Actually one thing I find interesting is that the lack of awareness of ad hoc informal networking systems by both staff and pupils outside of the school institution is rapidly becoming the norm in many areas. I am not really interested any more in the VLE or Admin aspects but more in the day to day actual connection between pupils and students outside of these syatems and the pedagogy going on there and how people are starting to use these systems as they become more familiar, trivial and ubiquitous. People are building tools, systems and networks that are highly personalised and distributed among both commercial and 'freely available' systems. They are distributed and not bound to any one area and are usually banned from institutions. As more dedicated wireless devices become available and ubiquitous then any VLE is
only going to be one small part of most people's comms, networking and archiving systems. Their information will become even less place dependent and educators, if given enough insight, can co-opt these into new ways of working - a lot of the heavy lifting, in terms of communication and pedagogy might well be outside of any school or VLE currently. And I would hazard a guess that it is going to continue to be the case around any activity in that area. I think the current obsession for keeping everything under one roof regardless if it's Frog, Moodle, Blackboard or any other Brand is missing the point of how informal connectivity is beginning to shape up. Some of these activities will definitely be extra mural and co-opted when and where needed for different timescales and for different puposes - shock horror they may not even need to be have persistance, sustainability or be recorded in certain contexts - they'll merely be a more fluid oil to
keep the pedagogy running smoothly and in more exciting ways between people teaching and learning. Notice I have mentioned no services or products in this mail just hypotheses about what is coming next in terms of people connecting to people to get the job done ;) Leon Cych --- On Sun, 12/10/08, Rob Englebright <[log in to unmask]> wrote: From: Rob Englebright <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: [VLES] Struggling with Learnwise VLE---LIST ADMIN---- To: [log in to unmask] Date: Sunday, 12 October, 2008, 7:16 PM
Hi all good to see such debate going on over a weekend. I've read the posts and considered the points raised by Peter and Roger, and feel that in this case Roger was not overtly promoting a product, However Peter is correct the list should not
be used for commercial purposes or hawking wares. It's a fine line and I appreciate that sometimes it's hard to discuss things without appearing partisan, I continue to be impressed by the professional approach our list members exhibit. If anyone has any issues regarding this please contact me off list. Thanks Rob
Robin Englebright VLE LIST ADMIN Manager, Infrastructure Further Education, Skills and Regeneration Becta, Millburn Hill Road, Coventry, CV4 7JJ mobile: 07747 458121 Skype: robenglebright Messenger: [log in to unmask] http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/champ-curriculum.html ILT CHAMPIONS on FRAPPR- http://www.frappr.com/iltchampions
“An e-portfolio is a purposeful aggregation of digital items - ideas evidence reflections feedback etc. - which presents a selected audience with evidence of a person's learning and/or ability “
-----Original
Message----- From: Virtual Learning Environments on behalf of Peter Kilcoyne Sent: Sun 12/10/2008 5:52 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [VLES] Struggling with Learnwise VLE Roger Roger I think you've made some really useful contributions and I hope you continue to but I feel it is essential for the integrity of this list that suppliers and consultants do not push their own products. That is not what this list was set up for. If we allow one or two people to do it we could potentially open up the floodgates for any commercial company to join the list and flog their products. The function of this very valuable list would then be ruined. I'm sure there are people on Schools, Colleges and Universities out there using other VLEs and its up to them to say what they like or don't like about them if they choose to all best Peter Kilcoyne Director of ILT Worcester College of
Technology www.wortech.ac.uk <http://www.wortech.ac.uk/> [log in to unmask] 01905 725583 07930245643
________________________________
From: Virtual Learning Environments on behalf of Roger Broadie Sent: Sun 12/10/2008 15:19 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [VLES] Struggling with Learnwise VLE
Peter,
We have had very similar debates within Naace, about the use of the Naace talk-list, and as a member of the Naace Board of Management I have been right in the centre of this, so am well aware of the issues and therefore took care in the drafting of my response. (Though note that what I am writing here is a purely personal response to your comment Peter.)
It would surely not be right for it to be possible for Moodle to be promoted freely in this list, but for there to be constraints on a similar level of conversation about platforms from commercial
providers.
You can of course take the stance that as I am currently employed by a commercial company that I should not be commenting on this list. There are two points to be made here:
- over the last several years I have gained insight into issues around learning platforms as the impartial chair of European Education Partnership meetings, as the independent leader of activities such as the Naace Learning Platforms and BSF Think Tanks and involvement in other Naace meetings, as an independent consultant, doing a study of schools using Learnwise plus work for numerous other companies in ICT-in-education that bears on learning platforms, and now as you rightly say, from the privileged contact I have with schools using Frog, from my role with Frog. The point is that sources of insight need to be referenced; people have a right to know what experience and prejudices have produced the comments made, and I
could not have made a balanced comment without mentioning Frog given what is visible in schools in the 'VLE plus lots of other functionality' category.
- if the list misses out on the expertise in the commercial sector, it will be cutting of its nose to spite its face, as there is a great pool of expertise in all the companies involved with learning platforms, in many cases provided by people with considerable experience of using platforms in education, before they moved to join a commercial company.
We are all on a very important journey that will make radical changes in education, and the insights that led such people to the decision to move from an education post to a commercial one don't stop growing just because of that move. In fact it is likely their insight is considerably enhanced, because they can more clearly see both sides of the arguments.
The conclusion we have come to in Naace
is that while overt promotion is not expected on the Naacetalk list, input from members of Naace employed by commercial companies certainly is, for the expertise they can offer. And in the knowledge that those reading posts can make up their own minds whether they are being 'sold' to, or whether the poster, being actively involved in development is giving useful insights from their perspective in a reasonably balanced way.
Should I over-step the mark I trust you will certainly let me know, but I don't feel I did so on this occasion. And I do feel strongly that lists such as this should not exercise thought control - let the readers judge.
Best regards,
Roger.
On 12 Oct 2008, at 14:17, Peter Kilcoyne wrote:
while I agree with some of the points Roger makes particularly regarding SMT buy in and whole school initiatived there are a couple of issues that I would wish to
debate. In particular I feel strongly this list shoud not be used to suppliers or consultants to push their own products or services, I'll come to this later. As an unashamed Moodle enthusiast I would very much disagree with the point regarding Moodle evangelists only having experience of Moodle. The reason most Moodle enthusiasts are so enthusiastic are that they have used other VLEs first had limited success and have moved to Moodle and had much greater success. For example the institution I work at at the moment had used WebCT for 4 years and had 30 active courses. after two years with Moodle that had risen to over 600. The main reason for this I would argue is how simple Moodle is for even IT terified teachers to use. Roger is right that Moodle needs supporting but there are plenty of organisations offering Moodle support at a fraction of the cost of a normal VLE license (1-4K per annum I believe is
typical). I'd also like to point out that I think its very questionable for Roger to use this list to promote a VLE that he has a commercial interest in. I appreciate that he has acknowledged his interest in Frog but my understanding of the rules of this list (and this kind of thing has occurred before) is that this is not on. The list is for users of VLEs to discuss issues not suppliers or consultants to push there own product or services. BTW who is moderating this list at the moment? all best Peter Kilcoyne Director of ILT Worcester College of Technology www.wortech.ac.uk <http://www.wortech.ac.uk/> [log in to unmask] 01905 725583 07930245643 -----Original Message----- From: Virtual Learning Environments on behalf of Roger Broadie Sent: Sun 12/10/2008 13:06 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [VLES] Struggling with Learnwise
VLE Tom, I agree strongly with Liz Summerfield's points, you have to think this through deeply and you need to do this with someone on the senior leadership team. I note you got several responses from people keen on Moodle and this indicates one of the problems; most people only have real experience of the system they use, and tend to become somewhat evangelical about it because of the effort they put into getting it going, as well as because they chose the system that most appealed to them (and this list has a higher percentage of Moodle users than schools generally). Which brings us to the second problem; schools use learning platforms in very diverse ways, and you need the system which will best suit the ways your school needs to use it, which means thinking deeply about the school culture and educational philosophy, school community,
nature of your catchment area and desire of the senior leadership team to embrace the change that can be catalysed by a really effective digital environment. I have been fortunate to have been in contact with a pretty wide range of learning platforms, because of work I have done with the E.E.P., Naace, through work as an independent consultant, and in my current role with Frog - but I am sure you can judge what 'health warnings' you need to apply to my comments below. The things that have influenced my thinking I recently pulled together the references to - this list won't take attachments so I will send it separately, if anyone else wants it drop me an email. My advice is: 1) The world has moved on rapidly from Learnwise and it is not being developed, so it is a dead end. Getting an effective digital environment to complement the social and physical
environments of the schools is THE critical catalyst for transforming education for the 21st century. So plan to replace Learnwise before next academic year. A good schedule would be initial explorations of what is available between now and BETT, conversations at BETT with the suppliers you have thinned the list down to, with purchase of the new system early Spring, implementation and initial training for the core group in the Summer term, and launch to the whole school Sep 09. 2) The only way for a secondary school to properly implement a learning platform is as a whole school initiative. Unless all teachers and all staff are using the system, most of the initial pay-back will not materialise and the system will be used only the few and will be marginal in terms of impact. But if you do implement for the whole school properly, impact can be massive and the system can
help the school to get onto a much steeper improvement path - look at the schools that have achieved this. The critical implication of a whole school approach, is that the Headteacher has to be 100% behind the development, because some staff will resist changing work processes and need to be pushed over the initial (small) pain barrier. Watch the video of Domenic Volpe talking to Naace Conference about this. (You also need to ensure all staff have laptops and that the school network is solid.) 3) There are basically two kinds of 'learning platform' around at the
moment, which you could categorise as 'just VLE' and 'VLE plus lots of other online functionality'. The 'Becta List' was all about hosted platforms to provide 'virtual learning spaces' for all pupils in all schools, and as a result the process selected only large companies, with hosted systems,
with the scale to implement platforms for
hundreds of schools in a short time scale. The Becta list also focussed only on 'VLE functionality' and not the wider needs of schools for things like a public website, community portal, online admin systems for teachers, pupils and parents, student voice areas and so on (not to mention the parent reporting requirements now coming in). Some of the systems from companies on the Becta list have developed a fair bit since the list was put together, but the key issue is that VLE functionality is now being subsumed into bigger systems, that provide for these wider needs. So companies providing 'just VLE' don't give you what you need to be future-proof. 4) The long term trend (driven by BSF amongst other forces) is to move to 'managed learning environments' well integrated with MIS and organisational IT systems. The sooner you move
down this route the better, because working practices and teaching/learning approaches are now changing fast in a significant number of schools, and your staff are going to get left behind professionally unless they start to gain experience of this. There are essentially three systems that you can look at for this: - Sharepoint based Windows systems, with a VLE such as Kaleidos or Assimilate or Fronter incorporated within it. - Frog, which is an alternative to Sharepoint (LAMP-based), not as 'corporate' but considerably easier for staff to create in, develop and control, which again gives you the VLE functionality and all the wider functionality you need. - Moodle plus other open-source systems integrated with it. Moodle is a course-based VLE and does not itself give you effective content management, admin systems etc. If you go the Moodle route, be
clear that it is not 'free' - you need
sufficient technically competent staff in school to set it up and to support it; sufficient to ensure that if one or even two key staff leave you still have people who can run and develop it - which is why FE colleges quite often use Moodle, they have technical teams able to do this, whereas few schools can afford such a team). Frog is provided as a managed service, as is Sharepoint usually. When you look at all the costs including staff, there is little difference between cost of Moodle and cost of Frog or Sharepoint based systems. But in any event it is not the initial purchase or annual system costs which really matter; it is the changes the digital environment will make possible in the school, to make the work of everyone more efficient and effective, and to save costs in other ways. When you look at this properly,
particularly how staff can use time differently, the positive benefits and cost savings hugely outweigh differences in system costs. If you want to pick up any of these points and discuss them further, do contact me off-list. Regards Roger. On 9 Oct 2008, at 12:04, tshaw wrote:
Dear All,
Any advice greatfully recieved:
I have taken on the role of E-Learning Co-ordinator at our secondary
school, and we are currentley using 'Learnwise' for the VLE. This is
proving quite unfriendly. Myself and the school technicians are
struggling to upload a relatively straightforward 'VLE ready' piece
of software, published by longman. We think we can solve the
problems (mainly due, we think, to the number of files that need to
be uploaded), but I'm
worried that this will become a trial
everytime we want to upload/use all but the simplest of courses.
so.....
Do we ditch learnwise at this early stage, and if so, can anyone
recommend a VLE system currently in use in a secondary school?
Anyone with any prior experience of Learnwise please feel free to
add any general comments about the system!
Thankyou in advance
Tom
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