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File sharing at a university: do teachers post files for a group online?
I would like to know how someone's teachers solve the issue of distributing materials for lectures / seminars for the whole group? Do they share online, and if so, what service do they use?
Maybe you know some other progressive ways to use file sharing for learning?
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We have the most progressive teachers upload materials to the shared Dropbox folder.
We have Moodle , where lecture texts, video recordings of lectures, homework, as well as all the files that students may need are uploaded.
We use the practice of "One group - one soap" everywhere.
The teacher sends a letter to the group's email - it is sent to everyone who has set up the forwarding, and the rest come in and see what has come today.
It is very convenient, and, in addition, the technology has been tested, i.e. no problems are foreseen.
The faculty has an Intranet portal that is blustery, mischievous, huge, staring and barking.
There are lists of groups, schedules, announcements, and files are posted on it, but all this is only by those teachers who were not too lazy and / or were able to get access there ...
The rest - they do it at random (group mail, etc.)
Probably, Moodle either a bunch of Google Docs + Calendar + Dropbox would throw hats at any hares in this area.
Mailing through google groups (aka former usenet), and files - on the collective ftp, where the dropbox is attached.
At the moment, the development of a new version of the department's website is being completed, on which teachers will be able to upload their files
Just like with Alexx_ps - They drop files on the soap group soap.
Although there is an official website of the faculty (which I made myself), however, they are in no hurry to spread it for some reason.
website for every subject, everything lies there.
lectures/answers under a password. The password is given at the first lesson.
update the site - 5 min. business per week.
We basically had, and probably still have, local balls, according to samba, a folder was created on the server for each teacher where he could upload, or during class you throw it on a USB flash drive or during class time you look for a free computer, you log in and throw it off, young graduate students sometimes they used third-party services to write the ball, for example, on the url board, and also, apparently at the request, 3-level subdomains were allocated from the university teacher, there, in fact, whoever wanted to did it.
And we had our own closed social network (SFedU). I really caught her quite a bit, but now she seems to be actively using it.
I personally (and not only me) distribute via FTP (only the internal network) and collect tasks and other information.
Also through the official website of the faculty (according to some materials, everyone is obligated here), which is based on zope
or through a working web server (this is what we call it, I’m not alone on it either). Well, the last one is Moodle. All sites are visible both on the intranet and on the Internet.
PS Well, as Magot said, I suspect who he is talking about.
When I studied for a bachelor's degree, there was one person in our group who took materials on a flash drive from the teacher and uploaded them to his website. A forum for discussions was also made by a couple of people.
In the current place, everyone is too lazy, so the materials are either sent to the Google group, or the teacher puts them on his home page.
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