IBM Donates E-Learning Software Code and Expertise to Sakai
Wednesday, 12 July 2006 IBM today announced it has donated e-learning software code to the Sakai Project, a group of learning institutions creating and deploying open-source course management, collaboration and online research support tools for higher education. The donation is part of IBM's overall support of open computing in education. Last year, the company announced that it will allow royalty-free access to its patent portfolio for the development and implementation of selected open software standards for Web services, electronic forms and open document formats in education. IBM developed the donated code exclusively for Sakai to enable the tracking of learning content and help Sakai better support universities that adopt its collaboration and learning environment (CLE). IBM will also contribute the expertise of a senior architect to help speed the development and growth of Sakai software and of open-computing communities in higher education. IBM's code donation will enable teachers using the Sakai environment to track consistently the progress of their students using Sakai-based courseware. For students, the IBM code will allow more freedom in how they access distance and self-directed learning applications. Since the Sakai environment is on the Web, students can learn and track their progress while in class, at home or anywhere else where they have a device connected to the Internet. "Sakai was created on the premises that open standards and open source solutions lower costs, increase interoperability and enhance flexibility," said Chuck Severance, PhD, Executive Director of the Sakai Foundation and Chief Architect of the Sakai Project at the University of Michigan. "This generous donation will help Sakai offer the most comprehensive and accessible open learning CLE framework in higher education. IBM has been one of the early and most aggressive leaders in supporting open source in the education industry and we look forward to continuing our partnership with them." At the recent Sakai Conference in Vancouver, more than 70 percent of surveyed attendees reported that they were planning on deploying Sakai in pilot, expanding their existing implementation or putting Sakai into production at an enterprise level. "Open-source software and open standards can revolutionize the applications and technology for learning, just as Linux, Apache and Eclipse have transformed and standardized infrastructure software," said Michael King, director of market development, IBM Global Education Industry. "We believe an open cycle of innovation that leverages common platforms such as the Sakai framework will become the model for developing and broadly deploying new solutions for educational institutions." IBM's donation will make Sakai's CLE framework compliant with SCORM courseware standards. SCORM stands for Sharable Content Object Reference Model. It provides specifications for producing learning content that is interoperable and can be easily shared and reused. SCORM-compliant code allows developers to create learning content once and then deliver, launch, and track the content in multiple environments without rewriting the code. About Sakai The Sakai Project, a landmark venture announced in January 2004 to create open-source course management, collaboration and online research support tools for the higher education community, involves more than 90 universities, colleges and institutions of learning around the world. The project, begun through a collaboration involving the University of Michigan, Indiana University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, the Open Knowledge Initiative and the uPortal Project, and funded by the Mellon and Hewlett Foundations, released version 2.0 of its software in 2005. The Sakai Software has been deployed as the primary teaching and learning system at the University of Michigan, with over 35,000 users. It is in a full parallel year at Indiana University with deployment to 90,000. Major pilot projects and rollouts are underway at Stanford University, University of California-Berkeley, MIT, Rutgers, Yale, UC-Merced, University of South Africa, Universitat de Lleida (Spain), Roskilde Universitetscenter (Denmark), Universidade Fernando Pessoa (Portugal), and others. For more information, please visit www.sakaiproject.org. For more information about SCORM, please visit www.academiccolab.org/projects/scorm.html. About IBM For more information, please visit http://www.ibm.com. For information about IBM's solutions and experience in education, please visit: www.ibm.com/education. Contact: James Peters Ketchum Communications 404-879-9127 james.peters@ketchum.com SOURCE: IBM
Source: marketwire
All trademarks and copyrighted information contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
Related Articles
- Media Machines Releases Source Code for Enabling Web-Based 3D Virtual Worlds
Tuesday, 11 July 2006
- "Third Party Logistics WMS Software - Side-by-Side Comparisons & Selection Strategies" is Released
Monday, 10 July 2006
- AltaPoint Releases New Multi-Platform Software
Sunday, 9 July 2006
- Emulex 4Gb/s PCI-X HBAs Now Shipping in IBM BladeCenter
Tuesday, 4 July 2006
- Ecora Releases Free Configuration Documentation Software
Thursday, 15 June 2006
- Agile Software Company Launches Open Source Initiative
Wednesday, 14 June 2006
- General Software Appoints Innolution to Provide Sales and Support to Designers in Korea
Friday, 9 June 2006
- Jive Software Announces Open-Source of Spark IM Client
Tuesday, 6 June 2006
- Open Source Firm Launches Products to Promote Business Software
Friday, 2 June 2006
- Akaza Announces the 1,000th Download of OpenClinica Open Source Clinical Trial Software
Thursday, 25 May 2006
- ALT Software and Freescale Bring Compelling 2D & 3D Graphics to Automotive Infotainment Systems
Sunday, 21 May 2006
- Spikesource Joins Forces With Channel Partners To Tap Small And Medium Size Business Market For Open Source Software
Tuesday, 16 May 2006
- Fortify Software Sponsors FindBugs Open Source Project
Tuesday, 16 May 2006
- Serval Systems Enters North American Retail Management Software Market; Serval Retail Manager Software Extends Presence beyond Native South Africa
Monday, 15 May 2006
- KnowledgeTree Document Management Software Now Available in Professional and Open Source Editions
Friday, 12 May 2006
|