Model Courses
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Prep Main Page > Web Conference 3 > Model Courses
Contents
What is a Model Course?
One of our goals is to create Model Courses. By this, we mean a set of WeBWorK problem sets with problems that will match the course syllabus for one or more textbooks.
An alternate view of a Model Course
- What is a Model Course
- A Gallery of Courses - actual WeBWorK courses used at a variety of institutions and available for guest browsing
Contents
What should be in a Model Course:
- Information about the text(s) to which it is matched
- Information about the syllabus that it assumes
- The set definition files (or sets of set definition files) that provide the problem sets for the course
- Any problems that are developed to fill in gaps in the NPL
Issues
- Naming conventions: how should we name sets and problems so that they are consistent (within the course) and useful?
- Completeness: how much should the model courses be a complete set of problem sets and problems for a course?
- Can/should we have model units that combine to make a model course?
- How would these model units fit into the organizational structure?
- How can we include documentation that discusses how these materials are used?
- Can this be addressed with naming convention?
- Should it be addressed by organizational structure within the model?
Instructions for Importing and Exporting Model Sets
Organization
How should all of these data be organized? A possible model:
CourseName/ Textbook_Readme Syllabus_Readme Set_Definitions/ sethomework0.def sethomework1.def etc. Set_Headers/ setheader0.pg setheader1.pg etc. Problem_Files/ prob01.pg prob02.pg etc. Hardcopies/ homework0.pdf homework1.pdf etc.