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On Sustainability, Experimentation, and Knowing When To Break the Mold

Comments

Well said

Submitted on January 11th, 2009 by Richard Kassissieh

Well said, Bill. A few observations to build on your thoughts. I have spent a lot of time with phpBB, Moodle, and Drupal. Of the three, Drupal was the hardest to learn but also the most powerful. After two years of part-time tinkering, I finally feel ready and able to make Drupal sing (i.e., develop a design and then build a site that meets our needs and leverages Drupal's strengths).

I have no doubt that a district could roll out Drupal to 250 sites. I imagine that the district would want to ride its Joomla installation until it was really considered end-of-life before switching to Drupal. For us, our previous web site infrastructure lasted six years, and we are just one school.

I have personally benefited from participating in open-source community discussion forums. Interacting with education community web site folks from higher ed has been especially enlightening. We secondary types have a lot to learn from their implementations, notwithstanding the greater resources they typically are able to access. Drupal in Education is a fine place to start.

Drupal has I feel the best handle on where the web is current headed. One of the project's core assumptions is that content should flow freely through a site, governed by rules that the webmaster or site developer puts into place. This is such a departure from the usual, highly compartmentalized web site structure, but it's so clearly on target. Having such a tool ready to go helps convince stakeholders at our school to adopt a more open content model for our next web site.

Richard

(Bill, that's quite a captcha one has to complete. 291/2@293/4c confer-?)

A really thoughtful post

Submitted on January 11th, 2009 by Bob Irving

I'll have to read it again, but I think you're right on about several things in this wide-ranging post.

First, it's about curriculum design, teaching and learning strategies, and not about the Next Great Thing. Ironically, I think Drupal can support these new and effective types of learning really well, leading to a possible criticism of it as another Next Great Thing!

Perhaps one reason that the edtech community doesn't understand Drupal that well is that it is, as Richard said, the hardest to wrap your head around. Moodle, though it has its roots in a constructivist philosophy, is still very teacher-centered, and most teachers understand that pretty well. Drupal leans toward the flattened hierarchy of the open source community, and can do the same in a classroom. But it's still a huge paradigm shift for most educators.

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