IMS Learning Design: Difference between revisions

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== References ==
== References ==
* Anders Berggren, Daniel Burgos, Josep M. Fontana, Don Hinkelman, Vu Hung, Anthony Hursh and Ger Tielemans (2005). Practical and Pedagogical Issues for Teacher Adoption of IMS Learning Design Standards in Moodle LMS. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/02. ISSN 1365-893X [jime.open.ac.uk/2005/02 HTML].


* Caeiro-Rodríguez, Manuel; Martín Llamas-Nistal and Luis Anido-Rifón (2005). Towards a Benchmark for the Evaluation of LD Expressiveness and Suitability. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/04. ISSN:1365-893X [http://jime.open.ac.uk/2005/04 jime.open.ac.uk/2005/04].
* Caeiro-Rodríguez, Manuel; Martín Llamas-Nistal and Luis Anido-Rifón (2005). Towards a Benchmark for the Evaluation of LD Expressiveness and Suitability. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/04. ISSN:1365-893X [http://jime.open.ac.uk/2005/04 jime.open.ac.uk/2005/04].

Revision as of 17:40, 11 April 2007

Draft

Definition

  • IMS Learning Design as opposed to IMS Simple Sequencing/SCORM focuses on the organization of learning activities.
  • LD has evolved from Educational Markup Language (EML).

The theatre metaphor

In IMS LD terminology a pedagogical scenario is called a play. Major components of this design are:

  • roles that are performed by learners, teachers, tutors etc.
  • activities
  • environments including services (e.g. a forum) and learning resources
  • The scenario itself is called method and contains play, act and role-parts.


The play is presented in a series of acts, in which roles are played by those taking part, for example learner, tutor, mentor, and so on.

  • People playing the roles undertake a series of activities within an act. For a learner these might include discussing with classmates the relative merit of a piece of source material. A tutor’s activity may be to comment on their conclusions.
  • Each role is presented with its own learning objects and services (e.g. communication tools) within an activity.
  • An act is completed after all the activities of a specified role, or roles, are finished. Alternatively, a time limit may be set, after which an act completes.
  • When one act completes, the next act is started. The play finishes when all the acts are completed; the learning design finishes when all the plays are completed.
(Jeffery and Currir, 2003)

The play metaphor has probably been chosen because as in a play LD scenarios can be played differently, with different actors and different props.

Conceptual Structure of the Learning Design

A level architecture

According to the CETIS Briefing on Learning Design:

  • Level A contains the core of IMS Learning Design: people, activities and resources, and their coordination through the method, play, act and role-parts elements. This simply provides for a series of time ordered learning activities to be performed by learners and teachers, using learning objects and/or services.
  • Level B adds greater control and complexity through the use of properties and conditions.
Properties may be internal (local) or external (global). They are used to store information about a person, such as test results or learner preferences; a role, such as whether the role is for a full-time or part-time learner; or a learning design itself. Internal properties persist only during a single run of a learning design, while external properties retain their values beyond the end of a run, and can be accessed from different runs and/or different learning designs.
  • Level C offers the opportunity for more sophisticated learning designs through notifications (messaging), which allow for notification of new activities to be triggered automatically in response to events in the learning process. It enables the automation of learning flow activities, which are triggered by the completion of tasks, rather than the learning flows being pre-planned.
For instance, a teacher may be notified by email that an assignment has been submitted and needs marking; once the score has been posted, the learner may be notified to undertake a new activity according to the result.

An overall view

An official UML Diagram summarizes the LD modelling language:

UML diagram of IMS Learning Design

An easier to understand picture has been made by Gilbert Paquette and/or Michel Léonard as an example ontology for their MOTPlus authoring tool:

IMS Learning Design as MOTPlus concept map, by Gilbert Paquette and Michel Léonard

Major learning design elements

The following table (copied from the Reload WebSite (18:43, 11 December 2006 (MET)) summarizes the hierarchy of the learning design elements.

learning-design
The base level container
   title
A title for the learning design
   learning-objectives
What this unit of learning

achieves

   prerequisites
Whether there are dependencies?
   components
The reusable elements of the

learning design - this is the key level of granularity

      roles
The Role List
         learner*
Learner-role
         staff*
Tutor-role
      activities
The Activity Container: Activities (can) have objectives, prerequisites and metadata.  They have an activity description (typically a web page containing instructions for how to perform the activity). If the activity is offline, then no further content is needed.  if online, there would also normally be reference to an environment.
         learning-activity*
e.g. view this learning object
           environment-ref*
A reference to the environment

for this activity

           activity-description
A narrative description of the activity
         support-activity*
e.g. pose question to class
           environment-ref*
A reference to the environment for this activity
           activity-description
A narrative description of the

activity - usually a web page,  This is kept separate from the resources in the environment, and so the runtime system can treat it differently - perhaps keeping it always available as a tab.

         activity-structures*
A grouping of activities (with

attributes to determine whether individual activities are presented as selection or in sequence). At this point there is no facility for coordination of different

users doing different things - that has to be done one level up.
           environment-ref*
A reference to the environment for this activity-structure
      environments
The Environment Container: which contains learning objects and/or services to be used in that activity
         environment*
Container for an individual

environment (an environment is the collection of resources, services etc necessary for an activity)

           title
A short-name for the environment
           learning objects*
Learning content utilised

within this environment

           services*
 A service needed for this

environment to be utilised

           environment-ref*
ref to another environment in

the package

           metadata
metadata about the environment
method
The key container - cf simple

sequencing.

     play*
Usually only one, but more than

one would run in parallel.

        act*
Acts run in sequence, with start

triggered by the end of the preceding act.  Transitions between acts form synchronisation points for roles.  any coordination of events has to be done at this level - it can't be done at the activity level.

           role-parts*
Run in parallel - so different

roles do different things at the same time.  Usually used for learners and teachers, but can be sophisticated - e.g. to support group-setting and role-play

              role-ref
ref. to a specific role for this

role-part.

             activity-ref
ref to activity(-structure) for

this role-part.

metadata
Descriptive Metadata for the LD

Links

Examples

Introductions and presentations

Software

Software indexes

Editors

Reload Editors
  • Reload LD editor and player. The Learning Design Editor (based on the IMS Learning Design specifications) allows the creation of re-usable "Pedagogical Templates" allowing the user to define a set of Learning Objectives, Activities and Learning Environments. These templates can be re-purposed with the user's own content to create on-line Learning Design compliant resources.
    • Free, Java 1.5/Eclipse based, cross-platform (downloads are fairly large between 20 and 50 MB for the Java-less versions).
    • Supports Levels A,B,C
  • The "standard" Reload 2.5.2 editor (und up) now also supports Learning Design. It also supports IEEE LOM, IMS MD 1.2.4, IMS CP 1.1.4 and SCORM 2004 (thus simple sequencing) and IMS LD level A. Documentation for the LD part of the editor was not found when tested and installed on 12:54, 4 December 2006 (MET).
MOT
  • MOT+ The editor from the MISA method (does LD level A). Note: This editor is free for non-commercial use (but difficult to find).

On-line Scenario Editors

  • DialogPlus Toolkit. This guidance toolkit is being developed, as part of the JISC/NSF funded DialogPlus project, to guide and support

teachers as they create, modify, and share learning activities and resources. It can export to IMS Learning Design (which level ?).

Servers

  • LAMS (not LD, but close).
  • Gridcole (article that describes the system)

Links

References

  • Anders Berggren, Daniel Burgos, Josep M. Fontana, Don Hinkelman, Vu Hung, Anthony Hursh and Ger Tielemans (2005). Practical and Pedagogical Issues for Teacher Adoption of IMS Learning Design Standards in Moodle LMS. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/02. ISSN 1365-893X [jime.open.ac.uk/2005/02 HTML].
  • Caeiro-Rodríguez, Manuel; Martín Llamas-Nistal and Luis Anido-Rifón (2005). Towards a Benchmark for the Evaluation of LD Expressiveness and Suitability. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/04. ISSN:1365-893X jime.open.ac.uk/2005/04.
  • de la Teja, Ileana; Karin Lundgren-Cayrol and Gilbert Paquette (2005). Transposing MISA Learning Scenarios into IMS Units of Learning. Journal of Interactive Media in Education (Advances in Learning Design. Special Issue, eds. Colin Tattersall, Rob Koper), 2005/13. ISSN:1365-893X jime.open.ac.uk/2005/13.
  • Dessus, Philippe et Schneider, Daniel Scénarisation de l'enseignement et contraintes de la situation, In J.-P. Pernin & H. Godinet (2006). (Eds.), Colloque Scénariser l'enseignement et l'apprentissage : une nouvelle compétence pour le praticien ? (pp. 13-18). Lyon : INRP. PDF
  • Karen Fill, Samuel Leung, David DiBiase and Andy Nelson (2006). Repurposing a learning activity on academic integrity: the experience of three universities. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2006/01. ISSN:1365-893X jime.open.ac.uk/2006/01.
  • Conole, Gráinne and Karen Fill (2005). A learning design toolkit to create pedagogically effective learning activities. Journal of Interactive Media in Education (Advances in Learning Design. Special Issue, eds. Colin Tattersall, Rob Koper), 2005/08. ISSN:1365-893X Abstract (PDF/HTML open access)
  • Greller, Wolfgang (2005). Managing IMS Learning Design. Journal of Interactive Media in Education (Advances in Learning Design. Special Issue, eds. Colin Tattersall, Rob Koper), 2005/12. ISSN:1365-893X jime.open.ac.uk/2005/12.
  • Jeffery, Ann and Sarah Carrir (2003). What Is IMS Learning Design ?, CETIS Brief, CETIS Briefing on Learning Design PDF.
  • Miao, Y., Hoeksema, K.,Hoppe, H.U., Harrer, A.(2005). CSCL Scripts: Modelling Features and Potential Use. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL2005), Taiwan, June 2005. PDF
  • Milligan, Colin D. ; Phillip Beauvoir and Paul Sharples (2005). The Reload Learning Design Tools. Journal of Interactive Media in Education (Advances in Learning Design. Special Issue, eds. Colin Tattersall, Rob Koper), 2005/07. ISSN:1365-893X. jime.open.ac.uk/2005/07.
  • Tattersall, Colin & Rob Koper (2005). Advances in Learning Design, Jurnal of Interactive Media in Education, 2005/01. ISSN:1365-893X jime.open.ac.uk/2005/01 (HTML).