 Let's add some SCORM to your Moodle. SCORM naturally stands for Shareable Content Object Reference Model. It's a web-compliant format for sharing, exchanging, learning content via the web. All right, so this is through the eyes of an admin or a course creator. We're going to add a new course. Give it a name and a short name. Summary's not mandatory. We will toggle the course, the default course format to SCORM in this case. Like so. We'll leave the other default settings and we won't mind the role assignment at the moment. Okay, so we will simply give our learning object a name. A summary would go there. Now we browse for the package file. This is no doubt a zip file that contains HTML, flash, XML and other associated files. It's probably living somewhere on your computer, so you browse for it, upload it and it's been uploaded successfully. The action then is to choose it and we can come down here and perhaps change a few of these default settings. It's up to yourself on your grading method and the number of attempts you wish to allow. In terms of the size of the object, I'd recommend 100% width and perhaps a thousand pixels high. Again, depending how large your object is and how it best displays, I'd open it in a new window, allow it to be resized and scrolled. Naturally, your users will have to allow popup blocker on their web browser if this is going to function as it should. Let's disable preview mode and also the table of contents. So if we save and return to the course, that should be good to go. We can enter that, pops up in a separate window and then it should simply load for the viewing pleasure of your audience. So that is all good. Naturally, at a later stage, you might come back and wish to edit the object. So you come into the course, turn editing on and you could go where there's a little editing icon here. Rename the object, change the summary or naturally if you revise or update the SCORM, you'll want to browse for it and upload it. I'd recommend you call it something different from the original uploaded file package. So that's option one. If we return home, another way to go about it is you might have a course prepared already like so. Okay, we've come in here with editing on and this may well be through the eyes of an editing teacher in this case. Might not be the admin or a course creator. We've got some other learning objects in the course already. Forums, chats, wikis, assignments, and so forth. So the aim might in fact be to just add another activity so your course is a little richer than it would be otherwise. So we add a SCORM slash AICC. Again, we can give it a summary and we browse for that package file. Upload it and it's been selected again. I'll just quickly toggle those settings as we had them before and we should just about be good to go. In this case, the course is no longer a one-trick pony because you've got some other rich learning objects and material in the course. So it's a far more richer learning experience than simply one SCORM object. It really does depend what you're looking to achieve however, okay? And naturally with that learning object, it pushes data to the inbuilt gradebook within Moodle so you can monitor, assess, track, and report on your learners in some very nice ways.