Home > Louisiana State Moves to Moodle

News

Louisiana State Moves to Moodle

11/2/2007

Louisiana State University is replacing two learning management systems on its campus with Moodle, an open-source LMS/CMS popular in higher education and elsewhere. According to information released by LSU's Office of the CIO, the move comes on the heels of a two-year system review process headed by the university's Flagship Information Technology Strategy (FITS) Task Force for Teaching and Learning that gathered input from the entire campus community.

Moodle is one of the most popular learning management systems out there. The open-source LMS, as of this writing, had nearly 15 million users participating in nearly 1.5 million courses at more than 35,000 registered sites, according to Moodle's published statistics. (That, incidentally, is about 1,000 more registered sites than the last time we wrote about Moodle, less than two weeks ago.)

LSU had previously been using both Blackboard and a home-grown system called Semester Book. Half the faculty on campus have been using learning management systems with their courses, and students were forced to use both Blackboard and Semester Book.

"Having a two LMS environment was burdensome from both a user and support perspective," said Joseph Hutchinson, executive director of the Centers for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (CELT) at LSU, in a statement released this week.

The university's FITS and CELT are aiming for a spring 2008 test run and course migration and expect to have Moodle "fully deployed" by fall 2008.

Read More:



About the author: Dave Nagel is the executive editor for 1105 Media's educational technology online publications and electronic newsletters. He can be reached at dnagel@1105media.com.

Have any additional questions? Want to share your story? Want to pass along a news tip? Contact Dave Nagel, executive editor, at dnagel@1105media.com.

Cite this Site

David Nagel, "Louisiana State Moves to Moodle," Campus Technology, 11/2/2007, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=52667

copy text (above) for proper citation



Recommended Reading
  • Business Intelligence Tool Means Healthy Data at UVA

    University IT groups will recognize the challenge of combining disparate data from more than one department in order to create meaningful reports for various users. At the University of Virginia Department of Medicine, which is overseen by UVA's School of Medicine, data was coming from two very different accounting systems, which meant problems for faculty members whenever they needed to run reports.

  • Exec Describes Microsoft's 'Social Networking' Vision

    A Microsoft executive involved with the company's Windows Live efforts outlined some of the company's ideas about cloud-based computing and social networking technologies Tuesday. The talk was presented by Brian Hall, general manager of the Windows Live Business Group, at the 2008 Merrill Lynch Technology Conference May 6.

  • Graduate School, USDA Standardizes on Adobe Acrobat Connect Pro for E-learning

    The Graduate School, USDA has standardized on Acrobat Connect Pro, a Web conferencing and e-learning platform from Adobe Systems. The school is a self-sustaining government entity created 87 years ago by the United States Department of Agriculture to provide adult continuing education.

  • Texas A&M System Signs Distribution Deal for Virtual Clinical Learning Lab

    Texas A&M University has signed a license agreement with BreakAway Ltd., a developer of game-based technology, for the worldwide rights to Pulse!! The Virtual Clinical Learning Lab. Pulse is a federally funded project in development at the Corpus Christi campus that allows medical professionals to practice decision-making protocol and experiential skills on PCs in a virtual hospital setting. The agreement grants BreakAway the rights to develop, market and distribute Pulse.

  • Tegrity Records 325,000 Hours of Lectures

    Ed tech developer Tegrity reported this week that usage of its Campus 2.0 classroom capture system hit record levels last year, including, among other things, capturing 325,000 hours of faculty lectures on Tegrity servers in a 12-month period.

  • JavaOne Keynote: Neil Young Likes Java

    Rock legend Neil Young joined Sun Microsystems' Executive Vice President of Software Rich Green on stage during the opening keynote of the 13th annual JavaOne conference, underway this week in San Francisco.