1. The Collaborative Hosting of Moodle Dec 1, 2011 Presented
by: Curtis Fornadley, PMP CCLE Coordinator
2. The Collaborative Hosting of Moodle Topics The
organizational structure that helped UCLA evolve from having ~25
LMS systems on campus to under 5 How CCLE goes about the planning
and decision making process Cost, benefits and lessons learned in
making the collaborative host of a large system work.
3. Decentralized IT Academic Many Autonomous Departments
Primary clients: faculty and researchers No Central Funding
Administrative Business and Student Applications; ex. payroll
Campus Communication Technology Obvious Synergies Email Course
Management Systems
4. CMS on Campus circa 2002
5. What is CCLE? Common Collaboration and Learning Environment
Common System for the Campus (Moodle v1.9.8) Supports: Instruction,
Collaboration and Research Users: Faculty, Students and Staff.
First successful, large scale, project that pulls together many
different campus departments to host a single service.
6. Growth of CCLE 2500 2000 FallTotal Winter 1500Course
SpringSites 1000 Summer 500 0 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009
2009-2010 2010-2011 Logins per Day Total Users Spring 2011 7,113
23,854 Spring 2010 4,178 19,362
7. Defining CCLE Guiding Principals: School/division staff and
support are the foundation for the CCLE Encourage broad adoption
through opt-in participation Planning and Governance should be open
and participatory Academic priorities and faculty/student
experience drive decisions Support creativity and innovation Allow
for more than one Moodle installation in the plan
8. Defining CCLEPossible Organizational Structure: Common
Software, Central Coordination, No Coordination Less
Autonomy/Flexibility Decision: Less Coordination, More
Autonomy/Flexibility One shared campus-wide system Some unit-only
installations Establish an administrative home for the CCLE
9. Shared Governance ModelOversight Academic Leadership, Deans,
CIOsGovernance Standards and Practices Faculty Group Student Group
GroupOperations Autonomous Department Common Interest System CCLE
Home Group (CIG) Autonomous Department System Shared Campus
Operations CCLE Subgroups Autonomous Department System
10. Shared Governance Model Oversight Academic Leadership,
Deans, CIOs CCLE Home CCLE Coordinator (hired Sept. 2008)
Governance Developer Lead Standards and Practices Faculty Group
Support Coordinator Student Group Group System Administrator Shared
System Operations Autonomous Department Common Interest Opt-in
units can System CCLE Home Group (CIG) run their own Autonomous
Department System server Shared Campus Operations CCLE Subgroups
Autonomous Department SystemCommon Code base in SVN Local support
is at the unit level
11. How it Works: Communication Standards & Practices Group
(S&PG) Monthly meetings, email Determine guidelines, policy and
approves spending When necessary decision by vote Common Interest
Group (CIG) Weekly meetings, email Balance day-to-day issues with
mid-long term planning CCLE Subgroups Weekly meetings, email, Jira
Developers - Crucible, Jabber Functionality User Support System
Operations CCLE Home: Organize, Facilitate, Coordinate, Mediate,
Moderate, Execute
12. Requirements Gathering CIG and SPG F&F MatrixFaculty
Survey Student Survey Faculty Advisory Group Student Advisory Group
CCLE F&F Matrix CCLE Projects
13. Prioritizing Feature Requests Features and Functionality
Matrix (H, M, L) Feature Types: System Operations CCLE Archival
User Interface Functionality Improv. Integration with Campus
Systems Other CCLE sites Staffing Resources Admin/Support Tools
Mobile Copyright Documentation Merge Code to Moodle .org Contribute
to Moodle .org Governance Other Value Technical Difficulty
14. CMS on Campus circa 2002
15. CMS on Campus 2011 Arts and Architecture - CCLE Anderson
CCLE (2012) Public Affairs - CCLE Statistics - CCLE Social Sciences
- CCLE Engineering CCLE (2013) Humanities - CCLEMathematics CCLE
(2012) GSEIS - CCLEPhysical Sciences - CCLE Life Sciences CCLE
Nursing - CCLE Public Health - CCLE
16. Challenges and Insights Building Trust: communication and
transparency Getting commitments and contributions from staff
Difficulty building a community of Moodle developers Balancing
individual needs in a shared environment Fairness is Relative
Differing Perspectives and Priorities Compromise is Constant
Managing entropy Funding challenges common good
17. Challenges and Insights Collaboration has a Cost: Many
meetings essential for communication Compromise, but power in
numbers Projects take longer CCLE governance mirrors government Few
vocal people drive direction Some choose to not get involved Free
ridership Having a priority setting and decision making process is
essential
18. The Collaborative Hosting of MoodleQuestions Curtis
Fornadley, PMP CCLE Coordinator [email protected]