Software for Online Courses? 59
bcrowell asks: "I teach Physics at a community college, and a lot of the faculty are trying their hands at teaching internet courses. I'm going through the process of getting approval to offer some of our physics courses with online instruction plus lab, as an alternative to lecture plus lab. (My main motivation is to boost enrollment in some of our higher-level courses, which tend to get canceled if not enough people enroll.) The standard software for this kind of thing seems to be WebCT, but I get the impression that it's proprietary straightjacket-ware. I'd rather go with something open-source, especially since proprietary software seems to come and go, but the best open-source code is forever -- who wants to waste their time building a whole course around the flavor-of-the-month software? I'm particularly curious whether something like Slashcode might work. Most online courses include a requirement that people post a certain number of 'substantial' comments, where 'substantial' is a subjective term to be determined by the instructor. I know some teachers who say when they teach a large online course, they just don't have time to read all the posts, so they end up going by length a lot of the time. Wouldn't moderation by one's peers work better?"
Zope (Score:3, Informative)
For basic discussion type things, slashcode, or one of the clones/mutants might work rather well. In fact, too well. You'd need to modify it for closed registrations, drop the automatic mod priveleges, etc.
Finally, I can say that as a former student, I'd be least interested in a BS web-course at higher levels. At that point in my education, one-on-one time was highly important.
on webct-- (Score:1)
The teacher would post the syllabus, lecture slides, announcements, solutions, etc to our class's forum, where only students in the class could access it, unlike profs who put all that info on their website for future students to see and cache before taking the course.
Two not-so useful features were the ability to perform multiple-choice quizzes in class and have instant grading, and a chat feature where the TA would schedule sessions. We only had one quiz, and it didnt count (I think the prof was trying it out). As for chat, I never used it, as I never really needed TA assistance.
What I really liked were the ability to upload assignment deliverables to the server, as opposed to emailing the prof and overloading his inbox, using floppies, or printing out stacks of paper. Another biggie were that we could look up our grades at any time for assignments, exams, etc., and also get a comparison to other students in the class on a particular gradable item -- a histogram of grades and descriptive stats on those grades (ie - mean/median/high/low). (I _really_ liked that after the final for that course - I saw that the highest score was 30/35, and that I had a 30.)
Re:on webct-- (Score:1)
Re:on webct-- (Score:1)
I can't fathom that there isn't an OS solution for this out there as it would be just about the same as many of the php/mysql bulletin board systems out there (throw in a chat method and you'd be just about set)
Re:on webct-- (Score:1)
that's really all it is, plus a few useful bells and whistles to sell it. We used it for a CS course that had the traditional in-classroom brick-and-mortar component. Probably wouldn't take much effort for the OSS community to come up with an equivalent solution.
Depends on course method (Score:3, Insightful)
We rolled our own for ThePhotoCourse.com using a combination of subforums and a way of doing lessons with integrated quizzes. This was a few-to-many approach: several instructors, each handling a small 'classroom' of similarly inclined students.
One professor has worked out integrated quizzes as an online component to his real-world course (which is where we got our approach for thephotocourse). The method is that you read the material and get quizzed, and if you don't pass the quiz you get hints or more material until you do have it 'mastered'. Still automated, but useful.
Ultimately, your course s/w is going to be based on:
a) your format: lecture/regurgative material, lab/hands-on, other
b) your teacher/student ratio
c) relevance of assignments and quizzes to the course
d) whether pass/fail (or grading) is required
Tools like slashcode are useful for _talking_ about something, but _teaching_ requires more than just two-way talking. You also need application, review, and testing.
Good luck!
WebCT and online courses (Score:1)
Re:WebCT and online courses (Score:2, Insightful)
COURSE DESIGN: From the point of view of an instructor/course designer, WebCT is an extrmely flexible platform -- much more thn, say, Blackboard. If your one experience with the platform was negative, this probably reflects on poor course design on the part of your instructor.
INTENSIVE INTERACTION AND WORKLOAD: Students may sign up for an online course because they assume that it requires more work, but perceptive students quickly learn that the medium actually requires more time than a traditional classroom. The point is simple: the best educational advantage of distance education is the opportunity for much more intensive interactions between students and students and students and instructors. These interactions take time, but lead to strong educational outcomes. So, if course is designed to promote intensive interactions, the students will work harder and learn more.
WebCT is poorly designed (Score:1)
There is a newer version of WebCT that is supposed to be better, but it's a rewrite in Java+Oracle, as opposed to the Perl+textfiles that the older version is. Also, they're not aiming at colleges with the new version, they're aiming for large corporations.
I've thought about writing a WebCT replacement, but I just haven't had the time. Ideally I'd like a college to hire me to write it (offers?
Re:WebCT is poorly designed (Score:1)
Re:WebCT is poorly designed (Score:1)
Re:WebCT is poorly designed (Score:1)
Re:WebCT and online courses (Score:1, Informative)
Anyways, I've heard that professor started using Learning OnLine for this same material and a friend of mine took the class and liked it. Now, learning online comes as part of Lon-CAPA which somebody else mentioned in this forum.
-Joe Tenbusch
Moderation by peers? (Score:1)
Re:Moderation by peers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, grading on a curve is a barbaric custom. I can't figure out why anyone would do it. Actually, I was more worried about the opposite: people would form cliques that would always mod each other's comments up.
Even if there isn't a curve --- are you sure that having people who may not like you or necessarily have a good enough grasp of the material moderating your posts?
Good point, although a lot of what moderation gets used for on Slashdot is just getting rid of trolling and obnoxious behavior. That type of moderation doesn't even require that much of a deep understanding.
Re:Moderation by peers? (Score:4, Insightful)
The goal of a class shouldn't be to see which students are more intelligent than other students. The goal of a class it to impart a certain amount of information to a student. Depending on how much of that information a student absorbs, they earn a certain grade.
If all of the students in the class gain a solid and firm understanding of all of the material that they need to cover in the class, then hell yes they all deserve an 'A'. They've done what they came to do, and that's learn the material.
Using a curve can be acceptable in some (few) certain cases, in order to smooth over the differences between your expectations and your classes abilities, but things like bell curves have absolutely no place in education grading.
You mention that in the average class score is 35% then the test should be immediately curved so that everyone doesn't fail. I disagree. This means that one of two things has occured. Either the teacher overestimated the students abilities, or the students failed learn the minimum required information for that test. Either way, the situation requires more examination, and you shouldn't simply curve it so people pass.
Later, you say that an 'A' should mean that a student is in the top 10% of their class. That's idiocy. What if the class only has 5 people? What if they are all exceptionally smart, or exceptionally stupid? As a different teacher, or prospective employer, what do I care how someone compares to their classmates? All I want to know is whether or not they learned the material that the class covered.
To repeat, grades should be based entirely on how well a student learned the material that was presented in the class they are in. If they learned everything they needed to, regardless of if everyone in the class also did as well, or if no one else in the class did, they deserve an 'A'. If they learned almost all of it, they've earned a 'B'. If they attained a solid grasp of it, they should be given a 'C'. If they know the minimum amount that they need to of the subject, then they get a 'D'. If they haven't managed to learn the minimum information that the course requires them to learn, then they've failed, and get an 'F'.
If you're curious as to where I'm coming from, I'm a part-time college professor who's also still taking classes (and who prolly always will be). I've also worked for a number of years in the private (business) sector doing computer stuff. Thus, I've been on all sides, as student, teacher, and business.
Re:Moderation by peers? (Score:1)
When I taught I was huge advocate of curves. Differences between professor's expectations of students are extreme. Differences between a classes performance on similar tests are rather large. Combine those two you have potential for serious injustice.
By grading on a curve you cancel out the effects of unusually hard or unusually easy tests. By curving between classes you cancel out the effects of unusually difficult or easy professors. The effect is a great deal more "justice" than you would otherwise have.
Take any online exam where you think you could score about 80% (50 or less questions)
Break it into 2 halves and do the test; you'd be suprised at the spread. Now that's the same test same day same student. Now do two tests from two different authors. Without trying to control for variances which are outside a student's control their grade becomes so random it doesn't provide meaningful feedback.
Meta-mod? (Score:1)
If you look at what people are moderating up/down, you can also get a grasp of how well they understand other people's comments.
You'd need to set rules (e.g. Do you mod down if it's wrong? Or post a correction?)
I'd have:
Then to do the grading:
For each student, assess how well they moderated, and then look at their best and worst rated comments. Don't rely on the moderation to score for you (i.e. You have Karma of 25 - you get an A), but let it guide you to the best comments, so you can assess them yourself. And then look at the worst ones - partly to see if someone is punishing them, and partly to see if they came out with some rubbish.
Blackboard may be an option (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Blackboard may be an option (Score:2)
And, although it is not open source, it is written largely in Perl, and the source is available when you buy it. When I spoke to Blackboard they did not officially tolerate customers modifying the source, but the acknowledged that it went on pretty widely.
Re:Blackboard may be an option (Score:1)
"Pilot Program" (Score:2, Interesting)
We are doing a "Pilot Program" (dear god in heaven..) of this company's [teamxtend.com] main product. YMMV,but it seems to be a straightforward content-management type system geared specifically to class management (though not free, it is fairly cheap). I believe that if you bug them enough they will give you access to the source, but it isn't Free as in speech.
Developing class content for online presentation seems to me to be the stickier problem. To do it well, you either have to have been trained to be able to produce with a good tool like dreamweaver or authorware, or have access to a code-monkey to do it for you.
GPL'd Zope-based solution (Score:1)
The sum of my ideas (Score:1)
First, the backend of this software would be a database server of cross referenced topics so that the presentation of material could be presented as a static idea flow (read text book) that would allow for dynamic, interactive exploration. Some benifits this would have over standard textbooks is that presentation could include video, interactive function graphing, and any other dynamic content that can be handled by a computer. The frontend would be basically a web client that could present and store the information and exploration history for future use by the student as a reference.Perhaps when you complete the course you would get a CD containing all of the material you covered and in the order you covered it, including an index/keyword search ability. However you would loose access to the dynamic content unless the "owners" decided to grant you permission to further access.
Second, While delivery mechanism would be open source, the content could still be controlled in house via a peer reviewed submission validation model. This could eventually allow growth into a colaborative effort of experts all over the world. Allowing group development expidites the elimination of informational voids as the topic coverage expands. There could multiple levels of trusted users, ie. at the lowest level would be the student who only has read access, slightly higher up would be outside material developers that could place topics into an incomming review queue, and highest would be the content owners and reviewers who would carry the burden of topic submission review and overall structure maintenance.
Third presentation of material would follow the same strategy as a class room. Both audio, graphics, and text (math) would be streamed concurrently so that the topic is "developed" to the student rather than presented en masse like a text book (So many web based methods fail to provide the teaching environment that a classroom has shown to be so sucsessful at). As an avid student, I find that material much easier to understand when I see it and hear it as it is presented, in essence following the thought process of the instructor as they present their understanding of the topic.
Fourth, any topic can be interrupted for a more in depth development or alternate explanation, if none was available a request for expansion of that area could be sent to the administrators. For math this could be the ability to define terms both rigorously and semantically, as well as, an algebraic expansion of derivations. I believe that there is a web site that employs the semantic portion of this method, although I can't think of it offhand.
On a philosophical note, I really don't believe that ideas can be property, so the student would be able to freely keep any informational content that they are presented with. However, I do believe that the structure of the presentation is unique and and therefor the dynamic structure of delivery could be restricted to developing "owners".
Pro and cons,
On the pro side, you could create an automated interactive learning experiance that would allow for dynamic exploration of the material utilizing tried and trusted methods found in classrooms.
CONtrarilly, development of the course would be an in depth work that could take years to properly create, since you would in esence be attempting to create an expert system with the data/knowledge of an experienced academic professional.
I am throwing this idea out to the public ingeneral, because I think it is an idea whos time has come. If you decide to produce this I would appreciate some form of acknowledgement of the originating ideas and a chance to help codevelop it.
Frisco Rose email (no underbars) r_o_s_e_f(at)e_o_u.e_d_u GPG fingerprint 81E2 194B 6F74 389E DE90 9A55 C8FD 9738 E17F 6508
Re:The sum of my ideas (Score:2)
It is a GPLed course setup, developed and used by many universities accross the country. It stresses the "nonlinear" flow of a course, although it is easy to create linear "textbook" courses as well.
The entire loncapa is built upon Redhat 6.2 and is designed to scale my simply adding more servers.
Courses can be created within loncapa or they can be set up separetely and imported in. Each component of a course can be an HTML page, a multimedia clip, a Java applet, a problem or assignment. These components are combined into the course.
What NOT to do (Score:2)
When they moved it to the web they bought/wrote a package that does all the user testing using multiple choice questions and client side scripting. So rather than sit through an hour of online tedium I 1) view source, 2) identify answer 3) submit answer.
Nobody seems to notice or care that I'm done in less than 2 minutes.
Re:What NOT to do (Score:1)
This is one of my major concerns/questions with the SCORM specifications. The "assessments" defined in the spec are all necessarily client-side, because they are to transmit the score back to the mother ship (as opposed to systems where student answers are transmitted back to be evaluated on the server side). Furthermore, the API for the transmission is JavaScript!
While this might not be too bad for the original target audience (corporate and DOD training for factual information) where presumably the audience cares about the material enough to value going through the tests, it simply won't work for higher education, even in a homework situation.
It was suggested to me at an ADL conference I attended that for serious quizzing one would need to have a separate application do the grading (server side grading) of the tests. Okay, but still at the end of that, the grade needs to be transmitted back to the mother ship - using JavaScript. No need to check source, it would seem - just send in that you got 100%, and you're golden. Fine, so maybe the grades should be kept on that "other application" as well, but then the supposed sequencing based on scores and adaptive moving through the modules stuff won't work, and hey, might as well put the whole THING in the "other application."
Just some things I wonder about.
yuck (Score:1)
in my opinion you should just have your lecture notes for the entire semester up and posted from day one.. be in an online chat room at certain pre-posted times to give a 'lecture' and answer questions students might have.. and then ofcourse a lab ontop of this
grading would then be two part, labs/lectures with a minimum grade of X required for each part ot pass..
as a student webct has nothing to offer for me, a comp sci student.
If you roll your own... (Score:4, Informative)
Advanced Distributed Learning [adlnet.org], the organization that promotes the SCORM standard for online content. SCORM stands for Shareable Content Object Reference Model, and is widely gaining acceptance in government and commercial settings as a standard for e-Learning courses. Tools which are SCORM-compliant have a better chance of becoming widely adopted, IMHO.
SFU uses WebCT (Score:2)
Set yourself up with a webserver with httpd, irc, a maillist server, and a newserver. Then you have what is equivalent to webct. You can even get around the newserver by using a discussion board [phpbb.com].
You will need to deal with security issues if you want your students to be able to check grades online. There are other security issues as well. I've been on a few maillists that got signed up to pr0n lists. This weren't webct lists though. Since webct uses a webmail type interface where only other members of the class can send mail to.
So, the question to ask yourself is: What will cost you more? Getting some monkey to set up standard software for you or shelling out some cash so that WebCT can set up proprietary software for you. Don't forget the maintainence costs.
If I were you and I'd have the IT department at your school set everything up for you. Use http for all the general stuff. Let people post questions to a discussion board. And hold tutorials over irc. Use the maillist for announcements.
Shameless Ad (Score:1)
My employer [lri.co.uk] does exactly this sort of thing. We don't offer online blackboards or self-authored courses as standard because our customers don't tend to ask for them and they're significant extra complication and expense, but they're there if you want them.
We'll write something that does what you want, not just take a CD-ROM off the shelf and copy your name onto it. Basically, if you can describe the function we'll look at including it.
Based on MS technologies, I'm afraid, because we have to run on corporate Intranets and finding NT servers on intranets isn't difficult. This sort of thing doesn't tend to start from IT so getting their consent to install something funny can be a good game.
If you want more info, have a look or mail me.
Online Course Software (Score:3, Informative)
There are a couple of 'standards' in this area, namely AICC (old) and SCORM (current). The latter stands for Sharable Content Object Reference Model, and is theoretically a way of encapsulating bits of an online class to allow, well, reuse and sharing.
In practice the standard appears highly complex and unhelpful. It comes from the aviation world (don't ask) and is geared towards courses like 'how to troubleshoot a Bowing 747 hydraulic system'. I.E., big, fact based piles of knowledge. This makes it not very helpful for all sorts of other courses, like 'What to expect from chemotherapy'.
Nonetheless, in corporate world being SCORM compliant is a vital feature for many companies that want to sell elearning products. But, SCORM is a highest common factor, and everyone ends up sinking to that level if they go with it. There are companies that simply sell SCORM compliant classes for you to plug into your SCORM compliant LMS (learnign management system), but that's a pretty blunt approach.
The academic world is better - there are a number of products (like blackboard) that derive from universities' internal elearning projects. These products are often technically kind of a mess and pretty crufty, but they are often more functional and cheaper.
Claroline (Score:1)
A GPL'ed e-learning platform: Claroline Classroom online [claroline.net]
Check out DotLRN (Score:1)
The backgound for the software is the OpenACS project, at http://openacs.org, and is TCL+AOLServer+Postgresql or Oracle. More info on DotLRN is at http://dotlrn.mit.edu or ask around in the dotLRN Development forums ( http://openacs.org/bboard/q-and-a.tcl?topic_id=15
Re:Check out DotLRN (Score:1)
So for obvious reasons, I hope, MIT didn't feel like watching this box get slashdotted by a ton of guest users.
Scalable Industrial Strength Open Source Platform (Score:2, Informative)
For this reason we have been evaluating lots of different systems over the last 5 months and in our search we came across an application that is built on top of an industrial strength web application framework that was born in the CS department of MIT and has a very active open source community supporting it (http://openacs.org). All data is stored in a database (Oracle or Postgresql - i.e. it can be spit out in any standard compliant format needed in the future) and it is served using a heavy duty open source web/application server (AOLServer). The actual application that is built on this framework (http://dotlrn.mit.edu) is focused on community building and sounds like something that would probably interest you. We have decided as an institution to go with dotLRN (with more than 30,000 users), but we are still in the planning phases right now (we should be going live in the first or second quarter of 2003). Word of warning... although dotLRN has been in active use at various institutions around the world for more than two years (in an earlier version called AECS), the "boxed" second version that MIT is funding (dotLRN) is still in a testing phase (although it is being used in production at more than one adventurous school at the moment). Do not be upset though... the present version can be pulled from the public CVS and it works very well... and the "boxed" version should be coming in September. DotLRN was built with scalability, performance, community, and modularity in mind (i.e. modules that expand its present capabilities are being built as a write this: xml-based LMS, quiz module, presentation module, bookmarks module, glossary module... to name a few) and it is going to make some waves.
dotLRN!!! Jump on the bandwagon for the GPL LMS! (Score:1, Informative)
talli
Physlets (Score:1)
In case you want to write software to help with the "online lab" part of courses or perhaps simply illustrate certain ideas in a graphical fashion, take a look at Physlets [davidson.edu]. These are open-source Java libraries for writing physics-related Java programs/applets. Award winning [merlot.org], no less.
-Rahul
Demo install of .LRN (Score:2, Informative)
http://dotlrn.collaboraid.net [collaboraid.net]
We'd be interested on opinions about our software (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, our system may be suitable, if you want to take a longer view *8-)
We're currently developing WHURLE - Web-based Hierarchical Universal Reactive Learning Environment - a GPL'd XML-based open system. It runs on a servlet engine with XSLT (apache tomcat and cocoon recommended *8-). The development team comprises several people who have run major online courses, mostly using WebCT, and we're keen to avoid the same mistakes - to this end - all our content is stored as discrete XML 'chunks' of information, which are structured into a hierarchical lesson plan - we're developing adaptive filters at the mo, but if you just want to do non-adaptive, straight course delivery, it's ready now.
I said take a longer view, because, even though we have courses running in Nottingham,UK and Hong Kong, authoring at the moment is either done by hand in an XML editor, or using some crude web forms I knocked up - we are in the process of finishing a converter for most of our legacy material, which was developed for a program called Scholar's Desktop - so if any one has courses built using this, let me know and I can get you started real quick - for others, if you'd like to see a demo of the system, or contribute, please drop me an email.Convertors from other formats are in hand, but realistically will take some time.
Addressing some of the other issues posted here - we think SCORM is a good idea and will get round to doing something with it RSN *8-) We found in our previous courses that what makes online components a success is a 'critical mass' of online contributors - silent forums are the death of any system. As for peer review - we're actively looking at this, perhaps using something along the lines that sourceforge use - most active, highest rated and so on, rather than the karma/mod system used here.
Hope this is interesting to some people - get in touch with me if you'd like to chat further.
Adam Moore
WHURLE Technical Lead
University of Nottingham
http://whurle.sf.net
Another Possibility (Score:1)
http://www.jonesknowledge.com/higher/jk_eed.php
Mark
to blog or not to blog (Score:1)
E-learning software (Score:1)
http://www.ilias.uni-koeln.de/ios/index-e.html
It requires technical help to set up. If your IT department can assist, you may wish to ask them for help.
There is also a company that provides space and e-learning accounts using ILIAS software. Try Training Space http://www.trainingspace.com. They can also help with a setup of ILIAS, if needed.