- Knowledge Base
- All About Deliveries
- Introduction to Test Delivery in TAO
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TAO Portal Quickstart Guide
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Rostering in TAO Portal
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Creating assessment materials in TAO
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Creating assessments for delivery in TAO
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Proctoring in TAO Portal
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Viewing results in TAO Portal
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How Does Scoring Work in TAO?
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Writing Your Own Scoring Rules for Your Assessments: An Example
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TAO Portal Terminology
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TAO Quickstart Guide
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Making the Most of the Asset Manager
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Working With Metadata in TAO
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Configuring Interactions: What Possibilities do You Have?
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Randomization in Items and Tests
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All You Need to Know About Test-Takers
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All About Deliveries
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Setting up LTI
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Proctoring Assessments in TAO
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Interpreting Results Tables in TAO
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Using the Advanced Search
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Best Practices for Working with Multiple Users in a Small-scale Authoring Scenario Part 1: Set-up
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Best Practices for Working with Multiple Users in a Small-scale Authoring Scenario Part 2: Workflow
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Optimizing Pictures
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All About Extensions
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Stylesheets in Assessment Items
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TAO for RTL Languages
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TAO Terminology Explained Part 1: TAO Architecture
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TAO Terminology Explained Part 2: Creating and Delivering Assessments
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TAO Terminology Explained Part 3: Scoring Assessments
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Test-taker and Accessibility tools
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How does scoring work in TAO? (II)
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Video demos
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Video tutorials: Creating interactions
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Thinking About Test Questions (and Choosing Interactions) According to Task Type
What is a delivery?
The aim of this course on Deliveries is to give you a better understanding of the concept of deliveries as they are used in TAO, as well as providing you with a practical overview of how to create them and how to use them in assessments.
TAO deliveries are described in the Deliveries section of the User Guide. Exactly what constitutes a delivery might sometimes be a bit confusing, however, and it's worth considering in detail what exactly a delivery is (and what it is not). A delivery isn't much more than, or much different from, a test, and there is a tendency to think of the two as interchangeable (and sometimes also to use the terms interchangeably). They are not, however, the same thing, and the difference is an important one.