Technology-Enabled Teaching October 5, 2005
IN THIS ISSUE
VIEWPOINT
NEWS & PRODUCT UPDATES
CASE STUDY
TECH NOTES
READER RESPONSE
Sponsors
Viewpoint
The Economic Case for Creative Commons Textbooks
By Fred M. Beshears
Senior Strategist
University of California at Berkeley
Talk to virtually any student about the cost of textbooks and you
will likely hear loud complaints about the expense associated with course
texts. According to a recent General Accounting Office report:
"... the average estimated cost of books and supplies per first-time,
full-time student for academic year 2003-2004 was $898 at 4-year public
institutions, or about 26 percent of the cost of tuition and fees. At
2-year public institutions, where low-income students are more likely
to pursue a degree program and tuition and fees are lower, the average
estimated cost of books and supplies per first-time, full-time student
was $886 in academic year 2003-2004, representing almost three-quarters
of the cost of tuition and fees."
While there are explanations that attempt to justify textbook prices
in the report, there are few suggestions to contain or reduce the cost
to students.
Recently, however, proposals have been advanced that might significantly
reduce the cost of textbooks benefiting students as well as faculty,
colleges and universities. One significant proposal put forward by Ira
Fuchs, Vice President for Research at the Mellon Foundation, called
for the creation of Educore--an organization dedicated to the development
of open source educational software. The Educore proposal envisions
a consortium of 1,000 colleges and universities around the world where
each member institution would be asked to contribute between $5,000
and $25,000 per year, based on size.
News & Product Updates
Global Consortium Forms Open Content Alliance to Bring Additional
Searchable Content Online
The Open Content Alliance (OCA), a global consortium has been formed
to provide open access to content while respecting the rights of copyright
holders.
OCA members includes The University of California, the University
of Toronto, Internet Archive, Yahoo! Inc., Adobe Systems Inc., the European
Archive, HP Labs, the National Archives (UK), O'Reilly Media Inc. and
Prelinger Archives. The OCA provided content includes cultural, historical
and technological digitized print and multimedia content from libraries,
archives and publishers. The Content Repository's complete works will
be searchable and downloadable for free by anyone.
Find out more
MIT Design of $100 Laptop for Kids Unveiled
The MIT Media Lab announced the One Laptop Per Child initiative with
a goal of making the Internet's educational and communications advantages
accessible to students everywhere. The initiative seeks to produce between
5 million and 15 million $100 laptops within a year. The laptop, running
Linux, features an AC adapter/carrying strap, a 500 MHz processor, a
tight rubber casing to protect the unit from damage, a hand crank that
supplies power when electricity is unavailable, a tint-adjustable display,
four USB ports for multimedia and data storage, and flash memory. (AP)
Find out more
SmartPros Ltd. Launches SmartPros eLearning Player
“SmartPros eLP delivers crisp video and audio at a wide range of bandwidths,
incorporating slides, testing and survey capabilities in an intuitive
learning environment,” says Joseph Fish, SmartPros Chief Technology
Officer. (Yahoo!)
Find out more
Case Study
CMS in Transition: Managing Change
By Joanne Dehoney
Director, eLearning, TELR
Ohio State University &
Rebecca Andre’
eLearning Consultant, TELR
In a relatively short time – three years – e-Learning offerings at
The Ohio State University (representing supplemental, blended and fully
online courses) grew to include a significant share of total courses.
In FY04, 1,643 instructors in 135 departments at the university offered
2,507 courses (3,487 sections) through WebCT. Forty-five thousand students--about
77% of the student body--had a WebCT account in FY 2004. Large first
year courses in the departments of biology, statistics, chemistry, and
theater depended on WebCT’s course management and testing functions–-unaware
that WebCT 3.2 was really not designed to manage the high load. Given
the importance of robust and scalable courseware to the university’s
educational mission, it was time to explore CMS options.
In June 2003, the Office of the CIO determined that the WebCT environment
would meet Ohio State’s needs for no more than twelve to eighteen more
months. A committee of 42 OSU administrators, systems engineers, and
faculty users, representing multiple colleges, formed three groups to
review policy, product strategy, and stakeholder CMS perspectives. Four
CMS finalists (WebCT, Desire2Learn, Blackboard, and Angel) were thoroughly
tested by users from across the university. In winter 2004, the recommendation
of the majority of team members was to purchase Desire2Learn (D2L).
Ohio State’s eLearning support organization, Technology Enhanced Learning
& Research (TELR), was given responsibility for the implementation.
Moving from a reasonably entrenched system to something completely
unfamiliar is not a task to be taken lightly, particularly for an institution
as large as Ohio State. For TELR the central challenge would be to meet
the needs of large numbers of students and instructors with a small
number of support personnel. Six months of planning went into the D2L
implementation effort before TELR even finalized the licensing agreement.
Planning covered every detail of the project from an 18-month projected
calendar of communications, to service level agreements with internal
partners such as the Help Desk, to user support.
Tech Notes
Katrina Articles and Resources for Campus IT
Campus Technology's coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina includes articles and resources focused on disaster planning
and recovery for IT. Read more:
target="_blank">Read more
Reader Response
From the Reader Response Forum
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina share experiences, lessons learned,
and your opinions on disaster planning and recovery.