New standards to facilitate eLearning
‘Common Cartridge’ reportedly will allow any digital content to work with any standards-based software.
This weeks eschool news article by Dennis Carter titled New standards to facilitate eLearning reports that educators and technology executives developed a common set of standards that will allow any kind of digital learning content to be used with any type of learning management system, student information system, or web portal. Common Cartridge (CC) would provide a standard way to represent digital course material for use in online learning systems and enable new publishing models for online course materials and digital books that are interactive and can be distributed online without compatability issues. Professors could create online courses that integrate several websites. Additionally courses created online could be imported to other platforms (life from Desire2Learn to Blackboard). These sites would be integrated so that students could log onto several web sites through one account. In Michael Korcuska’s sakaiblog “Common Cartridge is cool; LTI is even cooler” he suggests that CC will not provide what publishers needs most. The highest value content is becoming more interactive, require custom platforms to run, and are therefore not something you could put in a .zip file and import into CC. LTI, which stands for Learning Tools Interoperability Specification can launch a remote application, have the application and LMS platform communicate during the learning session, and have results from the users interaction fed back to the LMS. Regardless of its weaknesses CC would reduce the cost and hassle of creating and utilizing online course material and material can be converted usig one of many downloadable tools.
I don’t understand enough about the way online courses are set up but it seems that CC would allow a student to access blackboard material as well as sakai material using one account and makes creating and transferring online courses much more streamline for professors. I am all for anything that makes online learning streamline and lest costly. It is especially exciting to think that the best parts of blackboard could be used in conjuction with the best parts of programs like myclasses or livetext.