Category: Announcements

Nominations Open for CLAMP Steering Committee Members and Recognition Awards

Steering Committee

CLAMP is accepting nominations of member colleges to succeed them; terms are for three years. You need not specify who will represent the college on the committee now, and you can nominate schools other than your own.

The nomination criteria are:

  • The institution must be a four-year liberal arts college or institution.
  • The institution must be a member of CLAMP

Our current steering committee members are: Colgate College, College of the Holy Cross, Connecticut College, Lafayette College, Occidental College, Reed College, and Union College.

Rotating off the committee this year are: Colgate, Holy Cross, and Reed. The current committee members will choose the three new members based on nominations submitted by the community, with an eye towards maintaining geographical diversity.

Nominate a CLAMP school for steering committee membership »

Recognition Awards

The CLAMP Recognition Awards are awarded annually to one programmer (e.g.; hacker) and one instructional technologist (e.g.; doc’er) to acknowledge outstanding achievement as members of the organization. These achievements include work on Moodle development, Moodle documentation, CLAMP organization and/or recruitment to CLAMP.

In 2015-16, the value of this award is $500. To receive the award, individuals:

  • must be a member of a current CLAMP school
  • can not be currently serving on the steering committee

Nominate a CLAMP member for a recognition award »

Deadline

Nominations for both steering committee and recognition awards must be submitted by July 31, 2016.

Fritz Vandover Selected as Treasurer of Moodle Users Association

Fritz Vandover, Academic Information Associate for Humanities at Macalester College, has been selected to be Treasurer of the Moodle Users Association Committee. The Moodle Users Association Committee is an elected body of members responsible for the management of membership, activity and financial activity of the Association. CLAMP is proud to participate on the committee and to be represented by a long-time member of the Collaborative Liberal Arts Moodle Project. Fritz was a CLAMP Recognition Award winner in 2015, a fantastic organizer and host of the 2014 MUG and Hack/Doc events, and a past member of the CLAMP Steering Committee.

Filtered Course List Accepted to Moodle Plugin Repository and Awarded Reviewers’ Choice

The lead maintainer of the Filtered Course List block, Kevin Wiliarty from Hampshire College, submitted the plugin to the Moodle plugin repository. Not only did it gain acceptance, but it received a Reviewers’ Choice Award, which is “given by the plugins guardians and reviewers for particularly useful, well coded or otherwise interesting plugins.”

The Filtered Course List block displays a configurable list of courses. It is intended as a replacement for the My Courses block, although both may be used. The plugin has been used and developed by CLAMP members for years, including several hackers and doc’ers from different institutions; it truly has been a collaborative effort. Thanks to everyone who has dedicated resources to the Filtered Course List plugin over the years.

Welcome to the New CLAMP Website!

This site represents the first major redesign of CLAMP’s web presence since the organization began in 2008, and shifts the emphasis away from functional updates — new code, upcoming hack/docs — and toward CLAMP’s culture of collaboration.

The redesigned site is the work of an ad hoc communications committee, comprised of Sarah Ryder (Hampshire College), Jason Bennett (Kenyon College), Charles Fulton (Lafayette College), Ken Newquist (Lafayette College), and Daniel Landau (Reed College). The group formulated four major goals for the redesign project:

  • expand CLAMP’s outreach to member schools who don’t attend Hack/Doc or MUGs
  • promote CLAMP’s collaboration efforts
  • showcase best practices
  • raise the profile of CLAMP as a unique liberal arts collaboration community

The importance of collaboration — of getting together, talking through problems, and then working together to create solutions — was something we kept coming back to. As we evaluated the old site, we realized while this collaboration was a key component of our own involvement in CLAMP, it wasn’t something we as an organization did a great job of explaining.

For example, one of the historical outcomes of this collaboration has been the Moodle: Liberal Arts Edition. The LAE is a distribution of Moodle that incorporates a small, hand-picked selection of modules and code fixes of particular interest to the cohort. While an important part of CLAMP, the prior website’s blog-like nature put a disproportionate emphasis on LAE releases because it was frequently updated. At the same time the old site didn’t adequately explain what the LAE was, leading some to conclude that the entire purpose of CLAMP was to promote and support the distribution. The new LAE page better explains the philosophy behind the distribution, what it includes, and how folks can contribute to it.

Another example is Moodle Hack/Doc Fest. Held twice a year, this free event offers three days of exceptional work and conversation around Moodle, but our event announcements didn’t capture that. To address this we created a new Hack/Doc page that discusses the spirit of the event and provides an overview of its un-conference nature.

Finally, Moodle Hack/Doc Fest isn’t the beginning and end of collaboration within CLAMP. Much of our communication happens online through the CLAMP Moodle Exchange and our dedicated Slack instance. The new online collaboration page explains these tools and how to get started using them.

Best practices with Moodle are regularly discussed in the CME and at Hack/Doc. The website incorporates a few of these — for example, “Recommendations for Grade Settings and “Switching to Natural Waiting” but we’d like to see more. Our intention is to work with Hack/Doc attendees and CME participants to craft content that promote these best practices within our community.

To help promote this new content we are resurrecting the CLAMP Twitter account — @ClampHQ — as an official channel for organization news and updates. We hope to evolve the Twitter account into another opportunity for conversation centered on the liberal arts and Moodle.

Going forward, CLAMP will create a standing communications committee to manage the organization’s web and social media presence. If you are interested in participating in the committee or would like to contribute to the website, email info@clamp-it.org.