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This summary provides an overview of the LMS landscape as of October 2012, highlighting key market share data from 2011, notable newcomers such as Canvas and CourseEra, and the core functionalities offered by major LMS providers. It discusses differentiating factors, including open-source vs. proprietary solutions and cloud vs. local hosting. Key players like Blackboard, Moodle, and various proprietary systems are examined based on their strengths, market stability, and community engagement, revealing significant trends in the higher education LMS market.
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L21: LMS landscape October 2012
Market share summary (2011 data) • Notable newcomers (since 2011) • Canvas • New MOOC platforms (CourseEra)
Common core functionalities • All of the major LMSs offer similar core functionality: • file and content sharing • multi-media content tools, web 2.0 mashups • testing and survey tools • grading tools • collaboration tools such as discussion boards, blogs and wikis • Details and implementation will vary and need to be examined once functional requirements are defined
Some differentiating factors • Open-source vs. proprietary software • Externally vs. locally hosted • Cloud-based vs. individual instances • “Look and feel” and user experience • Community of practice • Maturity and product stability
US company; founded in 1997 at Cornell • Went public in 2004; private buyout by an investment group in 2011 • Acquired many competitors: WebCT, ANGEL, Elluminate, Wimba • Proprietary software, java-based • Very good standards compliance • Modular architecture and marketing approach: Bb Learn, Bb Analytics, Bb Collaborate, Bb Mobile • Also has service offerings: hosting, consulting, support • Currently dominates the marketplace; large community of practice
Recently acquired two main hosting providers for Moodle and created a branch providing services for LMS open-source customers • New CEO coming in December 2012
Open-source product; code created and unified by Moodle Pty, Ltd., an Australian company supported by fees from Moodle hosting partners • PHP-based • Major hosting partner (Moodle Rooms) acquired by Blackboard in March 2012. • Built on a learner-centric
Good standards compliance • Large user community/community of practice • Some well-known large installations exist (UK’s Open University) • Many European clients • US adoption as been especially strong for smaller colleges and community colleges • Allows for a relatively easy “out of the box” open source solution
Canadian company, privately held • Proprietary software, relatively standards-compliant • In the licensed software arena, main competitor to Blackboard • Microsoft.NET code base • Main clients include several state university systems and community college consortia: Minnesota, Wisconsin, Montana, Colorado, Kentucky, Pennsylvania • Not much market share outside North America • Recently received an $80 million infusion of new venture capital • Has a growing client base
Open-source product • Consortium-based; consortium members are higher ed institutions, weighted towards North America • Java-based • Many major clients are institutions with considerable programming resources; recent trend is towards hosted deployments • Recently spun off an “open academic environment” (OAE) concept which tries to move beyond the monolithic LMS
Some major OAE backers (UC Berkley, U Michigan, U Indiana) have withdrawn their support for the project in September 2012, leading to a major scaling down of the OAE project
Newcomer to the LMS world • Founded in 2008 by two BYU graduates • Privately-held start-up company, Instructure • Code based in Ruby on Rails; available under an open-source license – though Instructure does not support community contributions to the code • Cloud-based SAS service: i.e. no individual institutional control of/responsibility for upgrades or changes • Particular strengths: integration of web 2.0 tools, notably Facebook and Google apps for education • Clean and modern look and feel
LMS marketshare –a parting view http://mfeldstein.com/state-of-the-higher-education-lms-market-a-graphical-view/