Title: Jon Mason Education.au Ltd
1Jon MasonEducation.au Ltd
2Standards for e-learningIs there a future?
Jon Mason jmason_at_educationau.edu.au
3Process
Content
4Standards for e-learningIs there a future?
More importantly What standards? Why
standards? Who will develop them?
5Why?
- Standards are a natural artifact of any human
society - Communities of practice develop standards (
conventions, protocols, fashions, etc)
But
6Standards are misunderstood
- As a means for corporate dominance in the
marketplace - As a means for government regulatory control
- As an encroachment on personal freedom of
expression
7Standards are misunderstood
in the eLearning world the province of
techos!
8How to model the problem space?
- Processes Functions
- Concepts
- Components
- Services
- Frameworks
- Sustainable infrastructure
- Use Cases
9Critical Uncertainties
10 Technology empowers
Web of Confidence
Vanilla
Sources of power, influence and new ideas
Emergent
Acceptance and adoption of technology in society
Established
Back to the Future
U Choose
Technology frustrates
11Technology Empowers
Emergent Power
Established Power
Technology Frustrates
12What is common to each scenario?
All will utilise standards in various forms!
13http//mapageweb.umontreal.ca/turner/meta/english/
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15Other Tensions
16(No Transcript)
17- No clean boundary between technical pedagogical
issues - e.g., metadata soft infrastructure - Interoperability - semantic - cultural -
political - syntactic - technical
18Terminology
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10
Boundaries
Networks
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10
- What creates value in the information economy?
- Who creates it?
- How is it created?
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23Standards utilize define boundaries enable
networks facilitate development of systems
24Questions What if
25The paomnnehil pweor of the hmuan mnid.
Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde
Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the
ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng
is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit
pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can
sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae
the huamn mind deos not raed ervey lteter by
istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. - personal
email correspondence, Aug 2003
26What Technology?
- information communications
- nano-
- bio-
- a fusion?
- Many technologies will shape societys acceptance
or otherwise
27Who
28Who Else?
29Communities of Practice
30Conceptual Challenges
- What is content?
- new data-types object-types constantly
appearing - Boundaries
- Where are the boundaries between content,
context, learning activities? - What are digital objects what are digital
collections? - Where are the boundaries between data,
information, knowledge? - Modeling knowledge
- extending the scope of metadata assignment use
31Source Chris Blackall, ANU, 2003
32Will a Knowledge Economy Emerge? Is e-learning
meshing with knowledge management?
33Know
34 No Boundaries or Rules? www.nbor.com
35Interfaces Boundaries by another name A
critical success factor in technology adoption
36 Technology empowers
Web of Confidence
Vanilla
Sources of power, influence and new ideas
Emergent
Acceptance and adoption of technology in society
Established
Back to the Future
U Choose
Technology frustrates
37What does each scenario indicate about e-learning
standards?
- Back to the Future a content-delivery-centric
dumbing down (know-what) - UChoose portlets, wikis, weblogs, e-portfolios
- Virtually Vanilla blended dumbing down,
content-access, competencies (do-what
know-what) - Web of Confidence access management solved,
hi-trust systems