choose your learning management system (LMS)
A LEARNING MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (LMS )is a software application for the administration, documentation, tracking, reporting and delivery of e-learning education courses or training programs.
Choose your LMS and begin creating your own Enigma Missions!
Choose your LMS and begin creating your own Enigma Missions!
Google Classroom is a learning management system for schools that aims to simplify creating, distributing and grading assignments. It was introduced as a feature of Google Apps for Education following its public release on August 12, 2014.[1] Google started inviting educators to participate in the private beta from May 2014.[2]
Features
Google Classroom will tie many of Google's products together to help organize assignments, provide teacher to student communication and provide storage for students to submit work.[3][4] Assignment creation and distribution is accomplished through Google Drive, Google's file hosting service, while Gmail, Google's webmail, is used to provide classroom communication. Each class created with Google Classroom creates a separate folder in the respective Google Product where the student can submit work to be graded by a teacher. [5] Communication through Gmail allows teachers to make announcements and ask questions to their students in each of their classes. [6] Google Classroom will not show any ads in its interface for students, faculty, and teachers. [6][7]
Features
Google Classroom will tie many of Google's products together to help organize assignments, provide teacher to student communication and provide storage for students to submit work.[3][4] Assignment creation and distribution is accomplished through Google Drive, Google's file hosting service, while Gmail, Google's webmail, is used to provide classroom communication. Each class created with Google Classroom creates a separate folder in the respective Google Product where the student can submit work to be graded by a teacher. [5] Communication through Gmail allows teachers to make announcements and ask questions to their students in each of their classes. [6] Google Classroom will not show any ads in its interface for students, faculty, and teachers. [6][7]
myEd is an LMS with a mission to change the way that students in the Asia-Pacific learn and study for school, college and university by placing the power of education into the palms of student's hands: We take school and university curriculum's and transform them into engaging, interactive and relevant courses delivered to students via a gamified e-learning platform, available across the web and on smart phones & tablets. Using high definition video, interactive quizzes, social learning & collaboration, productivity & results tracking, and an overlay of game play elements including badges and levels, we are transforming a classroom learning experience developed in the era of industrialisation, and making it relevant to students today. In doing so our hope is to make learning fun, personalised and accessible so that student’s anywhere, from any walk of life can learn, study and excel at school, college or university. We are constantly working towards expanding the breadth of courses and features we offer. So, if you are a subject matter expert contact us to see how we can work together to change the way students learn.
Edmodo is a "social learning platform" website for teachers, students, and parents. It is marketed as the Facebook for schools.
Using Edmodo, teachers invite students into private groups that can be used for online classroom discussions, but in a format that keeps the teacher firmly in control. Teachers give students a class signup code, which can be deactivated once all students have signed up, and students in turn are encouraged to share the code with their parents, allowing them to monitor their own child's activity. As an invitation-only social network, Edmodo is meant to mirror a secure offline classroom that intruders cannot access, with rules of decorum enforced by software. For example, just as students aren't supposed to pass notes in class, they can't send private messages to each other. They can post only to the group or the teacher, and group messages can be moderated by the teacher if necessary.
Using Edmodo, teachers invite students into private groups that can be used for online classroom discussions, but in a format that keeps the teacher firmly in control. Teachers give students a class signup code, which can be deactivated once all students have signed up, and students in turn are encouraged to share the code with their parents, allowing them to monitor their own child's activity. As an invitation-only social network, Edmodo is meant to mirror a secure offline classroom that intruders cannot access, with rules of decorum enforced by software. For example, just as students aren't supposed to pass notes in class, they can't send private messages to each other. They can post only to the group or the teacher, and group messages can be moderated by the teacher if necessary.