While it is possible that the EdTech department could spend $100k per month ($1.2 m), it would be prudent for them to explain where this budget is targeted to. If you include the cost of equipment, technical staff, space, internet connections, training, maintenance and the software then I can see it (depending on the size of the program). However, are many of those areas in cross-use? Does the technical staff only work with the distance learning program or do they have other duties. Is the network considered in these figures, that can be an enourmous sum. I think the article is related to the direct costs of BB or WBCT.
I'm a 51 year old grad student, with 25 years experience in programming and training, so I'm looking at this thesis project from many angles.
1) I'm not going to get caught up in acronyms. Over the years I've seen so many made up terms that they have little meaning now. As pointed out in another post, so many products cross boundaries, just exactly what is what doesn't really count. I helped to write a book 20 years ago discussing acronyms in training, most of those would never be used now, even though they are still relevant. I call Moodle and NEW (and other things) simply virtual learning environments.
2) When I was talking about migrating, I meant from old WebCT to newer WebCT (I forgot the version numbers) and from WebCT to Blackboard. In 2001, USF did the WebCT version conversion, it was a mess. Due to the way that WebCT indexes pages the conversion essentially came down to recapturing every page and then importing the pages individually. In one course alone, we had over 270 content pages, many with multiple links to other areas and pages. In 2003 the decision was made to go from WebCT to BB, this move still has not been completed for all courses. Let's be honest, those two systems don't want to make it easy for you to leave them, and why should they?
3) Blackboard problems...as a programmer, a student and as a course designer I have always looked at BB as an interesting but not well designed product. At several universities that I have worked with, this system seems to constantly be running slow or crashing. At first I thought this might be related to a specific institution, but then I saw it happening at several others, in the exact same way. There have been numerous articles about this. BB and WebCT both lack in many reporting areas. Postings with attachments are always failing. In the fall of 2001 at USF, our WebCT system crashed and we could not get it running properly for 3 weeks. Their tech support was less than worthless, regardless of how much they were paid.
4) Instructional staff, by and large, don't want to be programmers. They get basic instruction in how to "create" a web based course and don't want to learn how to do it again. Ofcourse they would be satisfied with what they have, they don't know things can be better.
5) There is a bigger problem here, beyond just the software used. Instructors aren't taught HOW to teach online, it is different. Asynchronous communications don't require the participants to do anything with any immediacy. Failure in getting a point across can take weeks and can be completely misunderstood during the writing time. A joke turns into a slur. This is why I'm doing a blended class, with both synchronous, online voice communications as well as asynch discussion areas. I've known instructional staff that failed to respond to students for over 2 months or even show up for the class. This would never be allowed in a traditional classroom setting. Students also need to learn HOW to take a distance learning course. Since there is no set class time (in most cases), then the course gets put on the back burner. This is one reason why only about 30% of any given student population accept distance learning classes, it requires a massive amount of self-discipline.
Let's be real, if we look at the basic structure of most distance learning courses, regardless of the design platform, there is not that much difference between them and a paper correspondence course. In 1728 Caleb Phillips produced the first known correspondence course. The basic design has not changed. An assignment is posted--time passes--the student receives the assignment and mails back the response or question--time passes--the instructor may or may not respond--more time passes. No immediacy of communications. That is what was done in 1728, that's whats done now. That is a major reason why most students hate taking Distance Learning classes. Ask a question in a traditional classroom, you can get an answer in seconds. Ask the same question in a virtual classroom, it could be weeks before you get an answer and the answer may not be related to the question, because the text based question was misinterpreted.
Dave...
Dave