Tag Archives: Tetra

Bodington at the Sakai Conference

This is the first installment of my promised non-patent (and non-patented) coverage of the Sakai Atlanta conference. I’m going to start with Bodington, in part because I continue to be really impressed with these guys. In my opinion, they are … Continue reading

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Bodington Review, Postscript

Now that there are a number of LMOS/framework-like projects in active development (the Bodington Tetra/Sakai collaboration, Oracle’s AEI, LAMS’ service contract work and, of course, the venerable eFramework and all of its children), I thought it might be interesting to … Continue reading

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Bodington Review, Part II

In my last post, I discussed Bodington’s unique access control system and how this affects teaching affordances. I started there deliberately and at the suggestion of my Bodington expert and guide, Oxford University’s Paul Trafford. Today, Stephen Downes comments sarcastically, … Continue reading

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Bodington Review, Part I

Here’s an interesting announcement out of the UK: The Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Hull, and the UHI Millennium Institute announce the formation of the Tetra Collaboration, the outcome of a series of meetings and a major summit held at the … Continue reading

Posted in Instructional Design, LMOS, Notable Posts, Tools, Toys, and Technology (Oh my!) | Tagged , | 2 Comments