Title: Serf
1Serf
- Server-side Educational Records Facilitator
2What Is Serf?
- Invented in 1997, Serf is a self-paced multimedia
learning environment that enables students to
navigate a syllabus, access instructional
resources, communicate, and submit assignments
over the Web. - Instructors create courses without having to know
HTML.
3LoggingOn
4Viewing the Course
5Student Control Panel
6Instructor Options
7Editing a Serf Syllabus
8Kinds of Syllabus Events
Textual Content (adds text to the current
cluster) Class title (starts a new class
cluster) Generic title (starts a new generic
cluster) Preamble title (starts a new preamble
cluster) Multimedia graphic (adds content with a
graphic icon and link) Multimedia movie (adds
content with a movie icon and link) Multimedia
sound (adds content with a sound icon and link)
Multimedia Web site (adds content with a Web
site icon and link) Observational assignment Web
portfolio assignment Web query assignment Submit
file assignment True/false question Multiple
choice question Fill-in-the-blank question Image
map question Short answer question Slider
question (Likert scale) Examination (launches a
test) Strand (launches a tutorial
module) Diagnostic (launches a self-assessment) Su
rvey (administers a questionnaire) Control panel
(creates a customized control panel) Menu bar
(replaces or augments the current Serf menu
bar) Banner (replaces or augments the current
banner) Trailer (replaces or augments the current
trailer)
9Creating an Event
10Editor Viewer
11Navigating via the Index
12Editing the Calendar
13Setting the Date
14Jumpstarting the Calendar
15Editing the Style
16Rostering Students
17Using theGradebook
18Assigning Grades
19Discussion Forums
20Controlling ForumAccess
21Reading ForumTopics
22Writing In aForum
23Serf 2.0Summer 1998
- Version 2 added to Serf a testing system that can
administer and grade objective test questions in
a traditional exam style, or present
competency-based tests according to Blooms
mastery learning model.
24Kinds of Test Questions
- True/False
- Multiple Choice
- Fill-in-the-Blank
- Image Map
- Short Answer
- Slider (Likert Scale)
25Editing aQuestion
26Editing aPool
27Editing aModule
- Practice vs Graded
- Weight of Module
- Criterion
- Repeats
- Reviews
- Deadlines
- Time frames
28Editing aSection
- Relative weight
- Question pool
- Random or sequential
- Length
- Competency
- Origin
- Hide or see scores
- Time limit
- Allow skipping questions
- Allow changing answers
- Branching on condition
29Serf 3.0Summer 1999
- Version 3 added support for surveys, diagnostic
assessments, and tutorials.
30Creating aDiagnosis
31Making aDiagnostic
32Teaching in the Zone
- Helping All Students by Giving
- What They Need, When They Need It
33Identifying the Zone
- Vygotsky defined the zone of proximal development
as the difference between the difficulty level of
a problem a student can cope with independently
and the level that can be accomplished with help
from others. - Systems like Serf identify the zone and provide
the help from others.
34Throwing the Zone Away
- In traditional teaching, we throw the zone away.
- Students take tests, the results of which often
are never handed back. - Students hand in term papers at the end of a
course with no chance to rewrite them. - We are throwing the zone away.
35Teaching in the Zone
- Constructivist teaching via the Web brings the
student into the zone. - The instructor becomes a coach who helps the
student achieve goals. - Time shifting makes the process efficient and
manageable for student and teacher alike.
36A Hypothesis
- The effectiveness of an online learning system is
directly related to the degree in which it
facilitates teaching in the zone. - Methods I use to do this include
- Giving the student another try
- Just-in-time discussion
- Customized scaffolding
- Gallery of other students work
37Problem-based Learning
- The problem with problem-based learning is
assessment. - How do you assess what each student has
contributed in a cooperative learning
environment? - Systems like Serf solve this problem by logging
what each student contributes.