Staffordshire University launches JISC funded initiative for federating open courseware using HarvestRoad Hive DR
By admin, Gaea News NetworkTuesday, September 22, 2009
Staffordshire University is taking part in a pilot study to explore the issues and benefits involved in making its ‘stock’ of learning content freely available.
The project, made possible by the use of Giunti Labs’ HarvestRoad Hive digital repository (DR) allied to the Blackboard virtual learning environment (VLE), is one of seven such projects being funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) – a Government-funded body which supports education and research by promoting innovation in new technologies and by the central support of information and communications technology (ICT) services.
The project involving Staffordshire University involves making some 700 ‘credits’ of learning materials available in various forms, including video, ‘hardcopy’ notes and so on. These materials, originally kept within the Blackboard VLE, or learning management system, have been migrated to Giunti Labs’ DR; then federated to the JISC repository (known as JORAM Open) and made available to learners via RSS feed alerts.
Professor Mark Stiles, the University’s Head of Learning Development and Innovation, and a member of the board of directors of the IMS Global Learning Consortium, explained: “We bought Giunti Labs’ HarvestRoad Hive – in 2006 – because we wanted flexibility in how we used our learning content. We already had the Blackboard VLE but we wanted to use the content on this system in other ways.
“Moreover, we have some 11 partner colleges – which are part of the Staffordshire Region Foundation. All of these colleges use Moodle – the increasingly popular open source VLE.
“We also have other partner organisations around the UK and, indeed, throughout the world,” he added. “We want to share our learning content with all of them – and, indeed, getting academic institutions to share their learning and expertise more widely is in line with current Government policy.
“We are keen to make exposing our content to as wide an audience as possible the norm rather than the exception,” Stiles continued. “After all, universities don’t sell ‘content’.
“Rather, they sell accreditation and access to expertise. So, even if they make their courses freely available on the internet, they should find students wanting to come to the university, for assessment and accreditation.
“After all, you can find all the information associated with an undergraduate course freely available in libraries,” he added.
“But the key is the assessment and accreditation of your learning. If you work through the information without tutors, how do you know that you are any good at learning and applying that learning?”
Stiles discussed his university’s experience with this project at a conference held in Sestri Levante in Italy on 17th and 18th September. Called ‘EdReNe’ (https://edrene.org/) the event was a workshop on ‘digital repositories for education’, bringing together specialists in web-based learning resources repositories, along with content owners and other stakeholders within education.
“Today, organisations exist in an interconnected environment and it is no longer sufficient to merely manage and deliver the information that an organisation owns,” commented Fabrizio Cardinali, Giunti Labs’ CEO. “This is especially true where this information relates to knowledge dissemination, online learning and training programs.
“Moreover, organisations may have core contents or information held on disparate systems and, so, are unable to leverage any social or community-based content value augmentation practice - thus losing ground and effectiveness against user expectations. In this case, being a ‘Learning Organisation’ is an impossible task to fulfil.
“HarvestRoad Hive consolidates this information into one source, allowing people from all over an organisation to access, use and benefit by it,” he said. “DRs, such as HarvestRoad Hive, can be invaluable in providing not just learning materials but also vital information for business planning, strategy and tactics.
“Ultimately, the HarvestRoad DR solution allows organisations from any business and educational background to evolve in tune with their market requirements, augmenting the value of their content portfolio and ensuring contents are transformed into usable knowledge.”
In at least the case of Staffordshire University, that looks as if it will soon mean ‘freely available’ usable knowledge.
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About Staffordshire University
Established in the early 1990s, the university now has some 16,000 students, based at two main campuses in Stoke-on-Trent and Stafford, as well as a co-funded University Centre in Lichfield. The university provides courses at foundation, certificate, diploma, degree and postgraduate level in the arts, media and design; business and law; computing, engineering and technology; as well as health and sciences. It also runs a number of vocational courses, including a range of employer-backed foundation degrees, through its network of further education colleges throughout Staffordshire and Shropshire. Recognising that geographical and time barriers can be a constraint to learning, the university continues to develop online courses for access at home and/or in the workplace.
One of academia’s first users of VLEs in the UK, Staffordshire University also bought and installed Giunti Labs’ HarvestRoad Hive DR in 2006 to manage any form of content used in online learning, corporate training and knowledge management initiatives. It is now upgrading both its Blackboard VLE and its HarvestRoad Hive DR.
About HarvestRoad Hive digital repository (DR)
HarvestRoad Hive is the platform solution for creating digital content repositories for educational, knowledge and performance support. It solves the information management problems that occur when organisations implement knowledge sharing or e-learning projects.
HarvestRoad Hive creates an infrastructure that allows learners to bring together concepts, data, discoveries, ideas, interpretations and methods in powerful new ways. It provides a DR solution offering refined categorisation and search tools that help locate information quickly – helping organisations to make quantifiable savings in terms of time and resources.
About Giunti Labs
Giunti Labs is a leading Online and Mobile Learning Content Management Solutions provider with global headquarters in Italy and offices around the world.
Giunti Labs provides a wide range of solutions, in response to any content, learning and knowledge management need, covering:
• 24/7 multi language learning content production
• LCMS and Digital Repository Platforms
• Delivery solutions for mobile & wireless
• Consulting and professional services
Giunti Labs is part of Giunti Group, a leading educational and cultural heritage publisher with roots back to 1841. Over the years Giunti has built a catalogue of huge dimensions (over 12,000 titles) and acquired new brands worldwide.
In 2008, Giunti Labs acquired the HarvestRoad Hive digital repository system, which manages any form of content used in online learning, corporate training and knowledge management initiatives. HarvestRoad Hive can interface with practically any ERP, Learning or Course Management System and is already integrated with several commonly used course management systems, authoring and content assembly tools.
Further information from:
Minna Leikas, Giunti Labs, +39 3474435167, m.leikas@giuntilabs.com
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, +44 (0)1727 860405, bob.little@boblittlepr.com
Tags: digital repositories, e-learning, Education, learning content management, university