uploaded to an ANGEL course.

Use the browse button to find the file you wish to upload.

Give the file a title.

Choose the file type. Auto Detect is fine.

Click Upload File.

Page 38: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 37 of 49

Students can click the file name and download the file and save it to their computers or flash drives.

Link It is also possible to add a link to an external site in your course. Returning to our Course Information

folder as an example, click the Add Content link. From the available options, choose Link. You will

provide a name and subtitle as with the other objects. This time, you will also add the URL or web site

address to the site to which you are linking.

Page 39: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 38 of 49

In the link settings, having the link open in a new window makes it easier for students to return to this

course in ANGEL rather than having it open in the same page they are on in the course. Also you can

select the option for no banner to remove the ANGEL screen from the new link window.

In some browsers, the security settings may disallow the opening of an external site inside of ANGEL. If

that happens, look for a shield or other security icon in the upper left corner next to the web site

address. Click the shield and click the option to unblock the site.

Once you unblock page, things should work normally. The next workshop section will cover more of the

interactive content as well as backing up your course.

Add the title and subtitle.

Go to the address you plan to use, and copy the

URL. Paste the URL into the Link URL text box

below.

Choose New Window for Link Target

In FireFox, click this shield.

Page 40: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 39 of 49

Workshop C – Interactivity Content One of the strong points in favor of using the ANGEL Learning Management System is the ability to

interact with students and have them interact with each other. In this section, we will discuss three of

the common tools used for learner interaction and engagement; drop boxes, discussion forums, and

assessments.

Drop Box The drop box allows students to upload files to the instructor. It can also be attached to the grade book

so that when the instructor views the item, he or she can attach a grade to the submission and the

grade will be attached to the grade book. In a previous lesion we discussed the grade book so it is

assumed that you have configured the grade book with everything except assignments. Using the drop

box is one way to add assignments to the grade book.

In this example, we will create a new folder for our assignments called lesson 1. Go to your course shell

and create this folder at the root of the Learning Modules folder. When you finish, you should enter the

Lesson 1 folder.

Enter the Lesson 1 folder if you have not done so already. Use the Add Content link to access all

available learning objects. Choose the Drop Box option.

As with our previous learning objects, give the drop box a title, subtitle, and enter some instructions to

students in the message box.

Page 41: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 40 of 49

When creating the drop box, include basic instructions for its use. If you do not want students to copy

and paste their work into the message box, you can either disable the box or make sure you indicate this

in the instructions. There is a canned statement that cannot be removed stating that students may

attach the assignment as a file or copy and paste it into the message box.

Give the drop box a title, subtitle, and

basic instructions. Use the HTML editing

tools to format content or add media.

Page 42: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 41 of 49

The homework drop box can be tied to the gradebook from the assignment tab. Click the Settings link on

the drop box and then click the Assignment tab. Below, you can see an example of a completed

assignment drop box that is tied to the gradebook.

Statement cannot be

deleted.

Title is required.

Students may enter assignment

or leave a message. Optional.

Students may attach a file and then submit. They

have to click submit in the file attachment box and

then again at this level for the submission to be

successful.

Page 43: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 42 of 49

When you first create the drop box, you have to set the gradebook settings yourself. In new drop box,

under the section labeled, “Gradebook settings” click the drop down box and choose New Assignment.

Fill out the resulting form with appropriate values for this assignment.

Click the Assignment tab.

Task type is item completion. Allows students to track completed items.

Set date item was assigned. Set Due date. Optional

settings.

Name of assignment in gradebook. See below for more

detail.

This example has a rubric tied to it. Rubrics are covered in

an advanced topic.

You set the title for the assignment. Keep it short. Pick the

category. Enter value of assignment (points). Calculation

type based on the grade that goes into the gradebook.

Page 44: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 43 of 49

When you have set all the items, click save. NOTE: keep the title short so that it is easier to see in the

gradebook.

Discussion Forum Discussion forums provide opportunities for student interaction and engagement. Generally speaking,

the instructor poses a question or problem that students will discuss. They may be assigned to watch a

video and answer questions posed by the instructor. Guidelines for participation and grading must be

established. To create a discussion forum enter the folder where the forum is to occur. Click Add

Content and choose discussion forum.

Fill out the forum with all of the appropriate information as shown below:

Page 45: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 44 of 49

When you are done, click the assignment tab to set the gradebook settings. Save when you are done.

Assessment The assessment object is used for exams, quizzes, or tests. You can create your questions by hand or

create the exam in a tool like TestGen and import the exam into ANGEL. To create an assessment, go to

the folder where the assessment should appear and click Add Content. Choose assessment from the list

of available objects.

Initially the screen resembles all other items. You need to put the title, subtitle, message, and

assignment gradebook settings. Once you click save, you can create the questions for the assessment.

Page 46: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 45 of 49

Once the assessment is saved, you can create your questions. Click the link labeled, Add Question.

You need to decide the kind of question you want to use for this assessment.

Page 47: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 46 of 49

You can see the kinds of questions you can use for this assessment along with a description of the

question type. For this example, we can click Multiple Choice.

Page 48: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 47 of 49

You can and should provide feedback based on whether or not the student chose the correct answer or

not.

The question text goes here.

Create answer choices. Be sure to

indicate the correct choice. The

percentage is the grade if the correct

answer is chosen.

Additional answer choices can be added if

necessary.

Enter the number of points the

question is worth.

Page 49: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 48 of 49

Continue with this process until the entire exam is done.

Additional options include showing the HTML editor so that you can include an image in the question.

The students can examine the image and answer questions about the picture.

When you are finished, your screen will show all of the questions you created. You can click the link

labeled, “Preview” to see what your test will look like to a student or use the glasses view to preview the

exam from the student’s point of view.

Below is a preview of this question.

Enter the text for feedback based on

whether or not the student chooses the

correct answer.

The rest of these options are not required. Click save to

save the question, or click save and create new to save

the current question then create the next question.

Select the option to add the question to the question

bank if you wish to store it for future use.

Page 50: Introduction to ANGEL

Introduction to ANGEL for FMCC

IntroANGEL_V2.docx Page 49 of 49

Conclusion This brings us to the close of these first three workshops. Future workshops for more advanced topics

will be announced as they are developed. If you have any questions, contact Denise L. Passero.