California State System Expands WebCT Relationship
Nine California State University campuses have upgraded
to WebCT Campus Edition 4.0 course management system.
Earlier this year CSU signed a deal to make the WebCT
CMS available to all 23 campuses, their 414,000 students
and 46,000 faculty and staff. Seven of the campuses are
running WebCT exclusively at this point. Kathy Fernandes,
director of academic technologies at California State
University, Chico, said the upgrade will help its faculty
“deploy new courses more quickly.” She also said faculty
reported that the platform “encourages innovation.”
WebCT 4.0 users in the system now include Bakersfield,
Chico, Los Angeles, Northridge, Pomona, Sacramento, San
Marcos, Sonoma and San Jose.
Re-branding is Impetus for CMS Investment at N.J. Tech
The New Jersey Institute of Technology is using its CMS system to improve the
brand image of the university to visitors to its Web site. CIO David Ullman
said its rebranding initiative would help communicate its commitment to institutional
excellence. "Our Web site had grown organically over the years," said
Ullman. "There was no consistentbrand throughout the site and no consistency
in navigation. It createda difficult experience for end users." The school
is using the SCT Luminis Content Management Suite to convert thousands of Web
pages to a collection of easier-to-use, well-branded templates.
Stanford Updates Open Source ‘CourseWork’ CMS
Stanford has updated its open source course management system, called CourseWork,
which it released this summer. Changes to CourseWork include enhanced security
and encryption (via migration to WebAuth 3.1), enhanced performance (via migration
to Oracle 9i, Tomcat 4, and JDK 1.4). Other new features include an Event Sign-Up
Tool, time-saving measures for replace, add, and save functions on the CMS,
improved e-mail functionality, a bookmarkable URL for CoursWork courses, improved
content re-ordering, and upgraded accessibility.
Texas College Demos New Open Source CMS
Texas’s Tarrant County College and Tap Internet, a Michigan-based Web
software developer, announced a new open-source course management system. LogiCampus,
which was developed with public grant money, provides a single sign-on for students,
faculty, and staff. The CMS provides standard tools for faculty to create their
online courses, process assignments, make tests and stay in contact with students.
LogiCampus is built on top of Tap Internets open source application server called
LogiCreate. A LogiCampus demo can be ran from three different standpoints; administrator,
teacher and student. Each standpoint has different options and different applications
available to them.
Learn
more
Syllabus Radio: Selecting a CMS
Kathy Christoph explains how the University of Wisconsin
selected a new course management system, through an in-depth
study of campus requirements and user input, and a rigorous
evaluation of potential CMS vendors.
Listen now
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