I will keep this very simple because a good idea is simple.
There are known bugs with Blackboard(the dominant intranet, grading, messaging, etc. system for schools(mainly colleges) ) that have not been addressed.
There are many posts about them and they litter the net, just search for some of these terms and college "fixes". (the college btw cannot "fix" it, it is a BB problem).
The last ice storm has forced many colleges and universities to reschedule "days to take the finals".
This has had a cascade of BAD effect in that the Deans of the colleges have often had to tell instructors to tell the students (through blackboard) what the instructor wants done to alleviate the situation.
However, surprise, surprise, when they make the attempt it has to be on an individual student e-mail, not any kind of "class e-mail"
There are many known bugs but here are two CRUCIAL ones which have now created a perfect storm with probably thousands of instructors and many dozens of institutions.
a) The drop down menu within the grading portion of BB has a function to "e-mail selected users".
The drop down menu appears but when one moves the mouse, using a Windows system (depending on the version), and Internet Explorer, the menu disappears and the functions cannot be accessed. There are no "ctrl-functions" to do this.
Ok.....the teacher can go to MS outlook and manually obtain the students e-mails and do a mass e-mail from there.
Ain't gonna happen for an instructor at a very large institution who has a hundred and twenty students in a lecture. Which one of the dozens of "Jim Jones" is her or his student?
b) The copy and past function does not work in the message body within BB. A popup appears which says: "your browser does not support this function, use ctrl+c to copy, etc.
The ctrl + codes do not work.
So, even though the instructor might be able to e-mail people a message has to be typed individually for each.
c) As an illustration of how ludicrous the situation is, using a Vista system with the latest windows FF ......
the drop down selection menu works!
The copy and past functions do not.
Neither work with IE.
d) Imagine the woes of the people running a Mac which is the dominant desktop system for many academics.
Here is the HIDDEN opportunity.
a) Blackboard bought the "providers" for the latest and best two open source versions of this: Moodle and Sakai.
An article has been posted elsewhere about how they are going to "support them etc." Right, they have bought two others previously and buried them.
b) Of course the source code is still open anyone can develop it.
c) I was SURPRISED to hear just recently that the community college whereat I teach has the whole stack below BB and the grading system running LINUX!
d) the colleges are HARD PRESSED financially. Yes, some of the real biggies who are getting plenty of government money are "doing OK" but none of them are doing really well.
e) The "academics" like Apple products and NOT MS products. Now, yes, laboratories quite often have to run MS products to run equipment but....
the "academics" are probably READY for a change from BB.
VERY FEW academics like BB.
f) If Blue Systems communicated SOONEST with a "consortium" of junior colleges in an ACTIVE state, such as mine, and offered a tunkey system I think they would actively work with Blue Systems.
g) They will have the memory of what has happened fresh in their corporate structure.
h) what would be needed would be to integrate Kubuntu, Sakai or Moodle and Firefox and provide a complete, turnkey, package for the institution which would operate correctly from "within", that is instructor use at the institution, and also "remote" use by instructors using FF on a windows or Linux system, and whatever running animal Mac people use.
I offer that NO instructor would complain about having to use a FREE Firefox on their Windows system at home if they had a functioning Sakai or Moodle.
To the students, of course, this would be transparent since they would only interact with the "surface" of the system, through "observation"... with the exception of e-mail, messaging, chatrooms, drop box etc. But then that is the point of the system in the first place.
i) whether this could be done atop a Windows or any other stack I do not know.
j) the Junior Colleges is where the "action" is in terms of student enrollment because of massively lower costs.
k) but the lower costs come with a trade off, they have very, very, tight budgets.
l) But the tight budgets, the active DISlike of many/most academics of BB, and the recent events of the ice storm may just have created a....
perfect storm!
m) I humbly submit that now, not later, would be a perfect opportunity to make headway with "Linux" on both the "server side" and the "desktop side".
woodsmoke
There are known bugs with Blackboard(the dominant intranet, grading, messaging, etc. system for schools(mainly colleges) ) that have not been addressed.
There are many posts about them and they litter the net, just search for some of these terms and college "fixes". (the college btw cannot "fix" it, it is a BB problem).
The last ice storm has forced many colleges and universities to reschedule "days to take the finals".
This has had a cascade of BAD effect in that the Deans of the colleges have often had to tell instructors to tell the students (through blackboard) what the instructor wants done to alleviate the situation.
However, surprise, surprise, when they make the attempt it has to be on an individual student e-mail, not any kind of "class e-mail"
There are many known bugs but here are two CRUCIAL ones which have now created a perfect storm with probably thousands of instructors and many dozens of institutions.
a) The drop down menu within the grading portion of BB has a function to "e-mail selected users".
The drop down menu appears but when one moves the mouse, using a Windows system (depending on the version), and Internet Explorer, the menu disappears and the functions cannot be accessed. There are no "ctrl-functions" to do this.
Ok.....the teacher can go to MS outlook and manually obtain the students e-mails and do a mass e-mail from there.
Ain't gonna happen for an instructor at a very large institution who has a hundred and twenty students in a lecture. Which one of the dozens of "Jim Jones" is her or his student?
b) The copy and past function does not work in the message body within BB. A popup appears which says: "your browser does not support this function, use ctrl+c to copy, etc.
The ctrl + codes do not work.
So, even though the instructor might be able to e-mail people a message has to be typed individually for each.
c) As an illustration of how ludicrous the situation is, using a Vista system with the latest windows FF ......
the drop down selection menu works!
The copy and past functions do not.
Neither work with IE.
d) Imagine the woes of the people running a Mac which is the dominant desktop system for many academics.
Here is the HIDDEN opportunity.
a) Blackboard bought the "providers" for the latest and best two open source versions of this: Moodle and Sakai.
An article has been posted elsewhere about how they are going to "support them etc." Right, they have bought two others previously and buried them.
b) Of course the source code is still open anyone can develop it.
c) I was SURPRISED to hear just recently that the community college whereat I teach has the whole stack below BB and the grading system running LINUX!
d) the colleges are HARD PRESSED financially. Yes, some of the real biggies who are getting plenty of government money are "doing OK" but none of them are doing really well.
e) The "academics" like Apple products and NOT MS products. Now, yes, laboratories quite often have to run MS products to run equipment but....
the "academics" are probably READY for a change from BB.
VERY FEW academics like BB.
f) If Blue Systems communicated SOONEST with a "consortium" of junior colleges in an ACTIVE state, such as mine, and offered a tunkey system I think they would actively work with Blue Systems.
g) They will have the memory of what has happened fresh in their corporate structure.
h) what would be needed would be to integrate Kubuntu, Sakai or Moodle and Firefox and provide a complete, turnkey, package for the institution which would operate correctly from "within", that is instructor use at the institution, and also "remote" use by instructors using FF on a windows or Linux system, and whatever running animal Mac people use.
I offer that NO instructor would complain about having to use a FREE Firefox on their Windows system at home if they had a functioning Sakai or Moodle.
To the students, of course, this would be transparent since they would only interact with the "surface" of the system, through "observation"... with the exception of e-mail, messaging, chatrooms, drop box etc. But then that is the point of the system in the first place.
i) whether this could be done atop a Windows or any other stack I do not know.
j) the Junior Colleges is where the "action" is in terms of student enrollment because of massively lower costs.
k) but the lower costs come with a trade off, they have very, very, tight budgets.
l) But the tight budgets, the active DISlike of many/most academics of BB, and the recent events of the ice storm may just have created a....
perfect storm!
m) I humbly submit that now, not later, would be a perfect opportunity to make headway with "Linux" on both the "server side" and the "desktop side".
woodsmoke
Comment