Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJodie Craig Modified over 9 years ago
1
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 The Open Enterprise Kevin Pitts, eLearning Centres, Seneca College
2
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Overview A couple of questions A couple of models Some projects Some products Considerations The Open Enterprise Discussion
3
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Questions Is it possible to build an enterprise level elearning infrastructure/environment using open source software? If so, what would it take to bring an open enterprise system to reality?
4
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Model
5
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Model H. David Lambert, CIO, Georgetown University
6
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Sakai Project
7
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 NZOSVLE Project
8
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Applied Research Phase One Infrastructure Layer Network design, architecture OS, Database, Server, etc. Application Layer Portal Course Management System Learning Object Repository, ePortfolio
9
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Plone
10
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Mambo
11
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Moodle
12
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Moodle
13
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Slope
14
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 DSpace
15
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 ERIB
16
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Products Conferencing ePresence NEW Publishing Open Journal System Digital Publishing System
17
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 ePresence
18
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 NEW
19
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 OJS
20
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 DPubS
21
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Questions Is it possible to build an enterprise level elearning infrastructure/environment using open source software? Yes! If so, what would it take to bring an open enterprise system to reality?
22
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Suitability Scott Leslie, BCCampus
23
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Readiness 2005 Campus Computing Survey Kenneth Green (2005) 55.1% of senior IT officials agree that “open source will play an increasingly important role in our campus IT strategy.” 30.4 % agree that “open source offers a viable alternative” for ERP applications. Not ready yet, but reaching the tipping point
24
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Trends Admin focus Academic focus “Ask why, not how.” “Get faculty talking about teaching.” (Kovalesky, 2005) Distributed Innovation "...collaboration is more meaningful if you see the focus of these efforts as something that you need to solve, as opposed to something that you can wait for someone else to solve." (Abel, 2005)
25
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Croquet Project
26
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 LAMS
27
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 ConceptTutor
28
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Trends Clark Aldrich, Learning Circuits Blog
29
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Trends
30
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Considerations Standards IMS Global (data) OKI, OSIDs (technical) IMS/IEEE LOM (metadata) Platform LAMP UNIX, J2EE, ? ?
31
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Considerations Development How, Who Project management Support Licensing Open-Open (e.g. Sakai) Dual (e.g. MySQL) Creative Commons
32
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Openess Open Source Open Courseware Open Knowledge Initiative Open Archives Initiative Open Standards; Open Architecture Community Source Collaborative Open Source
33
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Open Enterprise Model Application layer Sustainability Leadership, accountability Security, Support, Scalability Competition/Collaboration Legal issues, Policy issues (IP) Coexistence (OS & Proprietary)
34
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Open Enterprise Model Worldview Culture, philosophy Right, radicalism, will Globalization Value Services Relationships Investment in people not products
35
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Applied Research Community of like-minded people/ organizations Outcomes: Educational Value Commercial Entity/Product ??
36
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 In a Nutshell OS at the tipping point Entering the “Teaching and Learning” era Distributed/Democratized Innovation Open Enterprise duality: technology and institutional culture It’s about ownership and control
37
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Discussion Ideas Thoughts Questions Answers
38
SOsSOctober 24, 2005 Thanks for having me kevin.pitts@senecac.on.ca
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.