Stephen Downes

Knowledge, Learning, Community

Jul 01, 2002

This Journal Column published as e-Learning Centre in The Technology Source July/August 2002 online Jul 01, 2002. [Link] [Info] [List all Publications]

After your quick introduction, return to the Centre's page and pick the link that best describes your role or area of interest (e.g., academic e-learning, e-learning evaluation, or content providers). As you move to more specific topic areas the links become increasingly precise, pointing to individual articles rather than generic resources. If you are not sure where to go, you may chose to access ELLA, a guide to developing online courses in higher education; however, there is an as yet unannounced price attached to this service.

To gain an overview of the e-Learning Centre, click on the Resources link from the menu at the top of the page. A large list of topics, ranging from Blogs for e-learning to Simulations in e-learning lets you browse through the resource collection. Again, the resources are well selected, nicely displayed, and summarized. The Planning an e-learning project page, for example, points to a number of well-known and widely-cited articles from such journals as Learning Circuits, Syllabus, and Forbes.

The Showcase area will be of interest for those with more experience in e-learning. This area provides access to examples of e-learning where each example is characteristic of a different vendor's products or approach to e-learning. Clicking on Customer Learning Centres, for example, leads to a listing of sites hosted by Macromedia, Visa, Barnes & Noble, Oracle and more. Spending an afternoon on this page would be an eye-opener for many e-learning practitioners: these are not your typical online university courses (despite the fact that most of the sites call themselves a "university").

By now the structure and approach of the site is becoming apparent. Selecting Vendors or Events from the top menu takes you to similar resource lists. What distinguishes e-Learning Centre is not so much its organization or format but rather the range of resources listed. There is no emphasis on corporate or higher education sources; rather, the entire field is surveyed and the best resources are offered for selection. Thus readers browsing through e-Learning Centre are likely to find listings from beyond the range of their usual experience.

The e-Learning Centre also offers a monthly newsletter, eCLIPSE, that lists new resources added to the site. This newsletter is a useful read, not because it provides the latest developments in the field, but because it identifies five or six quality items each month. Practitioners will also be interested in the newsletter's events listings and job postings.

Whether you are directed to its listings through a search engine, or whether you register and subscribe to the newsletter, you will find in the e-Learning Centre the resources you need to cover an e-learning topic quickly and efficiently.



Stephen Downes Stephen Downes, Casselman, Canada
stephen@downes.ca

Copyright 2024
Last Updated: Mar 29, 2024 07:25 a.m.

Canadian Flag Creative Commons License.

Force:yes