management system (LMS) companies, including market leader Blackboard,
with the announcement that it's turning its new LMS into open source.
Instructure has publicly released the source code to its Canvas learning
management system, which was launched in 2010. Currently, 26 institutions
have signed contracts with Instructure, including 17 within the Utah
Education Network. The company said that more than 100 other schools are
currently evaluating its application.
"We're excited to offer an alternative to the current LMS options," said
Josh Coates, Instructure's CEO. "We want to open up the market to allow
for innovation so teachers and students can be at the forefront of
technology."
Canvas, a cloud-based application, provides standard course management as
well as newer features, such as learning outcomes, peer review, migration
tools, e-portfolios, screen sharing, video chat, and rubrics. The
SpeedGrader puts a video, blog, document, or spreadsheet into a format
viewable in a Web browser, allowing the teacher to grade the material and
make comments.
Above all, the product is being promoted as having an open architecture.
"We don't think we're going to predict what the next big shift is for the
Internet, so we've built an architecture that's easy to plug into," said
Coates. "Historically, LMSs have been walled gardens. They've been closed
and monolithic in their architecture. From day one, Instructure has been
designed to be open."
As a start, Canvas integrates with Web services such as Google Docs,
Google Calendar, SMS, Facebook, Twitter, and RSS. When a teacher changes
the date of a quiz, for example, the system automatically sends a text
message to students who want notifications sent to their phone, a Facebook
message to students who want notifications sent to their social network,
or an e-mail message to students who prefer that.
Panola College, a community college in Carthage, TX, began a pilot of
Instructure in January after using WebCT for multiple years. WebCT is now
owned by Blackboard. "Blackboard is going to eliminate WebCT altogether.
At first, I thought we would just make the natural transition to
Blackboard, but I found out quickly that that wasn't what a lot of our
faculty wanted to do. So that's when we began to investigate other
potential LMSes," said Ann Morris, dean of distance education.
Joined by Jason Gilbert, Panola's education technology coordinator, Morris
began evaluating alternatives, and that's when Canvas came onto their
radar. They attended an audio conference about the product in September
2010. "I expected not to like Canvas and was very surprised. They were
offering some of the very same tools for students and faculty that Jason
and I were wishing for," she recalled.
Those features include a multitude of options for faculty to communicate
with students, its social network integration capabilities, and the
SpeedGrader function, which will allow the college's online speech
teachers to request that their online students video themselves using
their Webcams and then upload it to Canvas.
Panola began its pilot testing in mid-January with 13 instructors--"far
more than I expected," Morris added. "We thought two, three, four
instructors would give us a good analysis. Then we had 13 come forward,
close to a third of our faculty that uses an LMS. We were excited about
that."
Although Morris is hesitant to express any opinions about the product--"I
don't want the instructors to feel as though I'm guiding them in one way
or another," she explained--she noted that she's pleased with how open the
company is to taking feedback. "As our teachers who are piloting Canvas
request a feature, we pass that to the Canvas engineers who will
incorporate it. We're not just using it. We're providing them with a lot
of valuable feedback and helping them make their LMS better."
Morris said she expected Panola to be done with the first stage of its
pilot in April. At that point faculty and students will be surveyed to
develop a recommendation to the college's administration. If that goes
well, the school will bring on more instructors to try out the LMS during
the summer, and then more during the fall. "Our pilot will be a year-long
process," she explained.
"I think [Instructure] has some very intelligent leadership," Morris
concluded. "I think they're committed to surviving whatever may come their
way as they strive to become a real player."
Instructure started as a class project in a venture start-up course Coates
was teaching at Brigham Young University. "One of the assignments was:
List the top five worst pieces of software you use on a daily basis,"
Coates recalled. "Their No. 1 answer was Blackboard, which is what Brigham
Young uses. The follow up to that was to find out how really bad software
can be in the market." Two students who eventually founded Instructure
began studying the LMS market and, when they decided to start the company,
brought Coates in as an advisor and investor.
The company's move to open source may be a pre-emptive effort to avoid a
potential patent run-in with Blackboard, which had about 63 percent of the
market in 2009, according to the Campus Computing Project. In 2007 when
Blackboard was thick into a patent infringement lawsuit against
Desire2Learn, the company issued a statement that granted unrestricted use
of its patented technologies to open source developers. That pledge also
covered companies that service those systems, including hosting,
maintenance, support, and customization. The legal dispute between the two
companies formally ended in December 2009.
However, Coates insisted the move to open source will allow the company
"to penetrate the market quickly." And, he added, "In some sense it
inoculates us from a Blackboard buyout. We hear that so often: 'Your stuff
is so great. Blackboard always buys everyone out. What happens when they
buy you out?' Our response is, 'Well, no, that's not what we're in this
for. I want to change the market. That's why I'm doing this. Going open
source is the best way to do that. If Blackboard tries to buy us, we'll
rebuff the offer. And no matter what happens to Instructure, Canvas is out
there because it's open source."
Instructure is offering three editions of its product. Canvas Community
Edition (CE), available for a free download, will include an open source
AGPL license and community-provided support. Canvas Pro will have a
commercial license and will offer four levels of support, from basic to
professional service. Both of those editions are expected to be run on
institutional hardware. The third option will be Canvas Pro Cloud, which
will be made available as a service subscription and come with three
levels of support, from basic to premium.
As part of that last edition, Canvas provides for automated provisioning.
During peak usage periods, Instructure's hosting service notices traffic
jumps and automatically configures additional servers to handle the load.
Later this month the company will issue a version of SpeedGrader for the
iPad. In the third quarter of 2011, Instructure reported, the company will
release its entire application as an iPad app, with other mobile platforms
to follow.
"The LMS market is in transition," noted Panola College's Morris. "More
colleges and universities are leaving the big LMS systems and going with
[alternatives]. With constraints on budgets, we have to keep an open
mind."
About the Author
Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send
your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.
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