Friday, December 17, 2004

New eLearning projects

Most of the week, I have been preparing for the new eLearning R&D projects that will be starting in January 2005:
  • "Victorious - Virtual Curricula Through Reliable InterOperating University Systems", co-ordinated by the Coimbra Group of universities.
My department is partner in each of the 4 projects. The first three projects will be co-financed by the eLearning programme of the European Commission, whereas the fourth will be co-financed within the eContent programme.

We're also interviewing people who will be working as research assistants in these projects.

Interesting sites and references

Done some surfing yesterday and today and came up with some interesting sites:

Thursday, December 16, 2004

Commercial vs. OpenSource (bis)

Earlier I reported that one of the Flemish Universities decided to move from BlackBoard to Dokeos. This week, also the students at my own University decided that the current BlackBoard implementation just isn't good enough. In the students' weekly magazine, they argue for a profoud evaluation of the current system, ans they are especially concerned with a) some aspects of user-friendliness of the interface, b) the link with external dabases, and c) the 'inappropriate use' of the environment by teaching staff. You can find the (dutch) text of the article here.
To be continued, I guess (and secretly hope)...

Monday, December 13, 2004

Commercial vs. OpenSource DLE

Within the framework of the Elise e-learning course that I am taking this fall, I had an interesting discussion on the choice between proprietary commercial software for digital learning environments (e.g. BlackBoard, WebCT) versus OpenSource solutions (e.g. Dokeos, Moodle).

It turns out that one of the Flemish universities decided to fully move from BlackBoard to Dokeos next year.



The reasons for this move are enumerated in this (dutch) pdf report. The reasons are related to (1) the expensive licencing policy of BlackBoard, (2) the relative ease of integration with existing administrative systems, (3) the possibilities of extension (e.g with an e-portfolio) and customisation, (4) the use of IMS and SCORM standards.

Such a decision seems to reflect a gradual shift away from commercial systems such as WebCT, as suggested in this article, which I found this article in Stephen Downes' blog. The conclusion from the article is the following:
With so many comparable open source softwares [OSS] emerging for course management, containing more varied features than WebCT, one has to wonder: how long can such costly proprietary products survive? In the case of WebCT, the short answer to this is - possibly two years. If, as has been suggested, the vendor will no longer support earlier versions than Vista after 2006, it will either gather massive upgrade payments from many of its clients in the interim, or will lose them altogether to the new OSS systems. So is this WebCT's last attempt to make large amounts of money in the face of the growing OSS challenge, its “last hurrah?”
Interesting discussion...

Friday, December 10, 2004

Students of applied economy

This afternoon, I met with a couple of final-year students of applied economy here at Leuven university. For a course on English language skills, these students are organising a workshop on e-learning and its business potential.

I tried to point out that there is no simple economic rule about:
  • What is the added value of eLearning as opposed to face-to-face learning
  • How to do a cost/benefit analysis of eLearning
  • How to motivate learners in companies to use eLearning
I am afraid that I kind of overwhelmed them with a flood of information. I did send a mail afterwards with some links that might be of interest to them:
Hope they can find an interesting focus for their workshop.

Stievie

Wednesday, December 01, 2004

Opening blog message

Dear reader,

This is the first post to my weblog.
I want to briefly explain what the point of this blog is.
I am a researcher in eLearning at




I have worked in other areas of research before, but e-Learning is a new field for me. That is why I decided to take a course, and I stumbled on Elise, a European project testing eLearning for in-service training of teachers.
One of the courses that was developed in Elise was an online course on e-learning offered by the post-graduate teacher training centre at our University.

During this course, I learned about the existence of Weblogs, and decided that
"I needed to get one of those for myself too."

Why did I set up a weblog for myself - you may ask?

Well, my memory has not been very good of late, and I meet with incredibly many new ideas and concepts in the course of this job, that I need a tool to support "ze little grrey cells".

My intention with this blog is therefore to
Attempt to record my experiences with and new knowledge of eLearning.