2 DLE CONCEPT
The presented approach for DLE is based on the
proposition that it should consist mainly on
‘ultimately reusable’ LOs and their metadata
repositories as well as appropriate services to create,
modify and manage LOs, e.g. adaptable VLEs.
The need for reusability of LOs has at least three
elements: (1) interoperability: LO is interoperable
and can be used in different platforms; (2) flexibility
in terms of pedagogic situations: LO can fit into a
variety of pedagogic situations; (3) modifiability to
suit a particular teacher’s or student’s needs: LO can
be made more appropriate to a pedagogic situation
by modifying it to suit a particular teacher’s or
student’s needs (McCormick et. al., 2004).
The authors’ approach is that ultimate reusability
of LOs should be ensured by their partition to two
main separate parts (LAs and UoLs) which should
work independently and should have clear different
functions: (1) LAs are considered not to be directly
interconnected with particular pedagogical activities
/ designs, and therefore it should be possible to reuse
the same LAs to implement different learning
designs; (2) UoLs are conversely considered to be
LOs containing learning activities / designs reusable
for different subjects and different LOs / LAs.
DLE components’ scheme based on this
approach is presented in Fig. 1.
Figure 1: The scheme of flexible DLE.
3 RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
DLE INTEROPERABILITY
Conclusions of the analysis of existing standards and
specifications performed by the authors are:
(1) the majority of standards and specifications
are not adopted and do not conform with educational
practice; (2) there exists a problem of complex
solutions for application of standards and
specifications in education; (3) standards and
specifications often do not cooperate.
3.1 European Learning Resource
Exchange for Schools
European LOs implementation in education policy is
based on LRE. This is a federated network of 20
learning content repositories that has been developed
by European Schoolnet (EUN) and its supporting
Ministries of Education (incl. Lithuania) together
with other partners that include the ARIADNE
Foundation.
The main principles of LRE are: (1) LOs are
described using LOM standard for expressing
metadata about LOs; (2) federated search engine to
search for LOs is implemented. The LRE is a service
that provides the means to unlock the educational
content hidden in digital repositories across Europe
and share it among all partners of the LRE and their
users. LRE system is implemented by connecting
national LO repositories of various countries to the
federation system - an infrastructure for discovering
and exchanging LOs, where each partner remains in
control of LOs and their metadata.
Core services provided by the LRE system are:
(1) LOs discovery; (2) LOs exchange (including
Digital Rights Management (DRM)); (3) LOs
semantic interoperability. The quality of the former
two services depends on implementation of the latter
service - semantic interoperability of the LOs
(Jevsikova, Kurilovas, 2006).
The newest EUN initiative in the field is
ASPECT project proposal to European Commission.
ASPECT is Best Practice Network for educational
content that involves 23 partners from 16 countries,
including 10 Ministries of Education (incl.
Lithuania), four commercial content developers and
leading technology providers. For the first time,
experts from all international standardisation bodies
and consortia active in e-learning (CEN / ISSS,
IEEE, ISO, IMS, ADL) will work together in order
to improve the adoption of learning technology
standards and specifications.
Most stakeholders will benefit from agreed profiles
and established practices as projects like ASPECT
help combine existing specifications into complete
solutions that address the needs of the school sector
in terms of LOs discovery, exchange and reuse
(ASPECT, 2007).
LRE validation in Lithuania has shown that the
teachers prefer LOs from national repositories which
INTEROPERABILITY GUIDELINES FOR DIGITAL LIBRARY OF EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES AND SERVICES
469