• They do not provide management of the
resources.
So, AHKME LOM distinguishes itself from the
others by introducing an abstraction level to the user
from the technical aspects in terms of the XML
language and is more focused on the user needs, by
facilitating the metadata annotation of the LO
through a metadata automation process and the
search and retrieval of the LO, for the user to reuse
the LO in another scenarios. Because of AHKME’s
LO quality evaluation, the user may choose the best
LOs that best fit his educational scenario.
6 CONCLUSIONS
In this article we’ve presented how the platform
AHKME uses the IMS specifications and metadata
for learning resource management and evaluation.
The IMS specifications, which use the
combination of potentialities of metadata and XML,
are excellent to represent knowledge.
Through knowledge management the platform
allows a continuous evaluation of contents, granting
quality to all the existing resources in the platform
for teachers and students to use.
The presented platform uses knowledge
representation and knowledge management as two
processes that work simultaneously to grant success
to the process of teaching/learning.
The main contributions of AHKME are the
learning object management and evaluation of
quality, where we tried to introduce some
intelligence to these processes through intelligent
agents; the usage of the IMS specifications to
standardize all the resources of the platform in order
to reach interoperability and compatibility of its
learning components, and the interaction of all
subsystems through the feedback between them
allowing the platform to adapt to the students and
teachers characteristics and to new contexts. So, it’s
very important to have the resources well
catalogued, available, and with quality so we can
create quality courses. Meanwhile, we should take
into account that quality courses don’t just depend
on quality resources, but mainly in the design of
activities to reach determined learning objectives.
Being a multi-purpose platform it can be applied
to several kinds of matters, students, and learning
strategies, in both training and educational
environments.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work has been partly financed by Ministry of
Education and Science as well as FEDER
KEOPS project (TSI2005-00960).
REFERENCES
ADL SCORM Metadata Generator, 2005,
http://www.adlnet.org.
ALFANET, 2005, http://alfanet.ia.uned.es/.
AICC, Aviation Industry CBT Committee 2005,
http://www.aicc.org.
ANGEL, 2005, http://www.angellearning.com/.
ATUTOR, 2005, http://www.atutor.ca.
BLACKBOARD, 2005, http://www.blackboard.com/
Bray, T., Paoli, J., and Sperberg-MacQueen, C.M., 2004,
Extensible Markup Languaje (XML) 1.0 (Third
edition). W3C Recommendation. Available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xml-20040204/.
dotLRN, 2005, http://dotlrn.org
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, 2005,
http://dublincore.org
EUN, 2005, http://www.en.eun.org/menu/resources/set-
metaedit.html
García, F. J., García, J., 2004, Educational Hypermedia
Resources Facilitator. Computers & Education Press.
IEEE LOM, 2002, IEEE Learning Object Metadata
Specification, http://ltsc.ieee.org/wg12/
IMS Specifications, 2004, IMS Global Learning
Consortium Inc,
http://www.imsglobal.org/specifications.cfm
Koper, R., 2001, Modelling units of study from a
pedagogical perspective. The pedagogical meta-model
behind EML
LOM Editor, 2005, http://www.kom.e-technik.tu-
darmstadt.de/~abed/lomeditor
Morales, E., García, F. J., Moreira, T., Rego, H., Berlanga
A., 2004, Units of Learning Quality Evaluation. In
SPDECE 2004, CEUR Workshop Proceedings Vol.
117. http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-117. ISSN 1613-0073.
MOODLE, 2005, http://moodle.org
Reggie Metadata Editor, 2005, http://metadata.net/dstc
SAKAI, 2005, http://www.sakaiproject.org
SCORM: Sharable Content Object Reference Model,
2004, http://www.adlnet.org
Vargo J., Nesbit J.C., Belfer K., Archambault A., 2003,
Learning object evaluation: computer-mediated
collaboration and inter-rater reliability. International
Journal of Computers and Applications
WEBCT Web Site, 2005, http://www.webct.com/
Wiley, D., 2003, The Instructional Use of Learning
Objects: Connecting learning objects to instructional
design theory, D. Wiley (Ed.).
WEBIST 2006 - E-LEARNING
220