White paper
Napsterisation of e-learning (P2P)
Halfway through the year 2000, at about the same time that
the Internet bubble finally burst, a new kid appeared on the
block in the shape of peer-to-peer computing (P2P). Napster,
a revolutionary file-sharing programme, written by 19-year
old Shawn Fanning in his bedroom, soon had tens of millions
of young Internet users sharing music files over the Internet
- heralding the arrival of P2P as a mainstream phenomenon.
In fact, peer-to-peer networking takes the Internet right
back to its roots. Before it became the client-server monster
we have all come to know and love, the Internet was originally
designed as a peer-to-peer system.
So having rocked the music world to its foundations, what
does P2P have in store for e-learning?
This white paper by Donald Clark, CEO of Epic Group plc,
provides some answers. Describing how this 'disruptive technology'
figures in the ongoing debate over e-learning's potential role in
lessening some of the current 'control-freakery' associated with
large scale management of training, Donald surveys the issues and
practicalities around using P2P for learning, and gives a case study
of the P2P e-learning system developed by Epic in partnership with
I&DeA.
Order your free copy
Summary of contents:
- Napster: Disruptive technology
- e-learning: not yet disruptive
- Don't blend it, napsterise it!
- The Napsterisation of learning
- Issues around P2P learning
- Different P2P models
- Standards
- Quality
- Technical issues
- Case study - Epic & IdeA (P2P learning)
|