Online Education and Learning Management Systems
Global E-learning in a Scandinavian Perspective
By Morten
Flate Paulsen
Professor of Online Education, Doctor of Education and Master of
Science in Engineering
With Contributions about Online Education in Denmark
and Sweden by Søren Nipper and Carl Holmberg
European Forewords by Erwin Wagner and Ingeborg
Bø
Canadian Postscript by Dominique Abrioux
ISBN: 82 562 5894 2 (printed version);
ISBN: 82 562 6048 3 (PDF version);
Pages: 337. Publisher: NKI Forlaget
E-mail: faordre@nki.no
Price
and ordering information

List of Contents with
Links to Selected Chapters
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|
International Book Reviews
It is a pleasure to welcome a major book on e-learning
from a European author....This book should be of the greatest interest
to the European Commission and steps should be taken at once to
draw the attention of senior administrators within the Commission
to it... (Desmond Keegan, Distance Education International,
Ireland)
The book is interesting, important, innovative,
international, and impressive. (Dr. Erwin Wagner, former President
of the European Distance Education Network)
One is overwhelmed by the amount of material presented
in the book - and impressed by the clear structure of its presentation.
(Christian Dalsgaard, University of Aarhus, Denmark)
In short, it is a highly recommendable book.
(Maria Victoria Martín, Institut of Educational Ciencies,
University of Barcelona, Spain)
[It] is an interesting and important contribution
to the growing literature on technology-enabled learning.... the
scope of the book goes far beyond LMS, providing a very useful historical
and international review and perspective of online education.
(Eilif Trondsen, Ph.D., Founder and CEO, eLearning Forum, U.S.A)
This book is a much welcomed addition to the literature
on the development of online education. It is of great interest
not just because the author reports and builds on the evolution
of e-learning pedagogy and learning management systems in the Nordic
countries, but because he does so from a comparatist's perspective.
(Dominique Abrioux, President of Athabasca University, Canada)
This book is designed for a broad, international
audience and is a must-have for anybody in the business of running
online education. (Sirje Virkus, Manchester Metropolitan University,
UK)
This is a "must have" resource for students,
practitioners and
policy-makers in the online education world.
(Norine Wark, MDE, Athabasca University, Canada)
...it is evident that this book is not only of
great interest but also a kind of thesaurus of information on online
education of very great value to distance educators and others who
are interested in the status of online education today. (Börje
Holmberg, Sweden)
In conclusion, this book provides a clear view
of the field of online education and a general framework to help
us understand and grasp the main trends taking place in the field...
(Daniel Peraya, TECFA, University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Reviews
and Recommendations of the book
.
|
List of contents with links
to selected chapters and additional online resources
About the book
Prior to year 2000 Scandinavian universities offered
selected online courses attracting a few pioneering students. Today,
even primary schools offer online services to students, teachers
and parents. Online education is becoming mainstream education in
Scandinavia.
This book is intended for an international audience
with an interest in education and the Internet. It will be of special
value to students, teachers, course designers, administrators, decision
makers and educational officers in public and private sectors. The
book discusses major developments in online education, and provides
illustrating examples from the author's Scandinavian and international
research. It includes articles outlining a theory of online education,
teaching techniques, learning management systems, recommendations
for decision makers and terminology.
The author, Dr. Morten Flate Paulsen, has worked within
the field of online education since 1985. In this book he combines
theoretical articles with popular anecdotes and personal experiences.
This untraditional approach has made the book comprehensive, interesting
and enjoyable.
The book has an international perspective, which the
author has developed through nearly 20 years of participation in
the international online education arena. This includes his Adjunct
Professorship at the Athabasca University in Canada, his doctoral
studies at Pennsylvania State University, his work as editor of
the Distance Education Online Symposium (DEOS), his research on
online education in Australia, and his participation in nine European
research projects.
The printed book is designed and developed with the intention of
becoming an experimental, digital, online, multimedia publication.
Multimedia interview
The author is interviewed by Jane (a Voxit Budgie computerized
voice) about the book. Here is one of the questions:
Jane: I understand that you are really concerned about
the heavy workload reported by online teachers. Is this the most
important challenge for online teachers?
Dr.
Paulsen: Yes, online education will never become a large-scale success
until we are able to limit the teacher workload. Therefore it is
extremely important to consider the workload, especially during
development of course assignments. Online education offers students
excellent opportunities for individual communication with their
tutors. They can be contacted via e-mail 24 hours a day, 365 days
a year. Few learning environments provide such opportunities for
individual access to teachers. It is obvious that online students
appreciate always having a personal tutor available. It is the students'
dream, but it could soon become a nightmare for the tutors.
The complete interview is available as:
Quotes and pointed statements
With appropriate references you have permission to use, copy and
reffer to these thirty
quotes and pointed statements from the book. With appropriate
references you may also use these manual
and autorun PowerPoint slides in
your presentations.
Quizzes
Test yourself with these example quizzes
taken from the book content.
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Glossary with definition of terms used in the book
Online education: There are many terms for online education.
Some of them are: virtual education, Internet-based education, Web-based
education, and education via computer-mediated communication (CMC).
The following definition of online education is based on Desmond
Keegan's (1988) definition of distance education. Hence, online
education is characterized by:
- the separation of teachers and learners which distinguishes
it from face-to-face education
- the influence of an educational organization which distinguishes
it from self-study and private tutoring
- the use of a computer network to present or distribute some
educational content
- the provision of two-way communication via a computer network
so that students may benefit from communication with each other,
teachers, and staff
Sustainable online education is characterized by its ability
to persist when extraordinary internal or external funding stops.
Unfortunately, it seems to be a rare phenomenon. In most cases online
education is sustainable when it generates an economic surplus or
reduces costs.
E-learning is here defined as interactive learning in which
the learning content is available online and provides automatic
feedback to the student's learning activities. Online communication
with real people may or may not be included, but the focus of e-learning
is usually more on the learning content than on communication between
learners and tutors.
E-learning could be viewed as an online descendant of computer-based
training (CBT) and computer-aided instruction (CAI).
Unfortunately, the term e-learning is often used as a more generic
term and as a synonym for online education. Kaplan-Leiserson has
developed an online e-learning glossary, which provides this definition:
E-learning covers a wide set of applications and processes, such
as Web-based learning, computer-based learning, virtual classrooms,
and digital collaboration. It includes the delivery of content
via Internet, intranet/extranet (LAN/WAN), audio-and videotape,
satellite broadcast, interactive TV, and CD-ROM.
The term e-learning is not very precise, and it should be pointed
out that learning is just one element of education. So, the term
online education should cover a much broader range of services than
the term e-learning. One may also claim that e-learning companies
often focus on course
content, while online education institutions cover the whole range
of educational services.
Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) focuses
on socially oriented theories of learning using computer technologies
to support collaborative methods of instruction.
Instructional design is characterized by a systematic and
reflective process of applying principles of learning and instruction
to develop instructional materials, activities, information resources,
and evaluation.
Mobile learning (m-learning): The term m-learning is derived
from the term e-learning. It is a form of online learning that can
take place anytime, anywhere with the help of a mobile computer
device. The device must be capable of presenting learning content
and providing wireless two-way communication between teacher(s)
and student(s).
Learning Management System (LMS) is a broad term that is
used for a wide range of systems that organize and provide access
to online learning services for students, teachers, and administrators.
These services usually include access control, provision of learning
content, communication tools, and administration of user groups.
Another term that often is used as a synonym for LMS is learning
platform.
Virtual learning environment (VLE) is a term that to some
extent is used instead of LMS. The two terms have more or less the
same meaning, but one may argue that VLE focusses less on the features
related to the management of learning.
Read the complete glossary with definitions
of e-learning terms such as content creation tools, authoring
tools, assesment tools, learning content management system, learning
object, synchronous communication and asynchronous communication.
|
International Reviews and Recommendations
of the book
|
Reviews in English:
-
-
-
-
- Holmberg, B. 2004. Headlines, Online
Education. Learning management systems.
-
- Martin, M. V. 2004. Interactive
Educational Multimedia, number 9 (November 2004), pp. 89-92.
Book Review
- Peraya, D. 2004. International
Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL)
5(3), Book Review
- Trondsen, E. 2005. Book
Review.
-
- Wark, N. 2004, Instructional
Technology Forum, Dynamic, cutting edge online learning/LMS
resource
|
Recommendations in English:
The online version was used as readings for the Boldic
International Online Conference, October 27 to November 21,
2003
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|
Scandinavian Reviews of the book
Denne boka vil være til stor nytte for lærere,
studieadministrativt personale og politiske myndigheter som planlegger
satsning på nettbasert læring, det være seg institusjonelt,
regionalt eller på landsbasis....(Anmeldelse
i Utdanning.no av Kjell Åge Bringsrud, Institutt. for
Informatikk, Universitetet i Oslo)
Morten Flate Paulsen er en av pionerene på nettlæring
her til lands. Boken er praktisk orientert og beskriver blant annet
fordeler og ulemper med nettlæring, teknikker for undervisning
på nett, erfaringer fra vellykkede prosjekter og trender og
fremtidsutsikter på området. Boken er krydret med konkrete
eksempler fra erfarne nettlærere. Kapitlet Online Teaching
Techniques anbefales særlig for deg som har eller planlegger
nettstøttet undervisning. (Universitetet i Oslo: Bokomtaler)
Denna bok är ett utomordentligt intressant arbete, tillgängligt
dels på Nätet, dels i tryck. För information om
praxis inom online-undervisningen är det en guldgruva....(Recention
i Per Distans av Börje Holmberg)
Det vrimler med betegnelser som online uddannelse, fleksibel
læring, teknologistøttet uddannelse og e-læring,
der betyder mange forskellige ting for mange mennesker. Aktuelt
er der et stort behov for at definere begreberne, så vi
kan være nogenlunde enige om, hvad vi mener, når vi
bruger dem. Morten Flate Paulsen har udgivet en væsentlig
bog, som kan være med til at skabe øget klarhed over
betydningen af de nye betegnelser....(Anmeldelse
af anbefalelsesværdig bog i diskusjonsforumet til dansk
Computerworld og Nordisk
Pedagogik nr 2, 2004 av Bent B. Andresen, Danmarks Pedagogiske
Universitet)
Bogens indhold er omfangsrigt og overvældende, men det
er præsenteret i en klar og struktureret form. Bogen er et omfattende
katalog over de mange facetter af netbaseret læring....(Anmeldelse
av Online Education and LMS i Linqx av Christian Dalsgaard,
Informations- og Medievidenskab, Aarhus Universitet)
[Boken] er et interessant og viktig bidrag til den voksende
litteraturen innen teknologistøttet læring....[den
presenterer] svært nyttige historiske og internasjonale oversikter
og perspektiver på nettbasert utdanning...(Bokanmeldelse
av Eilif Trondsen, Ph.D., Founder and CEO, eLearning Forum, U.S.A.)
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Scandinavian Recommendations of the book
-
Universitetsavisa: For
mye teknikk, for lite pedagogikk. ... Noe annet som går
igjen hos Paulsens informanter, er at det ligger en potensiell
konflikt mellom administrasjon og ledelse på den ene siden,
og de faglig ansatte på den andre....
-
Computerworld Norge: Norge
best på elektronisk opplæring.... I elektronisk
form leveres boken, Online Education and Learning Management
Systems, som et PDF-dokument. Dermed er det mulig å gjøre
fritekstsøk og klikke på aktive lenker i boken....
-
Norgesuniversitetet: Global
e-læring i skandinavisk perspektiv...Det er ikke ofte
det kommer viktige bøker om e-læring fra Europa.
e-Læring er enda mer enn andre deler av utdanningssektoren
dominert av inflytelsen fra Nord-Amerika. Et velkomment unntak
er den nye boken til utviklingsleder ved NKI, Morten Flate Paulsen.
-
Frukostklubben: Spännande
bok på gång i november: Vad ligger bakom Sveriges
försprång vad gäller nätanvändning
och vår höga datormognad? Och vad hände med
alla vackra ord och initiativ?
-
Nätuniversitetet: Ny
bok från Norge: ...tar upp frågan om e-learning
som en global fråga. I Australien är det snart
den största aktören på landets exportmarknad,
medan Norden har en mera modest inställning till att
globalisera utbildningsutbudet. Det är ett av ett flertal
tema på IT-stödd distansutbildning som tas upp
i boken. Den är intressant läsning för allt
från studenter, lärare, till politiker.
-
Nationellt centrum för flexibelt lärande:
Ny bok
om e-lärande i Norden: Nu kan en internationell läsekrets
ta del av nordiska erfarenheter av distansutbildning och lärplattformar....
- Luleå tekniska universitet: Läsvärt
om distansutbildning och lärplattformar ur ett skandinaviskt
perspektiv
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Other books about Online Education by Morten Flate Paulsen
Nordic institutions with e-learning initiatives referred
to in the book
Commercial and self-developed Learning Management Systems (LMS) discussed
in the book
LMS Systems
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Original Nationality
|
Comments
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| Aep e-cursos |
Portuguese |
Self-developed LMS |
| Apollon |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by Handelshøgskolen BI |
| Ascot Course
Master |
Great British |
|
| Aspen |
American |
|
| Aulanet |
|
|
| BettyCOM |
Swedish |
|
|
BlackBoard
|
American |
In 1997, graduate students at Cornell University developed
CourseInfo. Blackboard.com now owns CourseInfo, and changed the name
of the product to BlackBoard with version 5. |
| Centra |
American |
|
| ClassFronter |
Norwegian |
Classfronter is a Norwegian-developed system that has
a very dominant position in Norwegian universities and colleges. The
system is available in a number of languages and sold to institutions
in several countries. |
| Clix
campus |
German |
|
| COM-C |
Danish |
COM-C is a web-based e-learning system developed by
UNI-C, the Danish IT Centre for Research and Education. It is offered
as a hosted solution. UNI-C E-learning is responsible for operation
and surveyance of the system.
|
| Corporate learning |
German |
|
| CourseKeeper |
Norwegian |
|
| Decus System |
|
|
| Destinations |
|
|
| DLS from ETS |
German |
|
| Docent |
American |
|
| Ed-On-Web |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by Høgskolen i Vestfold |
| EDWIN |
Danish |
|
| Elias |
Spanish |
Self-developed LMS by University of Vigo |
| Esperienze |
Italian |
Self-developed LMS |
| Evolui |
Portuguese |
Self-developed LMS by Prodigio |
| FDL Learning
Environment |
Great British |
|
| FirstClass |
Canadian |
FirstClass is a Canadian system that seems to have a
strong position in Scandinavia. |
| Fle3 Future Learning
Environment |
Finish |
Open source system Developed by Learning Environments
for Progressive Inquiry Research Group.UIAH Media Lab, University
of Art and Design Helsinki. |
| Formare |
Portuguese |
Self-developed LMS by PT-Inovacão |
| GLN - Global Learning
Network |
American |
|
| Granada Learnwise |
Great British |
|
| Greenteam |
Italian |
Self-developed LMS by Sinform |
| Ilias |
German |
Self-developed LMS by Virtus. ILIAS is available as
an open source Learning Management system. Its development is coordinated
by the Faculty of Economics, Business Administration and Social Sciences
at the University of Cologne. |
| Imaker |
Norwegian |
|
| Interwise-ecp |
German |
|
| Intralearn |
American |
|
| Intranets |
American |
|
| IT Campus |
|
|
| It's Learning |
Norwegian |
|
| Kark |
Norwegian |
|
| Kurs.nlh.no |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by Norges Landbrukshøgskole |
| L'aula virtual |
Italian |
Self-developed LMS |
| LC Profiler |
Finish |
The system is available as Open Source software |
| Learning solution |
German |
|
| Learnlink evoeye |
American |
|
| Lernen-im-netz |
German |
Self-developed LMS by Akademie |
| LEKTOR |
Swedish |
|
| Lotus
Learning Space |
American |
IBM Lotus has updated its e-learning software product
family with new updated offerings, and we will be retiring the Lotus
LearningSpace family. |
| Luvit |
Swedish |
Luvit originated at the University of Lund in Sweden,
before it became a Swedish commercial company with reasonable success
in Scandinavia and some other countries. |
| MvForum |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by Dronning Mauds Minne |
| Nettutor |
|
|
| PedIT |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by Globalskolen |
| Ping Pong |
Swedish |
PING PONG is a Learning Management System (LMS), developed
and designed in Sweden. PING PONG offers integrated Learning Content
Management (LCMS) capabilities, and Knowledge, Skills, and Competence
Management (KMS & CMS) functionality. |
| Planetux |
German |
Self-developed LMS by Virtuelle Universität |
| Plato |
|
|
| Proto |
|
|
| Response |
|
|
| Saba |
American |
|
| SESAM |
Norwegian |
Self-developed LMS by NKI Distance Education |
| Simulnet |
|
|
| Skills Vantage |
|
|
| Solstra Hybrid |
|
|
| SSVN2000 |
Swedish |
Self-developed LMS by Statens skolor för vuxna |
| Team Wave |
|
|
| TopClass
(WBT Systems) |
Irish |
TopClass originated as a European Commission project
at University College Dublin, in Ireland, before becoming an Irish
campus company and then migrating to the United States. |
| Tutor2000 |
Czech |
|
| TWT Teaching Web Toolkit |
Portuguese |
Self-developed LMS by Universidade Católica Portuguesa |
| VC Prolog Tutor |
German |
Self-developed LMS by Osmabrueck |
| Verkkosalkku, Verkkoopisto |
Finnish |
|
| Virtual-U |
Canadian |
Virtual-U was first launched in 1993 with Canarie funding,
and has since that time, with Industry Canada financing through the
TeleLearning Network of Centres of Excellence, grown as a research
platform that has spawned an integrated suite of e-learning tools
and methods. |
| Visit |
Irish |
|
| VU |
German |
Self-developed LMS by LVU |
| Wave learn |
German |
Self-developed LMS by Darmstadt |
| WebCT |
Canadian |
In 1995, WebCT was developed by Murray Goldberg who
was a faculty member at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver,
Canada. In 1999, Universal Learning Technologies, an American company
in Pennsylvania, purchased WebCT, and changed its company name to
WebCT. |
| WebLearn Plus |
|
|
| West |
|
|
| |
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