ATutor

ATutor Readme:

About

ATutor is a learning management system to continue professional development for teachers, career developers, and academic research. It is written in PHP in a cross platform operating system.

Features

Two accessibility features in the system are text alternatives for all visual elements and keyboard access to all elements of the program. With these features, a blind person can listen to the entire interface of the system with the help of a screen reader, and he or she can access the system without needing a mouse. These features also allow ATutor to adapt to a wide variety of technologies including cell phones, personal data assistants (PDAs), and text-based Web browsers, to name a few. ATutor is also designed for adaptability to any of several teaching and learning scenarios. There are four main areas that reflect this design principle: themes, privileges, tool modules, and groups

Installation

To install ATutor, point your web browser to the installation directory where ATutor was extracted, and follow the Installer’s instructions. e.g. http://localhost/ATutor

For full installation instructions see: https://atutor.github.io/atutor/docs/installation

Installing from a Github Clone

  1. Fork ATutor into your own Github account, at: https://github.com/atutor/ATutor

  2. Clone ATutor from the fork you created into the document root of your webserver (for convenience), with:git clone https://github.com/yourname/ATutor.git

  3. Before running the Installer, create an empty config.inc.php file in the ATutor/include/ directory. If you have a command line to work from, while located in the ATutor directory, create the file with: touch include/config.inc.php

  4. Follow the installation instructions at the link above.

  5. Or, follow the instructions given by the ATutor Installer.

How to contribute

If you want to contribute to ATutor follow the instructions below or on https://atutor.github.io/atutor/docs/dev_with_github.html

  1. Fork the repository and create clone
  2. Create a new branch to work in
  3. Edit and create new files within your new branch
  4. Make sure your branch is up to date with the master branch
  5. Merge pull requests into master branch

For additional ATutor documentation, see the ATutor Handbook in ATutor, or at the following links:

Developers

License

GPL

Report Issues


Have fun, and take it places!

-Greg