Open edX Ficus release key difference
The main difference between Ficus and all previous Open edx releases is that Ficus is built on Ubuntu 16.04. This provides possibilities for multiple new functions and ensures stable technical support for the next 5 years. The full list of new Open edX features in Ficus will be published soon. We’ll keep you posted once this information is available.
New Open edX features in Ficus
According to the Ficus announcement post from Joel Barciauskas, published in the Open edX blog, Ficus release includes improvements in everything from the LMS to data reporting.
LMS
- New Next and Previous buttons allow learners to navigate more intuitively through courses.
- A post listing view that shows not only post titles, but also the first line of each post, is now available on the Discussions and Teams pages and in inline discussions.
- The Progress page loads significantly faster.
- For course problems, the Check and Final Check buttons are now combined in one Submit button, and less frequently used actions (such as Save and Show Answer) have been moved to the side.
- Learners can quickly see whether problems are graded or ungraded.
- In course discussions, the UI includes profile pictures in discussion posts, a new header area, a more intuitive topic list, and indicators for unread items.
- Learners can now sort discussions by votes.
Studio and Course Author Tools
- Course teams can now copy and move HTML components easily in Studio.
- For rescoring, course teams can specify that the system will only update a learner’s score if the process improves the learner’s score. For more information, see Rescore Learner Submissions for a Problem.
- Using the advanced editor, course teams can include HTML tags inside the <label> and <description> elements for all CAPA problems.
- Course teams can specify more than one correct answer for numerical input problems. For more information, see Adding Multiple Correct Responses.
- For checkbox and multiple choice problems, course teams can use a <script> element to display different content depending on specified criteria, such as the time of day. For more information, see Using the Script Element for multiple choice problems and Using the Script Element for checkbox problems.
- The randomized content block component type no longer includes the unused Scored field. (This action does not affect courses.) For more information, see Randomized Content Blocks.
- Course teams can now create custom pages that are only visible to course team members with the Staff or Admin role. For more information, see Add a Custom Page.
- In open response assessment (ORA) problems, the assignment is now correctly marked as complete when a course team member overrides a grade from a peer assessment. For more information, see Override a Learner’s Assessment Grade.
- Improvements to the word cloud tool include a new Instructions field and accessibility updates.
- For drag and drop problems, course teams can now prevent learners from receiving feedback until they’ve dropped all draggable items.
- The “View this course as” feature now includes the capability to view the course as a member of a specific cohort.
- The Student Profile report includes two new columns: “enrollment mode” and “verification status”.
Data
- Insights now offers per-learner data and a new “Participated in Discussions Last Week” metric.
- Five grading events have been added:
- edx.grades.problem.submitted
- edx.grades.problem.rescored
- edx.grades.problem.state_deleted
- edx.grades.subsection.grade_calculated
- edx.grades.course.grade_calculated
Configuration
- Administrators can configure third party authentication differently for each of their sites.
Accessibility
- On the video player, improved controls make downloading videos, transcripts, and handouts easier. Additionally, the video playback and volume sliders are now visible when learners view videos in high contrast mode.
- Core CAPA problem types have been updated to help screen readers and keyboard users identify and respond to these problems.
- Navigating among questions and reviewing survey results in the survey tool is now easier.
- The contrast has been increased on the sign-in page for Open edX sites.
- In Insights, the <title> element on learner pages now indicates the correct view when you switch between learner roster view and learner view.
- The HTML structure of the Progress page has been reorganized, and the visual chart on this page is more accessible to learners who use keyboards and screen readers.
- The course Home page uses heading levels 1-5 in a way that screen readers can more easily process.
- For custom JavaScript problems, the jsinput tag includes a title attribute that helps orient non-visual learners.
Ficus deployment by Raccoon Gang
Unfortunately, upgrading Open edX from Ubuntu 12.04 to Ubuntu 16.04 is not possible. As always, Raccoon Gang will develop a script for fast, error-proof and convenient Ficus deployment. As soon as we testdrive the new release on our servers, we will start offering Open edX Ficus deployment for our customers. Feel free to contact us if you want to benefit from using the latest and most advanced version of Open edX LMS!