Digital Teaching Toolbox
Reiter
Session
What is a Session?
The ILIAS session is a structuring element that helps you to organize your course room in a clear way. It is used to represent attendance dates and to assign different information or materials to them.
What can the Session be used for?
You can use sessions, for example, to map individual course dates. These sessions can be one-time events or recurring events. You can assign additional information and materials such as lecture slides to individual sessions.
Example:

Working with sessions offers the following advantages:
- The structure and chronological sequence become clear at a glance.
- Information about the teachers and the venue can be seen at a glance.
- Materials such as files, slides, or other ILIAS learning content (such as exercises, surveys etc.) can be assigned to each session.
- You can determine whether participants have to register for the respective session or whether all members of a course or group can access related sessions without registration.
- You can set the availability of the session (using the arrow to the right of the session object in the course) so that the next session is only displayed shortly before it starts.
- You can track attendance and print a list of participants in the session.
- When the calendar is enabled, sessions appear in the relevant course or group calendar and in the calendar on each member's Personal Desk.
How does it work?
The following tutorials describe how to create sessions and to assign materials in detail:
- Tutorial "Sitzungen (from the ILIAS-Online-Help)
Help and Support
- via our Forum, where you will find many already answered questions about ILIAS, and where you also have the possibility to ask questions yourself.
- via the e-mail address ilias@rz.uni-freiburg.de.


Further use as OER explicitly permitted: This work and its contents are - unless otherwise stated - licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Please attribute according to TASLL rule as follows: "Digital Teaching Toolbox" from E-Learning Department, University of Freiburg, Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0
Zuletzt geändert: 31. Okt. 2024, 09:50, Sassiat (Admin), Daniel [sassiatadmin]