Liberal Education Today

Post details: Top 100 elearning tools: a British survey

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

Top 100 elearning tools: a British survey

Filed under: CMS, Best Practices, Communications, Libraries, Tools — Bryan Alexander @ 05:45:12 am

A British site polled a group of educational technology professionals to come up a with their favorite e-learning tools. The top 100 list is very interesting, including a browser and browser plug-ins, a VOIP service, several Google offerings, and more, with a strong emphasis on Web 2.0:
At the lead were the following:

1 Firefox
2 del.icio.us
3 Skype
4 Google Search
5 Wordpress
Gmail
7 PowerPoint
Google Reader
9 Blogger
10 Bloglines
11 Moodle

Commentators have noticed, among other things, the lack of library tools, the absence of education-specific software, and Google Reader beating out Bloglines and other RSS aggregators.

Comments:

No Comments for this post yet...

Leave a comment

Allowed XHTML tags: <p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small>

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.

Allowed XHTML tags: <p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small>
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email and url)
(Allow users to contact you through a message form (your email will NOT be displayed.))
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.

Please enter the characters from the image above. (case insensitive)

Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Copyright © 2002-2006 National Institute for Technology and Liberal Education
powered by  b2evolution Credits: skin converting | blog tool | framework | test site
This skin features a CSS file originally designed for WordPress (See design credits in style.css).
Original design credits for this skin: Dave Shea & Matthew Mullenweg