

The only difference is that the back-up file chosen would be the one that was saved without the student data. To restore a Moodle course without student data, the process is virtually the same. If this is not done, then the file could be lost if the Moodle course is removed from Moodle.) (The back up file needs to be saved on a hard drive, or somewhere besides in the Moodle shell. On the next screen, I would select the course where I want to place the restored course, and click “Restore this course now”. On the following screen, I would select “Current course, deleting it first”. In the next windows that appear, I would choose Yes and Continue. I would then choose the back-up file I had previously saved. I would then return to the Administration menu and click on Restore.

To restore a Moodle course with student data, I would click on Settings under the Administration menu and make sure that the course is set to the correct format (Topics or Weekly) and that the number of weeks or topics is set accordingly. That way, they are still available to me, but not visible to anyone else. To ‘hide’ course postings from students in Kidblog, I ‘unpublish’ them. When I used it in my class, I marked the work, and kept track in a separate program called Gradekeeper. There is no place to keep grades in Kidblog. The only way to keep the data is to let it remain in the blog. Kidblog really doesn’t have a method for actually saving student data. I found that Moodle is better for saving student data. The teacher name for the kubbu quiz within Kidblog is cathy.southwell, and the passwords are studenta, or studentb.
#GRADEKEEPER WIKI PASSWORD#
The username is Student A, password studenta. I used Kidblog for the course using an online tool. I found it was easier to work with material that I was familiar with. I used lessons that I created for another EDDL course.
