Digital Directions - Summer 2013 - (Page 25)
7
STEPS TO
C
PICKING
YOUR LMS
hoosing a learning management system is one of the most costly
and time-consuming decisions schools or districts must make
as they expand their technological infrastructures. An LMS is a
robust piece of software that provides an online portal for classrooms, serving
administrative functions for educators and allowing students to view assignments,
grades, and learning materials. Some can be used to deliver entire courses. Once an
LMS is in place, it can be difficult and expensive to switch to a different one. That’s why
making sure it’s a good fit initially is crucial.
By_Katie Ash
Ed-tech experts say many schools and districts don’t have a good understanding,
however, of how to choose and evaluate the different systems available. Several experts
offer these suggestions for how to do it right:
1.
iStockphoto/Anthos Boncompagni
Start by figuring out what you want
from your learning management
system and how it fits into the overall
teaching and learning structure of your
school or district.
“You really need to be having a discussion
about your overall program goals,” says John
Watson, the founder of the Durango, Colo.based Evergreen Education Group, which
conducts research on the use of technology in
schools. “The LMS decision has to be tied to
your content choices and to the devices that
students are going to be accessing the
materials with.”
Many LMS companies boast a dizzying
array of features, says Watson, so it’s
important to enter the discussion with an idea
of what students, teachers, and administrators
need from the system. He groups options into
three categories—don’t need, nice-to-have,
and must-have—to narrow the choices and
avoid paying for features that aren’t needed or
won’t be used.
Kristy Murray, the director of the Advanced
Distributed Learning Initiative, agrees. The
initiative, which is run by the U.S. Department
of Defense, is charged with prototyping and
testing the latest learning technologies.
“Sometimes you may get more bells and
whistles with more money, but you may not
need more bells and whistles,” Murray says.
“The most important thing you can do is sit
down with your team and identify the
requirements for your particular case.” In some
instances, a simpler, lightweight LMS may be
more functional and easier to use than a
complex, sophisticated system, she says.
Peter Berking, the instructional systems
designer for the Advanced Distributed Learning
Initiative, and co-author of the paper “Choosing
a Learning Management System,” says it’s
important to evaluate whether your school or
district even needs an LMS.
“You may have your heart set on it, but a
Web portal or content repository … could do
just fine,” he says. Berking also suggests
looking into partnering with other schools or
districts to piggyback on an existing LMS,
which could provide cost savings.
In fact, definitions of what an LMS is and
should be able to do vary widely from district to
district, says Themistocles Sparangis, the chief
technology officer for the 670,000-student Los
Angeles school district, which is preparing a
request for proposals, or RFP, for a new system.
(The district currently uses the open source
LMS Moodle.)
“You have to define [what an LMS is]
before you can select it,” he says. “Your
vendors are going to try to define [an LMS]
within their product line, but I think K-12 is
still struggling to figure out what it is.”
For Los Angeles, which is moving to
implement a new LMS in part because of its
new mobile learning initiative, as well as the
shift to common-core standards, the LMS is
“the glue” that holds together a variety of
functions, Sparangis says. The system will have
to integrate human-resources systems, the
student-information system, the curriculum,
classroom-level data, and dashboards, as well
as student and parent portals, he says.
“We’re basically redefining our learning
environment, and the LMS is going to be a
Spring/Summer 2013_ DigitalDirections >>
25
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Digital Directions - Summer 2013
Digital Directions - Summer 2013
Contents
Editor’s Note
DD Site Visit
Bits & Bytes
Test-Driving the Common Core
Flipped PD: Building Blocks to Success
Virtual Learning in the Early Years
Kindergarten the Virtual Way
7 Steps to Picking Your LMS
Cracking the Code
Powering the Crowd
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