Standard

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Definition

  • The goal of standardization is to improve efficiency of actions and interactions.

There are various degrees of technical standards:

  1. "Real standards" of very high formal quality adopted by bodies such as ISO, IEE, IEC, ITU, etc.
  2. Standards like the W3C "Recommendations" or the IETF "Requests for Comments" (RFCs) or the OASIS document or IMS pedagogical standards.
  3. De facto standards (usually no formalization at all) like Microsoft products.
  • Standards can be open or propriety. Open means publicly available, not necessarily free.

Standards in educational technology

This is a short, somewhat chaotic overview for now. See also:

There are many rationales for adopting standards in education, e.g. sustainability of assets and other information or the possibility to exchange. For the latter, Gartner's (2016) report on Top 10 Strategic Technologies Impacting Higher Education in 2016 coins the exostructure strategy concept to describe a strategy to insure that external collaboration can be leveraged and cites examples like as Open Badges, Learning Tools Interoperability (LTI), Caliper Learning Analytics Interoperability Framework, Question and Test Interoperability (QTI), Accessible Portable Item Protocol (APIP), eduPerson, MLO and Postsecondary Electronic Standards Council (PESC) transcripts.

Pedagogical standards

There are no real general standards, but the closet things are

  • In some countries there are quite precise curricula standards, e.g.
    • American Association for the Advancement of Science’s (AAAS, 1993) Benchmarks for Science Literacy
    • National Research Council’s (NRC, 1996) National Science Education Standards,

Pedagogical data standards

Assembly and data description
Modeling languages (see educational modeling language)
Combined profiles
More stuff

Systems standards

  • The SCORM specifications define some java-script bindings to insure interroperability of simple interactive contents (that is BTW one of the areas where a lot of systems are not Scorm compatible, even if they claim so ...)
  • IMS General Web Services to allow for interoperability of various systems. This is a fairly new standard (Jan 2006) and is an interesting initiative.

Some technical standards of interest

There are various standardization bodies and procedures:

Standardization bodies

This is a list of bodies that create "real" or "de facto" standards

In education

Specialized ICT

  • RFC - Requests for comments (Informal Internet standards, sometimes standardized by an "official body" sometimes not. The most important source for Internet standards.)

General

(including ICT standards)

  • ECMA (e.g. JavaScript)
  • NIST US National Institute of Standards and Technology

Links

References

(see also the entries for various standards !)

  • AICC/CMI CMI001 Guidelines for Interoperability Version 3.4. October 23, 2000. Includes: AICC Course Structure Format, AICC CMI Data Model, Available at: http://www.aicc.org/.
  • IMS Learning Resource Meta-data Specification Version 1.2. Includes: IMS Learning Resource Meta-data Information Model, IMS Learning Resource Meta-data XML Binding Specification, and IMS Learning Resource Meta-data Best Practice and Implementation Guide. Available at: http://www.imsglobal.org
  • IEEE Information Technology - Learning Technology - Learning Objects Metadata LOM: Available at: http://ltsc.ieee.org/.
  • Advanced Distributed Learning (ADL), Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM)® 2004 3rd Edition, Available at: http://www.adlnet.gov/