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Mellon Award for Technology Collaboration

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Middlebury College received a Mellon Award for Technology Collaboration (MATC) for Segue, the open source curricular content management system we have been developing for a number of years now.  This funding will help us to develop and release Segue v2, a completely new codebase that includes implementations of the Open Knowledge Initiative (O.K.I.) open standards for systems interoperability.  I have no doubt our inclusion of the O.K.I. standards in Segue v2, as well as Concerto, our digital asset management system and Harmoni, our application framework, is one of the primary reasons we were selected for this award.

Segue Updates

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Segue has been updated 7 times in the last month!  This flurry of activity resulted from changes made to Segue to make it more secure after a vulnerability has been discovered.  Special thanks to Melanie Hoag from Southwestern University who helped us to discover a number of bugs that our security updates introduced.

OpeniWorld

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OpeniWorld:eLearn

Adam Franco and Alex Chapin did a showcase presentation at OpeniWorld last week in New Orleans with the working title of “O.K.I. Open Service Interface Definitions as a Native Framework API“.  Held in conjunction with the 2007 Merlot (Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching) conference, OpeniWorld is a new venue focusing on interoperability standards in education that follows somewhat in the tradition of Alt-i-Lab (Advancing Learning Technology Interoperability), a series of conferences organized by IMS Global Learning Consortium.

The work of the Open Knowledge Initiative (O.K.I.) continues to be central to efforts to define standards by which independent curricular systems can interoperate.  Support for this work recently expanded within educational technology when California State University (CSU) committed to using the O.K.I. open service interface definitions (OSIDs) as the means to connect their various curricular systems to their Digital Marketplace initiative.  At the same time, the O.K.I. work is extending beyond education.  The Institute for Electronic Governance in Hyderabad, India is planning to use the OSIDs to increase interoperability amongst its information systems.

The CSU Digital Marketplace (DMP) is one of the largest initiatives to date to commit to using the OSIDs and should provide excellent real-world applications of these standards.  The DMP initiative also involves a diversity of technologies and service providers requiring interoperability between applications developed in different programming environments such as Sakai (writted in Java) and Moodle (written in PHP).   The Campus Project at the Open University of Catalonia is another large initiative that is planning to use the OSIDs to integrate Sakai and Moodle.  Essentially both initiatives would like to make possible content that can become independent of the tool or system used to create it and tools and systems that can access content from a variety of sources.

Stuart Sim, the CTO of Moodlerooms and an active participant at the conference, emphasized the need to create simple “Hello World” applications that can be a reference for developers who want to begin using the OSIDs.  Stuart has been an advocate for Harmoni, our service-oriented application framework that includes implementations of the OSIDs and wants to find ways to use Harmoni to introduce OSIDs into future versions of Moodle.

Scott Morris, a manager of education marketing at Apple, was another key participant.  Scott showcased the Apple Learning Interchange (ALI), a personal content management system and social network for educators, which feels like a cross between the iTunes Music Store and Facebook.  Educators can use the site to create projects and media collections that they can collaboratively develop with colleagues and then share using a Creative Commons license.  Scott noted how learning management systems are being decomposed into smaller, more specialized applications and how students want to use the same tools to access learning material as they use for other content such as iPods, iTunes and iLife, as well as IM, blogs, cell phones and so on.

CALICO 2007 Annual Conference

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I gave a presentation at the 2007 Calico annual conference at Texas State University on the use of iPods at the Middlebury College summer Language Schools, see: iPods and 2nd Language Acquisition.

Educational Mash-ups

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I did a presentation on “RSS Mashups” at Nercomp event on “Educational Mashups” at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, MA  highlighting the work of faculty at Middlebury on the cutting edge of technology including Hector Vila, Jason Mittell, Mary Ellen Bertolini and Maria Woolson.

Braintrust Knowledge Management Summit

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I led a discussion of taxonomies and folksonomies in a Social Network Analysis Symposium at the 9th annual Braintrust Knowledge Management Summit last week.  Participants included information technologists from the United States Army, Boeing, Pfizer, the IRS, Home Depot and Unisys.  Knowledge management is sort of the inverse of learning management, comparable perhaps to institutional repositories in higher education.  It was reassuring to know that these huge organizations were grappling with the same sorts of problems as small liberal arts colleges, how to capture the intellectual output and “transfer” that knowledge (i.e. teach).
The functional requirements for “managing” knowledge in organizations are very similar to those for “managing” courses in higher education.  Knowledge about how a corporation produces its products and/or services needs to be captured so that it can be refined and reused in the same way that courses offered in higher education (the primary service provided by colleges and universities) need to be captured so they can refined and reused.Of course knowledge is useful only to the extent that is can be “transferred” to others in the organization in the same way that courses are useful to the extent that they can “teach” students.  The irony of knowledge management that many large corporations are discovering is that it seems to be more successful when it is less “managed.”  That is to say, when individual employees take initiative to share what they know with their peers and colleagues and form communities of practice with little directive from supervisors and managers.  Many corporations described wiki and blogging initiatives that started as experiments and have grown to become valuable knowledge resources.  The key to this success, many noted, was to provide employees with tools they could use to express themselves as individuals within a community of peers…

A Framework for Emerging Technologies

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I gave a presentation, “A Framework for Emerging Technologies” at the National Institute on Technology and Liberal Education (NITLE) Learning Management Systems (LMS) Symposium

Emerging Technologies for Teaching, Learning and Research

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Last month I gave a presentation to a small group of faculty on emerging technologies for teaching, learning and research.   I focused in particular on news sites such such as Google News, Digg and Newsvine and how these and other sites can be accessed by  RSS.  Also discussed Del.icio.us, tagging and tag clouds and gave a preview of Perspective, a tag aggregator system we are developing.

Here is an audio clip from this presentation:

Nercomp Workshop: The Horizon Report

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The Horizon Report, co-published by the New Media Consortium (NMC) and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI), describes emerging technologies thought likely to impact teaching, learning and creative expression in higher education.  This report was the topic of a recent NERCOMP event, documented in an Emerging Technology wiki.  Speakers were Phil Long, Bryan Alexander and Cyprien Lomas.

There was much discussion about social computing and personal broadcasting, both of which have flourished in the last year, with examples of various types of blogs and podcasts. Enabling these forms of expression has been technologies such as search, RSS, tagging and folksonomies as exemplified in web applications such as Flickr, del.icio.us, Technorati, Bloglines and more recently, Podzinger.

Further out on the horizon was the delivery of educational content to cell phones, still nascent in the US but now commonplace in Japan where cellphones are used to communicate in classes and even to take exams.  Also on the horizon was educational gaming, particularly massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) and context-aware environments and devices.

A major obstacle to adopting many of these new technologies in education has been integrating them with curricular systems in use as most institutions.  It was noted that most course management systems including Blackboard and WebCT did not support blogging, podcasting, tagging or RSS.

Nercomp 2006 Annual Conference

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Many people from Middlebury presented at this year’s Nercomp annual conference.  I did a session entitled “From Taxonomies to Folksonomies: The Evolution of Organization.”  Other Middlebury sessions included:

Adam Franco did a poster session entitled “Using Frameworks to Ease Curricular Systems Development, Interoperability, and Maintenance.”  A common thread in all of these presentations was evolution.  I discussed the evolution of organization, particularly in the presentation and tracking of news.  Adam’s poster session addressed how frameworks can simplify the evolution of applications.  Mike and Graeme discussed the evolution of Privateye, a web application they have been developing for parsing logs.  I was not able to attend the session by Bryan and Carrie, but since its title includes “evolving web environment…”