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15 January, 2016 - 09:27
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The comments touched on each of Rob's postulates at varying depth. It is obvious that standards development is important and complex. I believe that for most folks who use educational technologies there is a vague understanding that standards are important and open standards are better than ones that are closed. Perhaps more importantly, open standards development is not really understood by a vast majority of technology consumers and users at universities.

    IMS has assumed a challenging task. I have heard quite positive comments about its role and potential and a number of detractors about execution and operation. While this posting and the ensuing dialog touched on a number of very interesting issues, connecting open standards, OSS, and education (which is exactly what we wanted); it did not really get to the options that a standards development organization has, its underpinning values and goals, and how it executes/operationalizes them. A future follow-up discussion might provide an opportunity to make the whole standards development process more “real” to teachers and administrators who make and influence technology decisions, but will probably not actually participate in standards development. An open dialog may also be a reflective exercise for other involved in the process.

    Some comment highlights included:

  • Richard Wyles pointed out the use of OSS in New Zealand, not only at the institutional level, but at the pan-institutional level in a manner that is coherent with Ministry of Education objectives.
  • Along the lines of strategic use of OSS, Gavin Baker indicated the importance of being able to articulate FOSS use as directly relevant to the university's mission. He asks who has done this well?
  • Gavin provides an interesting observation about Rob's second postulate, pointing out that although it can be hard to introduce a “homegrown” standard, it is possible, even if you are not the size of Google, if it does not compete with another existing standard and if it is a good standard.
  • The role and model of IMS in open standards development.
  • There was some discussion prompted by Pat Masson about OSS and Open standards in education, the impulse to customize, and the need to innovate rather than passively consume and adopt technologies. It was noted that educational technologies are applied in a very diverse and complex environment making it challenging to identify standard functionality to help guide standards development.

Thanks again to Rob, for his insightful post and excellent responses to all questions, and Richard, Gavin, Martin (RedSevenOne), and Pat, for making this a great exchange, and other folks who have been reading along. Please join in again on October 3rd when David Wiley posts on “Open Content as Infrastructure”. The schedule for the series can be found on WikiEducator 1.