Believe it or not the US Patent and Trademark Office has apparently granted Blackboard a patent for pretty much anything remotely related to learning management systems. Scary time ahead for LMS vendors???
Learn.com / LearnCenter support
A group of LearnCenter users have established an unofficial LearnCenter support forum on LMS Talk for users of Learn.com products. Users of other LMS’s are encouraged to do likewise if they’d like to further develop open discussion on online learning technologies.
How P2P Will Change Collaborative Learning
Once associated with illegal file sharing and RIAA lawsuits, peer-to-peer services may now be the future of eLearning.
E-learning in 2012? It won’t exist, predicts Kineo
BRIGHTON, UK, May 25, 2006 – Mark Harrison, partner with Kineo, has led Kineo’s research into future trends for e-learning. He recently presented his predictions at an E-Learning Network event in London – now available for viewing at the Kineo website. He asked his audience to focus six years down the road, to the time the Olympics will take place in the same city. What will e-learning mean by then? He reached some interesting conclusions.
First, there will (hopefully) be no such thing as e-learning in 2012. Harrison asked his audience: “How many hours do you spend at your computer in a day? More than eight? Do you call it e-working? Or e-report writing? Of course not. So why use the term e-learning? We need to move away from viewing e-learning, or even learning, as a discrete task, and see it as what it is – something that we just do on a day-to-day basis without differentiating it from the rest of our activities.” So while e-learning will of course still take place, we should not be calling it anything at all – not even informal learning.
Harrison went on to identify the key driver for learning to permeate through the workspace: new technologies. In that respect, he suggested, the future is already here: “If you look back six years, to 2000, nearly all the emerging technologies that we cite as examples of informal learning – blogs, wikis, podcasting, were already here. We just hadn’t figured out their value, or given them a name yet.” He concluded that ensuring e-learning has a successful future means focusing on sustainable technologies. “Some of them won’t make it. Remember the laser disc? I personally don’t believe wikis and blogs will survive”. E-learning heresy? Time will tell….
About Kineo
Kineo is the UK’s leading e-learning research and consultancy practice. For further information, please contact us at http://www.kineo.co.uk
eLearning Awards 2005
The Top 100 finalists for the 2005 eLearning Awards have been selected. The eLearning Awards support teaching and learning at European schools by awarding excellent resources, effective services, working ideas and imaginative solutions. Winners of the awards will be invited to a prize-giving ceremony in Paris, France, on 8 December 2005.