OpenBRR - Moodle rating

OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Karin van den Berg -
Number of replies: 7
An article in the New York Times today announced an Open Source rating system in progress. It's presented at http://www.openbrr.org

Incidentally this type of model is pretty much exactly what I've done in my own Master Thesis which will be published in just three weeks (most likely on August 24), so I feel kind of beaten to the punch, but ok.

The good news for Moodle: They gave some example ratings including Moodle and Sakai, and Moodle scores well (Sakai only moderate):

Moodle's BRR (Business Readiness Rating) is 4.19 out of 5 with a functionality rating of 5 out of 5 (Functionality is included in the BRR but for some reason also mentioned seperately)

Sakai scores 3.23 (beware, they obviously used Moodle's sheet and redid the names except for one sheet, it still says Moodle), with a functionality rating of 3

My thesis also gives Moodle high honors, more on that in three weeks wink

Edit: this should be in comparisons and advocacy. Can threads be moved to other forums? If not, I'll repost it.
Average of ratings: -
In reply to Karin van den Berg

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Art Lader -

Good find, Karin! smile

Looks like Moodle has the highest rating of all (Mambo, Web GUI, etc.). Or am I mistaken about that?

-- Art

In reply to Art Lader

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Karin van den Berg -
Honestly I only looked at the Moodle and Sakai sheets, but you're right. I do feel looking at it with my Thesis that Moodle is a great example of a good Open Source project. Community is the driving force behin an Open Source project, feeds into all activity (releases, documentation, security, ....) and fuelling that community into a friendly active place like it's been done here is the way to make your project a success. They key ingredient: enthousiasm! I've never seen that so well expressed anywhere else.

Anyway, don't want to give my whole thesis away, so I'll get back to you on that wink
In reply to Karin van den Berg

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Richard Wyles -

How is the category ranking determined in OpenBRR. Our selection of Moodle for the NZOSVLE project had very different weighting. Architecture, modularity, potential for scalability, performance, quality of code - these things were paramount yet have a zero rating on OpenBRR (or is it simply a sample?).

Functionality and documentation were lesser crietria - they're more easily fixed!

In reply to Richard Wyles

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Karin van den Berg -
I think they're meant as samples. Now that I take a closer look at the whole thing it does seem strange in some respects. 0 for modularity?

The problem with this sample as well as a lot of other comparison reports I think is that though the scores are given to quite some detail, how the scores where determined is hardly or not explained. This makes it difficult to reproduce or reuse the method. The value of examples is that it makes you understand the method. That's why, in my thesis, I've explained how I came to a certain score, what I have observed, etc.
In reply to Karin van den Berg

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Martín Langhoff -
Good find Karin!


I've recently given an impromptu talk on this matter, when one of the Debconf5 speakers failed to show up: http://dc5video.debian.net/2005-07-15/

It covers the criteria we used to evaluate LMSs last year, in a document you can find here:

"LMS Technical Evaluation"
http://eduforge.org/docman/?group_id=7

I have applied similar techniques before. Another good published example is the Midgard CMS for an e-govt portal, though it is quite dated. We used similar criteria in the evaluation process:
http://www.midgard-project.org/midgard/1.6/casestudies/govtnz.html


(Edit: removed the direct video link as it triggered the multimedia filter and wanted to show the 50MB video inline.)
In reply to Martín Langhoff

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Karin van den Berg -
Thanks for those links Martin. I had seen the NZ project(s) before (got a bit confused at one point because I thought the NZ VLE project and the Open Source Courseware Intiative NZ were 2 seperate projects until I saw the technical evaluation on both pages, perhaps you can clarify?)

I used the NZ project as one of the examples that justify my results for Moodle.
In reply to Karin van den Berg

Re: OpenBRR - Moodle rating

eftir Richard Wyles -

Hi Karin,

They're sort of sister projects. NZOSVLE is very much focused on code development and system integration work. Catalyst did the technical evaluation work and is a Moodle partner - the evaluation work was commissioned as part of the NZOSVLE project. OSCINZ is more focused on contextualising the VLE for cultural requirements in New Zealand, specifically Maori and Pacific Island communities. They've been working on graphical intefaces and Maori, Tongan and Samoan language packs.

NZOSVLE now goes into Phase II with funding through to July 2006. OSCINZ has finished its work but now the same team is focused on FOSS Learning Object Repository infrastructure. See OSLOR.

Also, we've upgraded Eduforge, which is an output of the NZOSVLE project. Anyone is welcome to use and contribute to this resource.

regards

Richard Wyles

Project Leader

NZOSVLE