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Open Source Projects e.g. Moodle Barron Koralesky Macalester College Barry Bandstra Hope College June 1, 2005

Open Source Projects e.g. Moodle Barron Koralesky Macalester College Barry Bandstra Hope College June 1, 2005

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Open Source Projects e.g. Moodle

Barron KoraleskyMacalester College

Barry BandstraHope College

June 1, 2005

Outline

• Open source solutions • What is Moodle, why use it?• Institutional case studies

– Hope College– Macalester College

• MITC, open source, & collaboration• Discussion

Open Source Learning Management Systems

(LMS) What is open source & what is an LMS?

– How does it differ from commercial models? • Cost• Control

– What are examples of open source LMS systems?

– Why open source for higher education?

Why use an LMS?

• Promotes active learning• Accessibility (reserve readings) • Reusability • Extend the course outside of the classroom• Because millennial students want/expect it• Incoming faculty expect a LMS• Reduce photocopy and duplicating costs• Because everyone's doing it?

What is Moodle?

• Name - Modular Object Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment

– Moodle - v. to lazily meander through something

• Developer - Martin Dougiamas • Appeared August 2002

• Guiding philosophy - Social constructivism

Why consider the Moodle open source LMS?

– Advantages • Cost (no licensing restrictions)• Linux/Win/Mac, Apache, mySQL, PHP• Configurability • Very active developer community

– Driven by educators

• Very active user (help) community

Why consider an open source LMS?

– Potential challenges? • Institutional buy-in

– Faculty– IT

• Credibility• Installation • Faculty training • Operational support and help desk • Integrating LMS with other campus data

systems

Functionality & Use

• Syllabus tools (calendaring) – fluid syllabus• Communication tools (mailing lists, discussion

forums, journals, course notices, file/link dispersal) – enhanced connection to students

• Assessment and evaluation tools (quizzes, surveys, grade book, polls)

– Formative & evaluative assessments– Enable student self-assessment

• Assignments• Glossaries

Functionality & Use

• Syllabus tools (calendaring) – fluid syllabus

Functionality & Use

• Communication tools

Functionality & Use

• Assessment and evaluation tools

Case Study – Hope College

• Inception– Needed a platform for teaching Hebrew, but Hope

had no LMS, and no plans to get one• Gestation

– MITC-ITLAC symposium was the opportunity to hear about CMS and institutional experiences (primarily no CMS, some Blackboard & WebCT)

• Experimentation– Searched the web, found possibilities– Hope's computing department allowed me to "play

with" a number of open source projects– Piloted Moodle in religion courses (Spring 2003).

Case Study – Hope College

• Campus pilot project (Fall 2003) • All-campus resource (Spring 2004) and why it

has been so well received • Will be the delivery platform for summer 2006

online courses

Case Study – Macalester

• Macalester had no LMS (2003-2004)• Instructional technologists saw need• Heard about Moodle from MITC colleagues &

MITC itself• Free software, desktop hardware, allowed

instructional techs to run pilot (2004-05)• Pilot pedagogically-focused faculty workshops

with faculty development center and early adopter faculty

B.K.

Moodle @ Macalester

Case Study – Macalester

• First semester – 25 faculty, 400 students, 35 courses

• Second semester – 80 faculty, 1,200 students, 90 courses– Macalester ~1,800 FTE

• Full support starting fall 2005– Central IT server administration– Accounts linked to central systems– Courses/enrollment linked to registrar data

MITC, Open Source, & Collaborations

• MITC collaborations– Liaison meetings– ITLAC symposia

• Helps overcome our natural isolation & limited resources

• MITC hosted projects– LMSs

• Moodle, CHEF– Digital Asset Management

• ContentDM

1/3 MITC Colleges using Moodle

• Albion • Beloit • Earlham• Hope• Lake Forest• Lawrence University• Macalester • St. Olaf

MITC, Open Source, & Collaborations

• MITC provides informal Moodle support – CMS mailing list

• Moodle users chimed in• Discussions of campus adoption of CMS• Discussions about some issues, i.e. FERPA

compliance

– Call for collaboration• Improving use• Extending functionality

Collaboration Case Study• Mac helped Beloit with server choice &

configuration– Heard of us and others through MITC– Existing relationships with colleagues– MITC server + local server

• Macalester took workshop to Beloit– Macalester workshop in development– MITC funded travel expenses– MITC staff attended & assisted

• Beloit expanding Moodle campus wide

Questions? Comments?Discussion?

Barry [email protected]

Barron [email protected]