Patrick Malley has given all of us Moodlers a great resource to use when beginning to customize a Moodle theme. He has “created a new theme – an antitheme really – for workshop attendees to use as a starting point for their projects.”
Stripdown is nothing more than a stripped-down theme that loads the Moodle Standard stylesheets first. It actually contains no style of its own. That’s for you to work out. Before adding these styles, it looks just like..” read more
I have always said I am surprised there are not more Moodle theme designers and resources like this. It seems like there are tons of resources for other programs like Worpress, Joomla, etc. I have not yet downloaded and tried this but hope to take a look this week. Hopefully these types of resources will keep coming!
Related Links:
Patrick Malley.com
Stripdown: A New Theme for Moodle
Download Stripdown
NewSchool Learning – Official Moodle Partner (themes)
This post is inspired by me finally getting read/write permissions to our Moodle server! Since last summer when we installed Moodle we have wanted to add themes, plug-ins, modules, edit the php, etc. Yesterday, that day came. Today, I am searching for recommended modules, plug-ins, course formats, themes and other small tips to make our Moodle site look good. I’ve added Book and Tab Display modules from Moodle.org. Now, I want to ramp up our Moodle site theme and layout. We force our users to use their My Moodle page, so I will also try and make that page look good.
Please give me your favorite Moodle themes, modules and tips! Comment on this post or Tweet me!
Related Links:
Moodle.org: Modules and plugins
Moodle.org: Themes
Moodleman Blog: Creating a custom Moodle Theme – LIVE!!
Moodleman Blog: Getting the most out of course design
NewSchool Learning (Moodle themes – some free, mostly paid for)
Taming Moodle: Ugly category names on front page? Pimp it!
The Moodle Playpen
Patrick Malley created a Moodle Slider for the front page of a Moodle theme. I think it’s pretty cool! It’s pretty slick and can save some space. I think it makes it feel a little more like a regular website.
The only problem, on our district Moodle site, is that we force our users to use My Moodle. When they log in they do not ever see the front page, they only see the front page when they are not logged in. Therefore, putting any important information there or spending a lot of time working on that may not be worth it if not many users see it.
I was looking through the U of M Moodle link and I ran across a link to an old interview with Martin Dougiamas by my current boss! So I asked him (he was right next to me in his office at the time), “Hey, Tim! you interviewed Dougiamas?!” He came out and said yeah had! Download the podcast interview on his blog, The Savvy Technologist. I have not listened to it yet but I plan to listen this afternoon. It was back in 2005, so it will be interesting to hear Martin’s thoughts and see if it corresponds to what Moodle is now.
Other links