MESSAGE
DATE | 2010-11-29 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
|
SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Open source software more suitable for Oxford
|
Can we download this and test it?
Ruben
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 09:30:39AM -0500, einker wrote: > Education IT, Technology Open source software more suitable for Oxford > http://www.futuregov.asia/articles/2010/nov/29/open-source-software-more-suitable-oxford/ > > By Xinghui Guo | 29 November 2010 > > Open source software is more attractive and better suited to traditional > education needs, the IT head of Oxford University has said. > > According to Director of Computing Systems & Services at Oxford University, > Stuart Lee, using open source allows the university flexibility to modify > software and make it more applicable to the Oxford style. > > ?When we were looking at Virtual Learning Environments (VLE), commercial > VLEs, like BlackBoard, just to name one, didn?t understand that students > want to move around the university and look at different areas of interests. > > > ?And when we explained the Oxford learning experience to them, it completely > threw them off so we went with open source product instead,? said Lee. > > The Oxford learning experience, as Lee put it, is when students have a short > eight-week term with a crowded timetable, but are still keen to attend any > lecture they want if it interests them?and that is why the ability to > capture lectures is very important for the university. > > Lee told audiences at the recent FutureCampus event in Kuala Lumpur: ?We > have to develop our own systems off the shelf for things like tutorial > recording. No one is going to be making a product for that because it is > really only Oxford and Cambridge who do it.? > > With open source products in hand and service-oriented architecture to boot, > the university is able to ?take one bit in and one bit out?, he said. > > The technology that supports the campus can then be customised to enhance > the ?immersive learning experience??letting students manage their time and > material, moving around campus and using all kinds of technologies > they want. > > The VLE that Oxford uses is called Sakai. Used to support the intimate > face-to-face teaching that Oxford is known for, Sakai is an archive of > materials for students to read. > > Said Melissa Highton, Head of Learning Technologies Group at Oxford > University: ?When a student goes to a lecturer?s Sakai, they have links to > the tutor?s lectures, researches, reading list recommendations and things in > the library that the tutor thinks students should look at. > > ?Even if they can?t find the tutor, students still have access to all the > materials and recommendations. > > Lee said that customising a technology is not easy to do when you buy ?a > monolithic solution? like Blackboard. > > Apart from customising, another benefit of open source is that it supports > open learning materials. Using Sakai means the university is not tied down > by a license. > > Lee said: ?If we suddenly want to open up a big area of our Sakai VLE, we > don?t have to renegotiate a license with the vendor. > > ?In this way, we can break down international silos in education. We can > open up our VLE to anyone in any country.? > > > -- > Regards, > > Evan M. Inker
|
|