Drupal

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Definition

Drupal is a popular portalware or the C3MS or CMS variety.

Purpose and features

According to the [About Drupal] page (retrieved 18:02, 11 May 2007 (MEST)) {{quotation | Drupal is a free software package that allows an individual or a community of users to easily publish, manage and organize a wide variety of content on a website. Tens of thousands of people and organizations have used Drupal to power scores of different web sites, including Community web portals, Discussion sites, Corporate web sites, Intranet applications, Personal web sites or blogs, Aficionado sites, E-commerce applications, Resource directories, Social Networking sites.

Features

The built-in functionality, combined with dozens of freely available add-on modules, will enable features such as:

... and much more.

Drupal is open-source software distributed under the GPL ("General Public License") and is maintained and developed by a community of thousands of users and developers.

Software architecture

  • Drupal runs on any typical LAMP, WAMP or MAMP configuration
  • Content in Drupal is created in individual "nodes". For nodes of type "story", users can add comments to the node (comments themselves are not considered nodes). Depending on site settings, adding new nodes and/or posting comments might or might not be allowed. Also, nodes or comments might require approval from the moderators before the node or comment is displayed. (Drupal terminology, retrieved 18:02, 11 May 2007 (MEST))

Drupal's basic set of note types include ([1]):

Blog Entry
  • Drupal blogs have typical functionality of blogware
Book Page
  • Book pages are designed to be part of a collaborative book. An example of a collaborative book is the Drupal developer documentation. All node types can be part of a book.
Comment
  • Comments actually aren't nodes, they are their own special content type. Comments are what allow people to add comments to any other node that has been created.
Forum
  • Forums are sets of nodes and their comments. These are grouped together as belonging in one forum by assigning them the forum name, which is a taxonomy term. These forum names can be grouped in forum containers, which are other terms, of which they are children in a hierarchical vocabulary which is called "forums", and configured as only applicable to nodes of the "forum" type.
Page
  • Pages are simple nodes, typically used for static content that can (but are not required to) be linked into the main navigation bar
Poll
  • A poll is where a multiple choice question is asked and users can answer and see other peoples answers to questions.
Story
  • Story pages are news engine entries. Stories are generally used for information which is only relevant for a period of time (eg. news stories) and is expected to expire off of the page.

Many other node types are included by [ contributed modules].

In education

Websites for educators and researchers

Drupal is very popular in education (all levels) to build community web sites within which members can post news, share resources or collaborate in other ways. Examples:

Teaching platforms

Drupal is good platform to implement project-oriented learning designs. Typically, a teacher (and not the institution) will run the platform.

Examples:

  • Archive of Welcome to English 420S (Distance Learning), Purdue University
  • Maxetom Integrates educational on-line multimedia applications. “Maxetom propose aux enfants des coloriages en ligne qui leur feront découvrir les couleurs en espagnol ou en anglais.”

Links and resource management

Example:

Installation

Standard Drupal

Drupal should install without problems on a LAMP or WAMP system. It is also distributed with WOS (WAMP on a memory stick.

Drupal is ready to go from the moment you download it. It even has an easy-to-use web installer. However, a typical educator probably would like to download and install third-party modules.

DrupalEd

A group of people (including Bill Fitzgerald) released an educational package (not tested yet).

“DrupalEd is a powerful open source content management system with the power to support the e-learning needs of large educational institutions. It is also easy enough to install and use for individual teachers/professors to implement in their own classes (for teachers who would like to abandon BlackBoard, sans IT Department backing)” ([2]).

Links

Drupal

Reviews and analysis on the Drupal website

References