Magic Studio » SCORM http://blog.magicstudio.com All things about Magic Studio Tue, 27 Apr 2010 09:41:38 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.8.4 en hourly 1 Magic Studio now with Common Cartridge support plus … http://blog.magicstudio.com/2009/05/22/magic-studio-now-with-common-cartridge-support-plus/ http://blog.magicstudio.com/2009/05/22/magic-studio-now-with-common-cartridge-support-plus/#comments Fri, 22 May 2009 09:56:26 +0000 martynfarrows http://blog.magicstudio.com/?p=268 We have made a number of new enhancements to Magic Studio this week:

  • As well as being able to export completed interactives as SCORM packages, you can now also export as Common Cartridge packages
  • SCORM packages can now be uploaded and shared
  • Larger sizes for videos are now supported, up to 500 pixels wide – this means that videos uploaded can be used in their native size and are resized automatically for use where appropriate in interactives (e.g. when projected onto IWBs)
  • For Gateway users, we have introduced a new home page and user interface

In addition, video and audio players now show a new ‘progress’ bar.

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Setting the Standard http://blog.magicstudio.com/2008/02/02/another-example-post/ http://blog.magicstudio.com/2008/02/02/another-example-post/#comments Sat, 02 Feb 2008 14:18:11 +0000 martynfarrows http://www.lexara.72dots.co.uk/?p=9 Metadata. If you look up the definition on wikipedia, it says “data about data”. Fair enough, I suppose. Why use more than three words when three will do.

However, ask your average user to explain what metadata is and you may well get a much shorter answer, if you get an answer at all. Does this matter? Well, not if the metadata does what it is supposed to do – and surely one of its most important roles is to improve the user experience.

It doesn’t always work like that, though. Take the example of a learner or teacher working in a school environment. To be able to fully exploit the ICT infrastructure of the school (Mobile devices, PC’s, Interactive Whiteboards, Learning Platform, etc) the user is seeking ease of use, accessibility and interoperability. Everything they use or create should be accessible and usable wherever their point of access is. Sounds like it should be easy enough. After all, we are operating in a web-enabled world where media is ‘portable’ and footloose.

But, when it comes to Digital Learning Resources (or DLR’s) things are not so simple. Why? Partly it’s because of the lack of a simple and open standard for exchanging resources. Sure, we have SCORM – but the latest version (2004, 3rd edition since you ask) is actually a collection of specifications and standards. These incorporate metadata about the DLR. Whether or not SCORM is an appropriate set of standards for DLR’s is not the point – that’s an argument for another day. Whether SCORM is actually acting as a help or hindrance to the creation and sharing of DLR’s is much more important.

In particular, this raises a serious issue about the user (learner or teacher) as author. If you are trying to produce a DLR, should you have to worry about making it ‘standards-compliant’? User-generated content works because anyone can do it. If the ‘standards’ are acting as a barrier to creation and collaboration, are they being counter-productive?

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