Showing posts with label e-Learning Vendors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-Learning Vendors. Show all posts

Learning Content Management System
The GeoLearning Learning Content Management System (GeoLCMS) is a browser-based tool for creating, delivering and managing high-quality learning content quickly and cost-effectively across your organization. Organizations just starting out in e-learning will appreciate its simplicity, while experienced developers will find that GeoLCMS offers ways to streamline their course creation process—and substantially reduce development costs.

GeoLCMS provides anyone in your organization, partner channel or customer base with critical learning and knowledge resources when they need them. Learning and knowledge sharing are driven from a single database of content that is easily created, updated and shared.

GeoLCMS is an integrated component of GeoLearning’s GeoMaestro enterprise learning and performance management platform, providing seamless content connectivity, security, session management and integrated reporting. It can also be deployed as a stand-alone system, or integrated with our GeoExpress LMS platform, as well as other third-party LMSs. Either way, GeoLCMS offers one-of-a-kind features that make the development of e-learning applications faster and more efficient.

The GeoLCMS offers several competitive advantages:

  • Rapid Content Creation
  • Powerful Collaboration Tools
  • Open Authoring
  • Reusable Learning Objects
  • Adaptive Learning Paths
  • Superior Assessment and Survey Capabilities
  • Robust Administrative Features
  • Intuitive Student Experience
  • Powerful Tracking, Reporting & LMS Integration Capabilities
  • Web-based and delivered Software as a Service (SaaS)
  • AICC, SCORM 1.2, SCORM 2004, PENS and Section 508 Compliant
“GeoLCMS offers us unlimited flexibility to create robust custom sales training content. The content reusability and intuitive environment enables our content development team and SMEs to access centralized assets and collaborate to streamline content development best practices. Our content creation and update process is rapid, reliable and scalable.”


Docebo is an Open Source e-Learning platform (LMS and LCMS) used in corporate and higher education markets.The Platform supports 18 languages and can support different didactic models. Including: Blended, Self-Directed, Collaborative and even Social Learning through Chat, Wiki, Forums and 53 other different functions.

E-learning: Docebo LMS LCMS functionality

  • LMS support SCORM 1.2 and scorm 2004 (international elearning standard) support
    The elearning System (LMS and LCMS) manage every file type (word, excel, video, audio, etc.)
  • User notification via SMS or E-Mail
  • Videoconference, chat, forum
  • Messages, advice
  • Test, polls
  • FAQ, Help, Link List, Glossary, Wiki, e-Portfolio
  • Elearning reports by user and by course
  • Organize users in company organizational trees
  • Group management
  • Docebo LMS, elearning system support interface with HR software like SAP, HR, Zucchetti, Lotus, as well as authentication systems like LDAP and Active Directory, Kerberos and NTLM
  • Business intelligence elearning system
  • Skill based
Multilanguage elearning (LMS and LCMS)

Docebo LMS LCMS is translated in following languages: Italian, English, Arabic, Croatian, Bosnian, Danish, Dutch, Farsi, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese, Spanish, Tamil, Turkish .


Administrators

  • Module Manager: Administrators can install modules, enable and disable them, define a default module and menu configuration for new courses. Developers can create integrated and third party feature modules for ATutor to extend its functionality. Types of Modules administrator, instructor, group, course, and public modules, as well as fully integrated feature extensions, or third party add-on software. New in 1.6.2! modules can be imported directly from a central module repository, and can now be automatically unistalled.
    Administrator's Home Page: All administrator tools can be accessed quickly from a central Administrator Home Page.
  • Patcher Module: New in 1.6.1! Administrators can install patches issued at update.atutor.ca to keep their ATutor system up-to-date, and secure. The Patcher can also be used to share custom features across multiple installation.
    Administrator ATutor Handbook: Administrator documentation is linked from each section of the handbook to the screen ATutor it refers to. The Handbook can be translated, and mutliple translations managed for each ATutor installation.
    Multiple Administrators: Create multiple administrator accounts assigning specific privilages to each.
  • Pretty URLs: New in 1.6.1! Administrators can turn on Pretty URL to have URLs with variables attached, rewritten in a more readable form. When turned on, public courses in ATutor can be indexed by search engines.
  • Master Student List: Require newly created student accounts to be authenticated against a custom imported student ID/PIN paired list.
  • Themes Manager: Easily create a custom version of ATutor by modifying or creating a theme. Type in a URL to a theme to install it in ATutor (see Themes). Assign themes to categories of courses. Export a theme to share with others. Login to submit themes to atutor.ca to make them available to the ATutor Community. DIV-based themes are available for added accessibility. New in 1.6.2! theme designer documentation is available in the ATutor Handbook. New in 1.6.2! administrators can import community contributed themes directly from the theme respoitory on atutor.ca.
    Automated Installer and Upgrade: A fast and easy way to install or upgrade ATutor! In most cases it only take a couple minutes, with little need for technical knowledge.
  • General Statistics: View system usage statistics.
  • Secure Course Content: Secure course content directory to prevent unauthorized access to course files.
  • Instructor Request: Review requesting instructors' personal information, and assign instructor status so they may create courses. Administrators are informed by email when new requests are made.
  • User Manager: Users on a system can be sorted, personal information can be viewed, and access privileges can be modified. Send announcements to all users on an ATutor system, or to students, or to instructors. Search through the users database using a variety of search strategies to find individual students, or a group of students. Users accounts can be batch managed to rapidly add, modify, or delete accounts. View courses in which individual students are enrolled.
  • Enrollment Manager: Administrators have all the same tools for managing course enrolments as instructors do, with the ability to manage students in any course. Create an enrollment list online to add new students to a course. Automatically generate login names and passwords for students and send them by email when a student is enrolled in a course. Assign students as Alumni so they can participate in discussions for future course sessions. Filter by login, first or last name, or email address.
  • Course Manager: Much like the User Manager, courses on a system can be sorted, their properties modified, and their instructors managed. Create new courses and assign an instructor. Use course backups to generate initial content for a new course. Create shared forums for select courses, or create a community forum for all courses. Easily jump between the administration section and courses without having to re-login each time.New in 1.6.1! Administrators can create an enrolment "trigger" link, that when followed, students are enrolled in specified courses automatically when they register.
    Backup Manager: Generate backups of courses to create master copies. Download backups for safe keeping or to move courses to another ATutor server. Use backups to generate new courses.
  • Cron Utility: Optionally schedule scripts to run at specific times. Use the Cron Uitlity to run the Mail Queue every few minutes. Write custom scripts to generate statistics, create a system backup, or to send system reminders, etc. using the cron utility to schedule when they run..
  • Course Categories: The ATutor course browser includes a course category browser, so courses can be sorted into a custom defined set of categories, perhaps by department or topic or grade level, for example. Themes can be assigned to course categories so all courses within a category look the same.
  • Language Manager: Import language packs directly into ATutor. Once imported, edit languages as needed. Create an ATutor Language Pack by exporting the language from your ATutor system. Make the language pack available to other, and submit it to the atutor.ca Translation Forum as an attachment, so others can use and continue to maintain the language. Easily search through the text of the language to quickly find and customize interface, feedback, and module language.New in 1.6! All languages are available in UTF-8, and courses can display multiple languages at the same time.

Developers
  • Developer Documentation: Guidelines, instructions, recommendations for those who wish to develop ATutor core features, bundled with each ATutor distribution.
  • Module Developer Documentation: Guidelines, instructions, recommendations for those who wish to develop ATutor Modules, bundled with each ATutor distribution.New in 1.6! Install the phpDocumentor module to generate API documentation. New in 1.6.2! modules can be exported from the module manager to be shared or redistributed to other ATutor systems.
  • Theme Designer Documentation: New in 1.6.2! Guidelines for developing themes are included in the ATutor Handbook. Theme designers can export themes to share or redistribute.
  • Hello World Template Module: A sample module that implements all potential module features, which can be used as a template for creating new ATutor modules.
  • Patcher Module: New in 1.6.1! Developers can use the patcher module to create patches to fix bugs, or to add new features or feature adjustments to ATutor, that can be submitted and added to the ATutor public distribution.
  • ATutor SVN Code Repository: Developers can checkout the live evolving ATutor source code from a public Subversion repository. With approval, developers can commit their features to the respository to be include in the ATutor distribution .
  • ATutor Bug Reports: Developers can keep up on bug fixes using the ATutor Bug Tracker With approval, developers can report to, and provide comments on, bugs listed in the tracker.


ATutor is an Open Source Web-based Learning Content Management System (LCMS) designed with accessibility and adaptability in mind. Administrators can install or update ATutor in minutes, develop custom themes to give ATutor a new look, and easily extend its functionality with feature modules. Educators can quickly assemble, package, and redistribute Web-based instructional content, easily import prepackaged content, and conduct their courses online. Students learn in an adaptive learning environment.

Try the demo to experience ATutor's adaptability, and its flexibility for course designers. Download ATutor to get a copy of your own.


Why ATutor?
Accessibility
ATutor supports these accessibility standards:
W3C WCAG 1.0
W3C WCAG 2.0
W3C ATAG 2.0
US Section 508
Italy Stanca Act
IMS AccessForAll 2.0 draft
ISO FDIS 24751

Interoperability
ATutor supports these interoperability standards:
IMS Content Packaging 1.1.2+
SCORM Content Packaging
SCORM 1.2 LMS RTE3
IMS Question Test Interoperability (QTI) 1.2/2.1
IMS Common Cartridge 1.0
W3C XHTML 1.0

ATutor's base in Open Source technology makes it a cost effective tool for both small and large organizations presenting their instructional materials on the Web, or delivering fully independent online courses. Comprehensive help is available through the documentation, through a number of support services, or through the public forums. Full language support is available through the ATutor Translation Site.

Open Source
ATutor is an Open Source project. You may copy, distribute, and modify ATutor under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). See ATutor Licensing for examples of permitted free use.

ATutor Awards
IMS Gold Learning Impact Award 2008: Selected by industry leaders, the IMS Learning Impact Awards recognize the high impact use of technology to improve learning across all industry segments and in all regions of the world.

Mellon Award for Technology Collaboration 2007: Presented by The Andrew Mellon Foundation. recognizing not-for-profit organizations that are making substantial contributions of their own resources toward the development of open source software and the fostering of collaborative communities to sustain open source development.


Molly Tipton failed at her first try last winter at putting classroom resources and homework assignments online—via a class MySpace page—after parents said they feared their children might get into trouble on the popular social- networking site.

But the 8th grade teacher has had more success this school year, with her second try. Last fall, she started using Moodle, an online course-management system that is stored on the El Paso,Texas, school district’s computer server, with access controlled by student passwords.

Through Moodle, Ms. Tipton now posts reading passages and links to Web sites that are related to her lessons. She also has set up a popular online chat room for her students and posts homework assignments online, a feature that students as well as some parents have embraced. Moodle’s online capabilities, she said, are making her social studies classes a hybrid between traditional and online courses.

Ms. Tipton is part of a growing number of K-12 educators in regular classrooms who are using course-management systems to share assignments, homework, classroom assessments, and other information with students and their parents. A course-management system is a software program that allows controlled exchanges via the Internet of just about any kind of information related to a course, although the features of individual products differ.

Blackboard Dominates
Moodle is perhaps the most popular rival to the course-management system sold by Blackboard Inc., the dominant company in the U.S. market for e-learning tools in higher education. The for-profit Washington-based company is trying to expand its foothold in what Blackboard officials call the emerging K-12 market.

Blackboard, which in 2006 bought its main for-profit competitor in higher education, WebCT, says that 400 precollegiate schools or school districts use the full or partial version of its academic product.

The company says it welcomes open-source competitors like Moodle, because interest among schools will help expand the use of course-management systems—a market that company officials believe they will dominate.

Next week, Blackboard is launching an enhanced version for small schools and districts, for an annual flat fee starting at $10,000, including online hosting and training of personnel. That rate is substantially lower than what larger institutions pay.

Still, cost remains a formidable obstacle in many school districts, and that’s one reason why Moodle is creating a buzz in the school marketplace. The software is free, with a modular design that allows educators to start using a few tools, while working gradually to add more.

The software has been developed over the past nine years by a global community, of both commercial and noncommercial users, led by Moodle, a company based in Perth, Australia. Under the terms of Moodle’s open-source license, users or their contractors may use the software on an unlimited number of computers and modify the program to add unique or specially tailored functions at will.

Yet while Moodle is free, it is not without cost. Those costs include computers, networks, and personnel to install and maintain the hardware and software, as well as the cost of training teachers, though some or all of these requirements can be outsourced to outside providers.

“It is free like a puppy, not like a beer,” says Trish Hart, a facilitator and instructor at the Alaska Vocational Technical Center, a state-run postsecondary school that uses Moodle extensively.

The school, in Seward, Alaska, offers online courses for students and teachers statewide, including professional-development offerings for secondary school teachers and advanced courses or electives for high school students. The Moodle system is run from a commercial host server in Virginia.

Other Players
Outside hosts and programming companies specializing in Moodle can provide schools with technical skills that their own technology personnel may lack, though a global community of users can also be tapped for assistance.

Commercial firms offer customized versions of Moodle, as well as hosting services. For example, Moodlerooms, a systems-integration company based in Baltimore, charges schools a fee to create customized versions of Moodle’s grade books, repositories of learning resources, warehouses for student data, and tools for real-time learning activities. The company also hosts Moodle systems for schools for an annual fee of $1 per user.

Moodle is not the only open-source, online course-management system, or CMS. Another is the Sakai Project, a free educational software platform, developed with leadership from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor with an original grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, based in New York City. The software supports online document distribution, a grade book, discussions, live chats, assignment uploads, and online testing, among other functions.

All told, at least a dozen different online course-management systems are used in schools around the world. Confusion about the term CMS exists, though, in part because of similar and overlapping technologies. They include LMS, or learning-management system; VLE, or virtual-learning environment; and LCMS, or learning-content-management system, among others.

“There are a lot of labels to describe this [market] space,” said Jessie Woolley-Wilson, the president of Blackboard K-12.

She said that Blackboard, which began by producing software for managing the operation of online courses, now supports a “mosaic” of functions, including interactive learning; synchronous, or realtime, learning; and asynchronous learning, in which students participate at different times.

“In its most simplistic form, we are focused on delivering an engaging, effective, and increasingly individualized learning experience to learning constituencies, including students, parents, teachers, and administrators,” Ms.Woolley-Wilson said.

Blackboard will work with schools, she said, to tailor its product “from 100 percent virtual, which includes data collection and data analysis, to using technology to help lighten the load and help teachers get back to teaching,” by helping them create, manage, share, and organize course content.

Amy W. Junker, a senior analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co., an investment- research firm in Milwaukee, Wis., said she expects the K-12 market for course-management systems to expand. High schools, in particular, may see them as a way to help prepare students for higher education, where online and hybrid courses are common, she said.

“Certainly we’re going to see greater adoption of course-management systems in the K-12 market,” Ms. Junker said.

In her view, the ability for teachers to conveniently post homework assignments online—giving busy parents a better ability to keep their youngsters on track—might be the “killer application” that turns the systems into a must-have for many schools.

Complementary Services
Some companies offer other services that can be added either to Blackboard systems or the open-source alternatives such as Moodle.

For example, Elluminate Inc., a Canadian company that has its U.S. headquarters in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., provides live Web conferencing that is tailored to school functions, such as professional development for teachers. The live-video capability and moderator tools can be integrated into the use of Moodle or Blackboard.

The new Blackboard School Central service—for schools and districts with no more than 2,000 users—is a more robust package than the Blackboard Gateway product it replaces, but at a comparable price, the company says.

For an annual fee starting at $10,000, Blackboard will host an e-learning system, with software and training included, for an unlimited number of courses, including professional-development sessions.

The company said it could not provide the price for Blackboard’s Academic Suite, the comprehensive e-learning platform used by large districts or higher education institutions; that price is based on many factors, such as student enrollment, the number of users, and the services included. But Ms. Junker, the Baird analyst, said larger institutions typically pay annual fees ranging from $25,000 to $75,000 for the full suite.

Ms. Junker said that tightening school budgets and the costs of absorbing the company’s acquisitions may mean that even with the new lower-cost offering, Blackboard’s growth in the K-12 market will be tempered. She lowered her rating for Blackboard stock in November, advising investors to maintain but not increase their holdings. Still, she said, the company’s long-term prospects are bright.

Whatever course-management system they select, of course, busy educators must carve out the time to learn how to use it.

For Ms. Tipton of El Paso, learning how to use Moodle took about a day of practice last summer.

Soon afterward, she starred in an instructional video that introduces educators to Moodle, which the 64,000-student district made to interest other El Paso teachers. The video is also posted on the Teacher-Tube and YouTube video-sharing Web sites.

Ms. Tipton has plans to ramp up her own use of Moodle, first by putting podcasts of her lessons on her Moodle site to give students another avenue for learning class material, among other ideas.

She also is looking for grants to buy a classroom set of 30 laptop computers, so her students can use Moodle in class without going to the computer lab. And she plans to help train other teachers in the district.

But those projects will have to wait till summer, she said: “Once the school year has started, we have no time to try anything new.”


Founded in 1997 with a vision to enable educational innovations everywhere by connecting people and technology, Blackboard is a leading provider of e-Education enterprise software applications and services. Consisting of five software applications bundled in two suites, the Blackboard Academic Suite and the Blackboard Commerce Suite, these products are licensed on a renewable basis.

Our global clients include primary and secondary schools, higher education, corporation and government markets as well as textbook publishers and student-focused merchants. Blackboard and its clients have pioneered the emergence of the e-Education industry around the world.

Blackboard's online learning application, the Blackboard Learning System, is the most widely-adopted course management system among U.S. postsecondary institutions.

Mission
To enable educational innovations everywhere by connecting people and technology.

Vision
Our role is to improve the educational experience with Internet-enabled technology that connects students, faculty, researchers and the community in a growing network of education environments dedicated to better communication, commerce, collaboration and content.

Blackboard's large and diverse community of practice supports, enhances and extends our offerings every day, all over the world. The Internet offers great potential for education and the educational experience. While our role as the platform is important, communities of practice make the best solutions. The value of the network is connectedness. Each Blackboard client makes every other Blackboard client’s solution more valuable as a result of that connection.

The Blackboard Learning System™ is a family of software applications designed to enhance teaching and learning. Intuitive and easy-to-use for instructors, the Blackboard Learning System helps instructors to build course materials online and engage with students in an interactive way.

»Institutions around the world use the Blackboard Learning System to:

  • Create powerful learning content using a variety of Web-based tools
  • Encourage student interaction, small-group work, and peer knowledge sharing
  • Facilitate students or groups using engaging assignments that cause them to reflect
  • Enhance student’s critical thinking skills using interactive tools
  • Leverage student participation, communication, and collaboration
  • Evaluate a student’s progress using a rich set of evaluation and assessment capabilities


What's ToolBook?

Posted by Miro | 6:28 AM | | 0 comments »

ToolBook provides a comprehensive solution with everything you need to quickly create engaging interactive content, quizzes, assessments, and simulations.

Learning content that you create in ToolBook is deployed as HTML for distribution, delivered through SumTotal Learning Management solution, or any SCORM or AICC-compliant Learning Management System (LMS). Learners easily access content from desktop and mobile devices like the iPhone.

Our newest ToolBook 9.5 version allows you to build your courses faster than before.

Faster, Engaging and Interactive Authoring
ToolBook helps you quickly create professional learning courses with the included content templates, SmartPages and SmartStyles. Choose from over a dozen different graded question types – including true/false, multiple choice, fill in the blank, matching, hotspot, drag-n-drop and more.

Create software application simulations with the screen recorder and simulation editor. When needed, you can develop custom interactivity and branching with the Action Event feature.

Turn your Microsoft PowerPoint Library into SCORM-Compliant Courses
With ToolBook, you can easily import the slides of a Microsoft PowerPoint (.ppt) presentation. ToolBook enables you to enhance the imported presentation with assessments, interactivity, media, and rich effects.

Anytime, Anywhere Learner Access
ToolBook allows you to deliver engaging learning experiences across major operating systems, Web browsers, mobile phones and devices.


Composica Enterprise is a web-based e-learning authoring system that offers real-time collaboration among team members and provides a powerful programming-free WYSIWYG environment to create high-quality interactive e‑learning content.

Features

  • Rich web-based WYSIWYG authoring environment
  • Groupware authoring with task-management
  • Entirely programming-free
  • Unique fast-editing approach
  • Highly reusable content
  • Powerful assessment capabilities
  • Serious Games - game based learning
  • High interactivity - Multi Choice, Drag & Drop, Fill-in, Hot Spots, and other customizable interactions
    Direct and easy import from PowerPoint
  • Exciting visual effects and animations
  • Dynamic navigation elements
  • Project tagging
  • Instant preview
  • Automatic bookmarking and state restoration
  • SCORM 1.2 / 2004 and PENS conformance
  • Publish anywhere, LMS/online/offline/CD


A New eBook from The eLearning Guild!

In February and March, 2008, The eLearning Guild conducted a survey of its members, asking for their favorite tips for producing and managing Flash-based e-Learning. A total of 147 members responded to the survey, contributing 239 usable tips on 28 products (17 of which were not included in the original list). The tips range in length from one-sentence ideas all the way up to multi-page discourses. Some are very basic in nature, and others are quite advanced. These tips were different from past surveys in one significant way: Many of them contain detailed ActionScript code that will help you solve common problems. We have not edited the tips in any way, other than to correct spelling – everything you see in this book is in the tipsters' own words. As a result, these tips will be useful to any designer or developer looking for best practices to incorporate into their own production process.

If you're not familiar with their products for e-Learning, or if you haven't checked them out lately, we encourage you to take a look at your earliest convenience.
Access Instructions: Depending on the speed of your Internet connection, this document could take a few moments to download because of its size (102 pages in PDF format, ~6MB). We urge you to save it to your computer first and then open it.

Download Link:
http//www.elearningguild.com/showFile.cfm?id=2866

License Agreement: The content of all Guild eBooks is FREE. You are encouraged to use it, share it, and post it on your Web site and/or your organization’s Intranet. No one is authorized to charge a fee for it or to use it to collect contact information. The PDF file cannot be altered without written permission from The eLearning Guild. We request that reuse or re-distribution of this publication is accompanied by appropriate attribution to The eLearning Guild.