Media
Centre
Giunti Labs
Master
List
PRESS INFORMATION ISSUED ON
BEHALF OF:
Giunti Labs
Abbazia dell'Annunziata, Via Portobello - Baia del Silenzio, 16039
Sestri Levante (GE), Italy
Phone: +39 0185 42123; Web
www.giuntilabs.com
10th November 2008
DECOM 2008 debates the future
for educational publishing
According to Vijay Kumar, Senior Associate Dean and Director of the
Office of Educational Innovation and Technology at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology - and an advisor to India's National Knowledge
Commission - the traditional education model has been based on scarcity
and assumed limited educational resources.
Today, he said, the development and availability of open education
resources are challenging these assumptions and suggest that that model
is changing. This movement is making learning materials more widely
accessible - although there are issues related to quality and secondary
use, to be addressed.
Kumar was addressing over 100 top level executives - from the learning
content industry, international publishing firms, corporate training
providers and academic stakeholders engaged in both publishing and open
courseware initiatives in schools, universities and corporate training,
together with Government policy makers throughout Europe - who were
debating the future of the learning content industry and, in
particular, its ability to adapt to, and exploit fully, a new
generation of educational content production, management, sharing and
distribution models.
The debate took place in Sestri Levante, Italy, at the end of October -
at The Digital Educational Content Marketplaces conference (DECOM
2008). The event was hosted by leading learning and mobile content
management solution provider, Giunti Labs, and the European Learning
Industry Group (ELIG). The event's sponsors were Cegos, Plateau, Cisco,
IBM, AxMediaTech - AXMEDIS and SIF Association.
The results of delegates' deliberations will be summarised in ‘The
Sestri DECOM Declaration'. Intended for the EU Commission, the
Declaration will outline suggested policy actions to support a
transition towards digital content marketplaces for educational
publishing in Europe.
Other speakers included Judy Brown, Mobile Learning Researcher at the
Institute for Simulation and Training, the University of Central
Florida and the founder of the Academic ADL SCORM Co-Lab; Spyridon
Pilos, of the European Commission; ELIG's Sectrary General, Richard
Straub, and Fabrizio Cardinali, CEO of Giunti Labs.
In addition, there were educational publishing case studies from Joel
Greenberg, of the Open University (OU); Adam Black, of Pearson
Education; Ulrich Schmid, of Scoyo GmbH; Bob Bolick, of McGraw-Hill;
Tim Hawkins, of Elsevier, and Willem van Valkenburg, of the Delft
University of Technology.
Cardinali set the tone for the conference by emphasising that the world
economy is changing, with increasing challenges to competitiveness in
world markets coming from Eastern economies. He said: "The key to
competing globally is innovation and being creative in the application
of that innovation."
Greenberg stated that the OU is committed to open source software, open
education resources, the personalisation of learning and the ‘social
web'. He said: "Traditionally, students adapted to the education
system.
"Today, the education system must adapt to the students and their
learning preferences. Interoperability standards and new publishing
formats such as IMS Common Cartridge will help facilitate this."
In endorsing the move towards mobile learning, Pearson's Black
commented that, every second, three babies are born somewhere in the
world whereas, in the same time, 38 mobile devices are sold. He added:
"So, regardless of the challenges, we need to take mobile learning
seriously as a new channel for delivering educational content and
services."
David Worlock, Chief Research Fellow at Outsell, Inc., revealed that
Outsell sizes the annual worldwide market for information at $390bn.
Commenting on current educational publishing trends, Worlock said that,
whereas publishers were used to producing pre-formatted information
such as textbooks, nowadays they are building solutions that model the
needs of the learners more closely.
"The key issues are self-assessment, continuous assessment and
diagnostics," he said. "Customer needs analysis is driving publishers
to move towards high degrees of quality assurance and publishing
content in several places and formats and then releasing it to
customers as appropriate for them.
"In the current economic climate, the educational publishing industry
faces three major risks," he added. "First, that all content becomes,
or can be made, free; second, the global recession could undermine
customers' spending power, and, third, that opportunities for
developing mobile learning materials and technologies are ignored or
under-exploited."
End
About ELIG
The European Learning Industry Group (ELIG) emerged from the eLearning
Industry Group (eLIG) in 2007. The original organisation had been
inaugurated, in 2002, by the European Union in order to provide input
to the EU's strategy on e-learning.
ELIG is now an open industry
group which explores, researches and determines ‘innovation in
learning' throughout the EU. It aims to offer thought leadership in
this sector; a communication channel to the learning market, and a
network within which members collaborate rather than compete - which it
terms ‘co-petition'.
ELIG's membership encompasses those operating in the fields of
technology infrastructure; media; learning content; publishing;
learning platforms; software; services providers; research;
associations, and user organisations.
About Giunti Labs
Giunti is unique in the international publishing industry.
In 1497, Giunti publishers and typographers in Florence, together with
others in Venice, began modern book manufacturing. Over the years
Giunti has built a 'historical catalogue' of huge dimensions, through a
gradual process of 'fusion' of different publishers, but also through
the creation of new brands, including Giunti Labs. Giunti Editore now
includes 20 companies in the publishing sector.
Giunti Labs, which has its global headquarters in Italy and offices in
London (UK), Frankfurt (Germany), Lund (Sweden) and in Boston (US),
provides a wide range of services, in response to any content, learning
and knowledge management need, covering:
-
Content production
-
Research and
development
-
Technological
solutions for content, learning & knowledge management
-
Architectural and
technological solutions for mobile & wireless
-
Training and
consulting
Giunti Labs provides
the learn eXact® suite, Europe's leading e-learning and mobile learning
content management technology. This suite is interoperable with all
major vendor-driven and open source LMS and VLE solutions in the market
including Plateau, Oracle, SumTotal, Saba, WebCT, Blackboard, Sakai,
LRN and Moodle.
Moreover, Giunti Labs does not just adhere to the international
standards relating to the LMS/LCMS world, it is one of the
organisations that helps to determine and drive these standards:
co-writing and developing them. Giunti Labs plays a key role in most of
the international institutions for the definition of eLearning
specifications (IEEE LTSC, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC36, CEN/ISSS WSLT, AICC, IMS,
ADL-SCORM and OKI).
Further information from:
Minna Leikas, Giunti Labs, +39 3489 399127
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, +44 (0)1727 860405