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Claroline . NET - Home
Claroline . NET - Home
Claroline is an <strong>Open Source eLearning and eWorking platform</strong> allowing organizations to build effective online courses and to manage learning and collaborative activities on the web. Translated into 35 languages, Claroline has a large worldwide users’ and developers’ community.
·claroline.net·
Claroline . NET - Home
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
The Scholar360 Network Learning Environment integrates the best features of a learning management system with the best features of a social network. Instructors can teach online courses, dialog with students via discussion boards and blogs, manage automated tests, lessons and grading. Students can share files, build an eportfolio, blog, build a peer and mentor network.
·scholar360.com·
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
I was touched by her comment of near resignation when she says "<em>Besides, I know that realistically our organization is not going to stop using a traditional LMS, so this is a thought exercise for me."</em> Christy, the hope of friendlier, more useful and adaptive tools is thankfully a 'thought exercise' for most of us. Those ideas will spawn the tools that will swallow your LMS.
·storyboardmind.blogspot.com·
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
Sakai Tutorial Menu
Sakai Tutorial Menu
Sakai tutorials, created in Captivate. The information is good, but the audio is irritating--the narrator reads the caption text word-for-word and doesn't add anything else.
·cerritos.edu·
Sakai Tutorial Menu
udutu | Create simulations online with ease.
udutu | Create simulations online with ease.
Udutu has a beta system out called UdutuTeach and UdutuLearn to turn social networking sites like Facebook into an LMS
Udutu brings to the eLearning community the world's first LMS designed to run on popular Social Networks such as Facebook.
·udutu.com·
udutu | Create simulations online with ease.
'Socializing' the CMS
'Socializing' the CMS
The traditional CMS/LMS is designed for a more instructor-centered course, so the pedagogy of these courses reflects the technology. This article skims the surface of what might be possible if social networking tools, blogs, wikis, and more were used to construct courses and give students more control. What would that do to the pedagogy?
·campustechnology.com·
'Socializing' the CMS
Content Migrations: Options, Strategies and Faux Pas
Content Migrations: Options, Strategies and Faux Pas
Collection of articles about content migration. Even though this is about general CMS migrations and not specific to e-learning, most of this is relevant to e-learning and converting from one LMS to another. The summary of points to take away seems very true: we can't expect perfect automated migration, and we have to anticipate that content will change.
<li>Plan, plan, plan</li> <li>Look into automated and semi-automated, but don’t expect miracles</li> <li>Inventory first</li> <li>Never migrate content as is — always expect changes</li> <li>Keep metadata top of mind</li> <li>Consider outsourcing for the simple tasks like cutting and pasting</li>
·cmswire.com·
Content Migrations: Options, Strategies and Faux Pas
iterating toward openness » Blog Archive » If Facebook Worked Like Blackboard
iterating toward openness » Blog Archive » If Facebook Worked Like Blackboard
A short post, but very pointed--if Facebook worked like an LMS, no real community would ever develop. Questions the whole idea of closed educational systems.
<p>What if Facebook worked like Blackboard (or pretty much any other LMS)? </p> <p>Imagine if every fifteen weeks Facebook:</p> <ul> <li>shut down all the groups you belonged to, </li> <li>deleted all your forum posts,</li> <li>removed all the photos, videos, and other files you had shared, and</li> <li>forgot who your friends were.</li></ul>
·opencontent.org·
iterating toward openness » Blog Archive » If Facebook Worked Like Blackboard
Sakai 3 Proposal
Sakai 3 Proposal

Vision for what Sakai could look like in the future. The authors envision an LMS based on widgets with lots of flexibility, social networking, and content creation tools. The proposed changes to the organization (doing away with sites) would make Sakai much more flexible outside of a traditional academic course environment. The ability to have groups persist outside of courses would allow cohorts to be part of a group together, which creates some interesting possibilities.

"In summary, our ambition is not merely an incremental improvement of Sakai nor is it to copy Google. Our goal is not simply to create a better and cheaper version of Blackboard. It is time to arrive at a clearer understanding of the capabilities that represent needs unique to education and for the Sakai community to focus its development effort on providing these capabilities while taking advantage of established open‐source efforts to provide more generic capabilities. We should, in short, strive to create a different type of academic collaboration system."

·mkorcuska.files.wordpress.com·
Sakai 3 Proposal
Average Pricing for Learning Management Systems in 2009
Average Pricing for Learning Management Systems in 2009
LMS pricing for low-cost systems for different sizes of implementations. I've seen complaints on the eLearning Guild discussion board that $50K for 100K users for Moodle was too high. Considering that the average price for that size is over a million dollars, $50K seems quite reasonable to me.
·brandon-hall.com·
Average Pricing for Learning Management Systems in 2009