• Home
  • About
  • Presentations
  • Projects
  • C.V.
Browse: Home / Course Management Systems / Where are open source course management systems being used?

Where are open source course management systems being used?

By sleslie on March 4, 2004

One of the big “Fear Uncertainty and Doubt” questions I often get asked as someone who spends a fair bit of time looking at the course management system landscape is “But are open source systems really ready for use as enterprise systems?” (Up until recently one might have done well to ask the same questions of the commercial systems that alleged to be ‘enteprise ready’!)

I don’t know what better way to respond than to simply point to where these systems are being used, so as some initial examples:

  • sites running Moodle

  • sites running Atutor (scroll down the page to see the list)
  • case studies on 16 institutions representing over 60k users running .LRN

There are lots of fears held by Directors of IT, EdTech and others (some justified, others extremely unfounded) that need to be addressed before it becomes easy to adopt open source for ‘enterprise’ needs. This should be an easy one, though – any open source project that seriously wants to be adopted and that doesn’t actively solicit information on who is using it and share this back with potential users is clearly overworked or missing something. Better yet, segment your responses (k-12/colleges/universities/corporate training” might be a start for the education sector) so that people can point to a peer group and say ‘look who else has adopted this software!’ You’d be amazed how effective an argument this can be, especially as we move along the famous curve of innovation adopters (e.g. early and late majorities are like that for a reason.) – SWL

Posted in Course Management Systems | Tagged adoption, CMS, Moodle, open_source

No responses to “Where are open source course management systems being used?”

  1. G Rich
    G Rich
    March 4, 2004 at 7:32 pm | Permalink

    Just to add to your list…

    Heard of Interact? Excellent CMS system that uses MySQL and PHP. I haven’t been using it for long, but Interact has a “component” approach that’s a great fit with admins and users.

    http://cce-interact.sourceforge.net/

  2. victor
    victor
    September 21, 2004 at 1:58 am | Permalink

    I dont want to start another holly world but me for one I simply cannot see the benefit of open source enterprise applications… From what I understood the very meaning of open source is to strengthen our professional community. Building our own OS, our own development tools or development frameworks is a great way to ensure progress, but building an open source ERP or course management system I doubt is of any use. Not to mention damage for business. Me for one I would be very happy if one of my developers would work in the Linux kernel or like, but I would fire and sue him in a second if I would hear he just started an open source implementation of the project he’s working on during day time…

  3. Greg
    Greg
    October 1, 2004 at 9:00 pm | Permalink

    Oh. I see.

    Let me get this straight – You’re all for OSS when you get GPLed software for free(beer), but it’s a public menace otherwise?

    Yeesh.

  4. Bruce Landon's Weblog for Students
    Bruce Landon's Weblog for Students
    March 5, 2004 at 7:31 am | Permalink

    Open Source

    Where are open source course management systems being used? .

  5. jarche.com
    jarche.com
    March 5, 2004 at 12:28 pm | Permalink

    Who is Using Open Source?

    Scott Leslie posts on who who is using open source course management systems and makes the suggestion that the open source community advertise itself, and become more acc

« Previous Next »

Technologies for Learning, Thinking and Collaborating

Search

Tags

authoring BCcampus blogs CMS conference constrained-search copyright Creative-Commons dickheads Edutools elearning2.0 evaluation firefox google humour IMS interoperability learning-design Learning Objects library lms loosely-coupled loosely-coupled-teaching LOR mashup mashups Moodle music network-learning northern-voice OER OLNet open-education open-textbooks open_source PLE presentations reusability RSS SCORM sharing social_learning standards twitter wordpress

Recent Comments

  • adam hyde on Open Textbook Authoring Tools Part 2 – WordPress and Pressbooks
  • Keith Webster on Open Textbook Authoring Tools Part 2 – WordPress and Pressbooks
  • admin on Open Textbook Authoring Tools Part 2 – WordPress and Pressbooks
  • Notes from the web: OER platforms and news « kavubob's miscellanea on Open Textbook Authoring Tools Part 1 – Mediawiki
  • Notes from the web: OER platforms and news « kavubob's miscellanea on The Moving Target of Open “Textbooks”

Archives



My Favourite Reads

  • Abject Learning
  • Bavatuesdays
  • Clint Lalonde
  • CogDogBlog
  • D'Arcy Norman
  • David Kernohan
  • eLiterate
  • Flexknowlogy
  • FreeLearning
  • Gardner Writes
  • iterating towards openness
  • Joss Winn
  • Leigh Blackall
  • Mike Caulfield
  • Nancy White
  • Network Effects
  • OLDaily
  • OUseful
  • Ruminate
  • The EdTechie

SaveOurNet





Creative Commons License
Edtechpost by Scott Leslie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada License.
Cite

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org