tufts university shares its experience selecting and implementing rsmart sakai as its next lms
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TuftsTRANSCRIPT
Evaluating, Selecting & Implementing Sakai at Tufts
Gina Siesing, Director, Educational & Scholarly Technology Services 9/29/11
Agenda
Brief introduction to Tufts University
Paving the way for change
Strategic planning project – Q&A
Implementation and migration project
Lessons learned and tips for success
Q&A
About Tufts University
8 Schools 3 (US) Campuses (Boston, Grafton, Medford/Somerville)
~10,000 total students ~5,200 undergraduate students (A&S, Engineering) ~4,600 graduate and professional students
~2,000 faculty ~3,000 staff
How did we get here?
• Tufts LMS Terrain – a rich ecosystem
• Project Drivers
• Laying the Groundwork
• Project Initiation
Before we began the project…
Before we began the project…
• Blackboard administrator proactively recognized the need for a change in 2005
• Research/piloting of leading LMS platforms, including ANGEL Learning, Moodle, Sakai in 2006-07
• Blackboard replacement proposal endorsed by faculty committee and Deans
• Initial work focused on Tufts Blackboard context
Meanwhile…
• Blended & distance learning programs burgeoning and seeking technological & instructional design solutions
• Architectural and business model analyses of TUSK to ensure sustainability into the future
• Hence, wisdom of pursuing a university-wide planning process
Tufts Next-Generation LMS Strategy Project Charter:
• Define selection criteria based on university’s goals and community requirements
• Evaluate leading LMS platforms to determine which best fits Tufts criteria
• Articulate a robust, coordinated support model for migration and ongoing service to enrich TLR at Tufts
• Recommend a comprehensive LMS strategy for Tufts University
Strategy Project Model:
• Core Team – deep experience with learning management systems and instructional services
• Advisory Team – multiple vantage points from educational to financial to technological
• Executive Steering Committee – holding the university-wide focus
Strategy Project Communications:
• Letter to Schools introducing project and inviting participation
• Project updates via elist and project site
• Importance of unified project message and robust communication with our respective communities across the university
Internal Project Wiki
Community Engagement
University Opportunities & Challenges:
• LMS is the most ubiquitous educational technology resource (“PeopleSoft of the academic world”) => unprecedented opportunity to enhance a system and service that almost all Tufts faculty and students use regularly
• Opportunity for Tufts to gain more value from same financial investment by adopting a common platform and leveraging shared expertise & common services
University Opportunities & Challenges:
• Opportunity for more sustainable and adaptable LMS architecture that frees design & development teams to focus on Tufts-specific and discipline-specific functionality
• Opportunity to integrate instructional design and faculty development more fully with LMS support, thus enabling more meaningful use of available tools
University Opportunities & Challenges:
• Facilitating strategic conversations and change across Schools and organizations. Value of planning toward university service with coordinated multi-School, cross-organizational approach
• Goal of continued end-user satisfaction
• Associated importance of robust communication about project drivers, intended benefits, and progress
• Opportunity to address questions that arise through LMS project, but that extend beyond to broader strategic directions for Tufts University
Big Questions for Tufts Teams:
• simplicity for most, extensibility for some
• stability/sophistication of commercial vs. configurability/sharability of open source
• next-gen paradigm vs. old silo model
• relationship to portal for faculty/students?
• planning for core educational technology production services
• mustering "army of too much help" in current economic climate
Strategy Project Milestones:
① Facilitate community requirements gathering – round out with Dental, Medical, and Veterinary Schools
② Develop functional requirements toward comparative evaluation / RFP
③ Learn from accessibility, architecture, SIS integration, and security working groups
④ Structure and begin deep comparative evaluation of alternative platforms
Strategy Project Milestones:
⑤ Finalize and send request for proposals
⑥ Introduce platforms to community via demo sites and usability testing
⑦ Complete comparative evaluation of alternative platforms
⑧ Recommend LMS strategy for Tufts University, including platform and service model scenarios
High-level Criteria of Evaluation:
① common platform ② responsible investment ③ meaningful use enabled by faculty development and
instructional design support ④ mostly simple, but also extensible ⑤ reliable/robust ⑥ sustainable architecture that enables integration
Tufts LMS Value Statements (shorthand):
① Implement & Leverage a Common Platform for Tufts ② Build upon a Leading Open-source Platform (Sakai) ③ Coordinated LMS Service Model ④ Implementation Project Model (EC, SC, CT, WGs) ⑤ Professional Expertise for Implementation (rSmart) ⑥ Hosting Strategy (in-house via UIT) ⑦ Three-phased Approach to Migration
Unanimously Endorsed Strategy Recommendations:
Tufts Next-Generation LMS Strategy Recommendations – full PDF available on Trunk Support site
Questions about the strategic planning process before we shift to implementation?
High-level cost estimation
Funding model for Phases 1 & 2 and ongoing service
Project Plan
Contract with rSmart for implementation services and 2nd- and 3rd-tier support during first 18 months
Recruitment for LMS positions
Formation of implementation project teams
Pivot between Strategy Project Culmination (April 2010) & Implementation Project Launch (Nov 2010):
Implementation Project Model: • Same Executive Committee
• Implementation Steering Committee with university-wide representation and opt-in flex by phase
• Cross-organizational Core Team and Working Groups for Phase 1 (Academic Technology, Libraries, IT training & documentation, et al.)
• rSmart implementation support
• Coordinated Trunk Support & Technical Teams for ongoing service at Tufts + rSmart 2nd- and 3rd-tier support
High-level Implementation Project Timeline:
• Phase 1 (Nov 2010 -> Sept 2011): – University LMS infrastructure & coordinated service model
implemented and available – Migration from Blackboard to Sakai for Course Sites – Project Sites rolled out for full university community
• Phase 2 (Oct 2011 -> June 2012): – Migration from ANGEL Learning to Sakai – Course Evaluation functionality for university – E-Portfolios piloted and service model defined
• Phase 3 (to be defined this year) – Integration of TUSK with University LMS
Implementation Project Internal Wiki:
Project Communications:
• Communications officer dedicated
• Plans developed in dialogue with Core Team and working group leads
• Multi-pronged approach for faculty, students, staff
• Time-released communications
• Trunk Support site with targeted information for Phase 1 community
• Internal project wiki
A. Trunk B. Option 2 C. Option 3
Naming & Branding the Tufts Platform:
Trunk Support Site:
Early Education for the Community: Three Pillars of Sakai
Software Platform Community
Project/Foundation
Sakai as Software:
• Open source (ECL 2 license) • Open architecture • Feature rich • Fully Scalable • Widely adopted • Constitutes a contemporary / next-generation paradigm
beyond the traditional LMS
Sakai as Project & Foundation:
• Project launched in 2003 (Michigan, Indiana, Stanford, MIT, Berkeley)
• Initial funding from Mellon Foundation • Sakai Foundation chartered in 2004 • Sustaining funding from in-kind grants and Sakai
academic partner memberships (e.g., Tufts) • Leadership - Sakai Board of Directors, Executive
Director
The Sakai Ecosystem:
Sakai Board Foundation Staff Executive Director, Ian Dolphin, Product Manager, Clay Fenlason Product Council Sakai 3 Project Director Administrative Staff Partner Schools Commercial Affiliates Individual committers, users
Sakai as Community:
• Open • Active • Innovative • Participatory • Meritocracy
• Collaboration is key
Sakai Platform Demo:
Training and Support for Instructors:
• Support site: http://sites.tufts.edu/trunksupport/ • Quick Start Guide in every mailbox
• 96 Workshops and open labs beginning May 16, 2011 • “Getting Started with Trunk” • Advanced Trunk workshops (Discussion Forums, Gradebook
& Assignments, Creating Content, Copyright & Library Resources)
• Content Migration: 314 requests + self-service option
• Email, phone, and drop-in support for Trunk (1150 support tickets resolved thus far)
• 565 people have attended workshops; ~88% completed the evaluation • Primary affiliations: Faculty; Staff; Student; Other (TA/misc) • School: A&S; Eng; Fletcher; Other (Central Admin/Boston)
Training and Support for Students:
• Support site: http://sites.tufts.edu/trunksupport/
• Workshops
• Email, phone, and drop-in support for Trunk
• Quick Start Guide and FAQs
About Trunk adoption thus far:
1070 course sites (SIS fed, published by instructors) 307 project sites (self-provisioning)
8750 unique users 871 concurrent users (max. thus far)
Tracking & Prioritizing Potential Trunk Enhancements:
1. Review options for distributed administration roles and mechanisms and for handling sections
2. Define and implement Mobile Trunk (beyond OOTB) 3. Trunk Math Editor 4. Trunk TurnItIn Integration 5. Trunk Adobe Connect Integration 6. Kaltura Implementation 7. CALT-Trunk Integration 8. Trunk MediaMarkup Integration 9. Trunk iClicker Integration 10. Sakai for Administrative Training for Staff & Faculty 11. And the list continues to grow….
What else has worked in our context? • Weekly project calls with rSmart
• Trunk project facilitators (steward, PM, service owner, core team, infrastructure, support, and training teams) meet weekly and frame steering committee meetings with care
• Steady flow of communication from us, Deans, department chairs – snail mail, email, in-person…
• Peer institution connections. • Several of us attended the Sakai Annual Conference in June • Sakai User Group – initiated by Hannah Reeves via NERCOMP. Next
meeting 11/10/11. • Informal conversations ongoing. • Several Tufts delegates attended the AAEEBL World Summit in July with
focus on Sakai-based Portfolios. Will be an institutional host in 2012.
Encouraging Lessons: We can work across organizations in a highly decentralized institution
Communication will never reach everyone, but most people appreciate a thoughtful process and the opportunities to learn and participate
Leverage students – “Content Migration Engineers” and “AT Fellows”
Celebration!
Questions? Thoughts?