วันเสาร์ที่ 15 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2554

Class Differences: Online Education in the United States, 2010


Abstract:

Online Education Grows by almost a Million Students
Eighth Annual Sloan Survey of Online Education Shows Economy Still Driving Growth

The complete report, “Class Differences: Online Education in the United States, 2010” is available here.

The 2010 Sloan Survey of Online Learning reveals that enrollment rose by almost one million students from a year earlier. The survey of more than 2,500 colleges and universities nationwide finds approximately 5.6 million students were enrolled in at least one online course in fall 2009, the most recent term for which figures are available.

“This represents the largest ever year-to-year increase in the number of students studying online,” said study co-author I Elaine Allen, Co-Director of the Babson Survey Research Group and Professor of Statistics & Entrepreneurship at Babson College. “Nearly thirty percent of all college and university students now take at least one course online.” She adds:

"There may be some clouds on the horizon. While the sluggish economy continues to drive enrollment growth, large public institutions are feeling budget pressure and competition from the for-profit sector institutions. In addition, the for-profit schools worry new federal rules on financial aid and student recruiting may have a negative impact on enrollments.”

Other report findings include:
• Almost two-thirds of for-profit institutions now say that online learning is a critical part of their long term strategy.
• The 21%growth rate for online enrollments far exceeds the 2% growth in the overall higher education student population.
• Nearly one-half of institutions report that the economic downturn has increased demand for face-to-face courses and programs.
• Three-quarters of institutions report that the economic downturn has increased demand for online courses and programs.

The eighth annual survey, a collaborative effort between the Babson Survey Research Group and the College Board, is the leading barometer of online learning in the United States. The survey is funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and distributed by the Sloan Consortium. The complete survey report, “Class Differences: Online Education in the United States, 2010” can be downloaded here. The report includes a detailed analysis of the factors driving the growth in online education.

Source: http://sloanconsortium.org/publications/survey/class_differences

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 13 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Learning 'out of the box'

By Jirapan Boonnoon
The Nation 13 May 2010

University studies are no longer limited to learning within the classroom "box". Students are encouraged to think "outside the box", and to study and access knowledge via new innovative technologies.

Students at the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC), for example, are now able to pursue their studies through cloud computing, thanks to Microsoft (Thailand)'s provision of a Hybrid Learning 2.0 system in a cooperative deal with the university.

UTCC president Chiradet Ousawat said the system adopted Microsoft's cloud-computing technology (or software-plus-services) to build a digital-learning community. Microsoft and the university now plan to enhance educational standards and transform the classroom experience by making it easier than ever before for students and teachers to communicate through online communities.

He said that the university currently provided 334 courseware programs for e-learning over the Internet. It expects next year to lift this number to 500 e-learning courseware programs, or 80 per cent of UTCC's total courseware.

The university is also implementing a student-response system called My Choice Clicker. It will allow students to question or respond to their teachers via a My Choice Clicker tag, using radio-frequency identification technology and a My Choice Clicker application installed on mobile computers.

A My Choice Clicker application is also being developed for mobile phones. This will enable students to communicate with their teachers via mobile phones equipped with wireless technology by the end of this year.

The next step will be to extend the My Choice Clicker application to recently-released iPad devices.

Microsoft (Thailand)'s managing director Patama Chantaruck said that under an agreement with UTCC, Microsoft was offering some of its online software applications and services to students and teachers free of charge, including Microsoft DreamSpark, Microsoft BizSpark, Microsoft WebsiteSpark, Microsoft Imagine Cup and MSNDAA.

She said Microsoft had developed a fully digital approach to learning within an interactive learning environment with cloud-based services, so that students could work efficiently from any location with a wireless Internet connection.

This means using the cloud to make it easier for students to both access and share the information they need with their peers and teachers via a three-screens concept, comprising PCs, internet browsers and mobile phones. Using any of these access points, students can obtain course materials and interact with teachers and classmates anywhere and anytime, she said. Course materials can also be downloaded with a teacher's personal guidelines for studying by themselves anytime they want.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/home/2010/05/13/technology/Learning-out-of-the-box-30129199.html

วันอังคารที่ 9 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

10 อันดับ Social Media ยอดนิยมในไทย


โดย : กรุงเทพธุรกิจออนไลน์

สิบอันดับสุดยอด Social Media ที่ได้รับความนิยมในประเทศไทย ประจำเดือนกุมภาพันธ์ 2010

1.Facebook (Social Network)
2.Youtube (Video Sharing)
3.Hi5 (Social Network)
4.Blogger (Blog)
5.Wikipedia (Wiki)
6.shared (File Sharing)
7.mediafire (File Sharing)
8.exteen (Blog)
9.bloggang (Blog)
10.multiply (Blog & Photo Sharing)


จากข้อมูลข้างต้น จะเห็นว่าคนไทยนิยมใช้ Social Network, Video Sharing, Blog, Wiki และ File Sharing เป็นส่วนใหญ่ โดยมีผู้ให้บริการ blog สัญชาติไทยอย่าง exteen และ bloggang สอดแทรกติด top 10 ได้ด้วย ต้องขอปรบมือให้ และถ้าใครแอบสงสัยว่า twitter อยู่อันดับเท่าไหร่ ขอแอบกระซิบเบา ๆ ว่า twitter ตามมาอยู่ที่อันดับ 11 เลยทำให้ตกชาร์ต top 10 ไปอย่างน่าเสียดาย แต่ก็ต้องจับตามองให้ใกล้ชิดเช่นเดียวกัน

ข้อมูลจาก Alexa

วันพุธที่ 27 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2553

New Study: Online Education up 17% to 4.6 Million

Annual Survey Shows Recession, Influenza among Factors Driving Growth

(Wellesley, MA) – The 2009 Sloan Survey of Online Learning reveals that enrollment rose by nearly 17 percent from a year earlier. The survey of more than 2,500 colleges and universities nationwide finds approximately 4.6 million students were enrolled in at least one online course in fall 2008, the most recent term for which figures are available.

“Online enrollments in U.S. higher education show no signs of slowing,” said study co-author Jeff Seaman, Co-Director of the Babson Survey Research Group at Babson College. “More than one out of four college and university students now take at least one course online.”

The seventh annual survey, a collaborative effort between the Babson Survey Research Group, the College Board and the Sloan Consortium, is the leading barometer of online learning in the United States. The complete survey report, “Learning on Demand: Online Education in the United States, 2009” is available on the Sloan Consortium Web site, www.sloanconsortium.org . The report includes a detailed analysis of the factors driving the growth in online education.

"Online education continues to establish itself as demand remains strong and new applications materialize, such as contingency planning for campus emergencies," said Frank Mayadas, special advisor, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. "We believe demand will fuel sustained growth especially within public universities and community colleges, raising the need to share research, optimal methods for faculty training, and other best practices to new levels of importance." The survey is funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

The Babson Survey Research Group in the Arthur M. Blank Center for Entrepreneurial Research at Babson College conducts regional, national, and international research projects, including survey design, sampling methodology, data integrity, statistical analyses and reporting.

The College Board is a not-for-profit membership association whose mission is to connect students to college success and opportunity. Founded in 1900, the association is composed of more than 5,700 schools, colleges, universities, and other educational organizations. The College Board is committed to the principles of excellence and equity, and that commitment is embodied in all of its programs, services, activities, and concerns. Visit www.collegeboard.org .

The Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C) is an institutional and professional leadership organization dedicated to integrating online education into the mainstream of higher education, helping institutions and individual educators improve the quality, scale, and breadth of online education. Sloan-C supports the collaborative sharing of knowledge and effective practices to improve online education in learning effectiveness, access, affordable for learners and providers, and student and faculty satisfaction.

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 12 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2552

Strong Faculty Engagement in Online Learning APLU Reports

by Sloan-C
News Type:Sloan-C News
Date:Aug 31 2009 - 10:00am

Unprecedented Study Offers Institutions Guidance for Continued Growth of Online Learning

August 31, 2009 – More than one-third of public university faculty have taught an online course while more than one-half have recommended an online course to students, according to an unprecedented study of administrative and faculty views toward online learning released today by the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities-Sloan National Commission on Online Learning.

In addition, nearly 64 percent of faculty said it takes “somewhat more” or “a lot more” effort to teach online compared to a face-to-face course. However, a large majority of faculty cited student needs as a primary motivator for teaching online, most commonly citing “meet student needs for flexible access” or the “best way to reach particular students” as the reason they choose to teach online courses.

The two-volume report, Online Learning as a Strategic Asset, contains the results of 231 interviews conducted with administrators, faculty, and students at 45 public institutions across the country and more than 10,700 responses from faculty across the spectrum of teaching positions – tenure/non-tenure track; full- and part-time; and both those who have and those who have not taught online. The report was underwritten by a grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

While faculty engagement in online learning is solid, faculty expressed dissatisfaction with the support services provided and the incentives offered by public universities. Faculty ranked seven of eight support dimensions as “below average,” including support for online course development, course delivery, and students; policies on intellectual property; recognition in tenure and promotion; and incentives for developing and delivering online courses. Only technology infrastructure was rated average. Faculty gave the lowest ranking to their institution’s incentives for developing and for delivering online courses.

“During the past decade, online learning has begun to weave into the fabric of higher education and has become the fastest growing segment,” said Peter McPherson, president of Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU). “All indications are that this growth will continue. The work of the APLU-Sloan Commission—through this in-depth study—will help inform higher education leaders trying to meet current demand for online learning while preparing for future growth.”

Online enrollment has more than doubled from an estimated 1.6 million students in fall 2002 to 3.94 million students in fall 2007 and grew by 12.9 percent from fall 2006 to fall 2007, according to the annual Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C) survey of online learning. The Commission believes the leadership of presidents and provosts is one of the key elements to successfully integrating online learning into every campus.

“We’re hopeful that the Benchmarking Study will provide fresh insights and guidance to campus leaders and senior administrators striving to establish, sustain and grow strategic online learning programs,” Jack M. Wilson, president of the University of Massachusetts and chair of the APLU-Sloan National Commission on Online Learning. “We also hope the observations will lead to an increase in the number of strategic online learning initiatives at public colleges and universities across the nation.”

The faculty survey data indicate growing acceptance of online learning among faculty but highlight a number challenges, including campus support services and faculty incentives.

“Faculty from across the university are participating, many feel the quality is as good as or better than face-to-face instruction, and an overwhelming majority have recommended online courses to students,” said Bruce R. Magid, dean of the International Business School at Brandies University, and co-chair, APLU-Sloan National Commission on Online Learning.

During the past two years, the Commission has been focused on encouraging higher education leaders to become more involved in online learning.

“Online education fundamentally rests on a firm foundation that includes robust growth, faculty engagement, student demand, and the recognition of quality,” said Frank Mayadas, program director at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. “Now the challenge is to engage more of the faculty to meet the continuing growth in demand for online learning opportunities.”

Volume I: A Resource for Campus Leaders outlines a set of key factors contributing to successful development and management of online learning programs, while Volume II: The Paradox of Faculty Voices: Views and Experiences with Online Learning, provides insight into faculty views, perceptions and behaviors relative to online learning.

A Campus Leader Resource

In Volume 1: A Resource for Campus Leaders, the Commission reports the results of 231interviews conducted with administrators, faculty, and students at 45 public institutions across the country. The observations include the following:

Online learning programs have the capacity to change campus culture and become fully integrated if presidents, chancellors, chief academic officers, and other senior campus leaders are fully engaged in the delivery of “messages” that tie online education to fundamental institutional missions and priorities.

Online learning programs may work most effectively as a core component of institutional strategic planning and implementation.

Online learning initiatives benefit from ongoing institutional assessment and review due to their evolving and dynamic nature.

Online learning activities are strengthened by the centralization of some organizational structures and administrative functions that support and sustain the programs.

Online learning programs overseen by academic affairs units may be more readily accepted and may be more easily integrated into the fabric of the institution.

Online learning programs need reliable financing mechanisms for sustainability and growth.

Online learning programs succeed with consistent and adequate academic, administrative, and technological resources for faculty and students.

The report also includes special sidebars on California State University, Fresno; Clemson University (SC); Tennessee State University; University of Central Florida; and University of Montana.

The Faculty Paradox

In Volume II: The Paradox of Faculty Voices: Views and Experiences with Online Learning, the Commission reports on the results of the Faculty Survey. Conducted in fall 2008 and winter 2009, the survey was sent to approximately 50,000 faculty members at 69 public institutions. More than 10,700 faculty responded including individuals across the spectrum of teaching positions – tenure/non-tenure track; full- and part-time; and both those who have and those who have not taught online.

Participating institutions included a range of missions and type, from research and doctoral-granting to master’s and associate degrees, and from land-grants to historically black colleges and universities and Hispanic serving institutions. All together, the campuses represented in the Faculty Survey account for the higher education of almost one million students nationwide and include approximately 100,000online course registrations.

The views of the faculty suggest that significant challenges must be resolved before online learning is universally accepted across the academy. However, the paradoxes evidenced by the survey results also suggest considerable opportunity for campus leaders to engage the faculty in constructive dialogue about the quality, support, and overall role of online at their respective institutions. Among the specific findings:

Who teaches online?

More than one-third (34.4 percent) of faculty have taught online. At the time of the survey, nearly one-quarter of all faculty responding (23.6 percent) were teaching at least one online course.

Online teaching experience is dispersed throughout the faculty with the most experienced faculty, those with more than 20 years of teaching experience, teaching online at rates equivalent to those with less teaching experience.

Current online courses are more likely to be taught by non-tenure track faculty (27.6percent) than tenured faculty (21.1 percent). However, overall tenure track faculty (36.1 percent) are more likely to have online teaching experience than non-tenured faculty (35.7 percent) or tenured faculty (32.6 percent).

Online course quality: Learning outcomes and course recommendations

Among faculty with online teaching or development experience a majority believe that the learning outcomes are as good as or better than face-to-face instruction.
What is the relative effort to develop or to teach an online course as measured against a comparable face-to-face course?

Nearly 64 percent of faculty said it takes “somewhat more” or “a lot more” effort to teach online compared to a face-to-face course.
The results for online course development are even more striking: More than 85 percent of the faculty with online course development experience said it takes “somewhat more” or “a lot more” effort.

What motivates faculty to teach online?

A large majority of survey participants cite student needs as a primary motivator for teaching online, most commonly citing “meet student needs for flexible access” or the “best way to reach particular students” as the reason they choose to teach online courses.

Faculty with more than 20 years of teaching experience are less likely to cite additional income or pedagogical advantages as motivations than are faculty with less teaching experience.

What barriers do faculty see to teaching online?

Faculty consistently rate the additional effort to develop and teach online courses as the greatest barrier to engaging in online learning.

Concerns about the acceptance of online education by potential employers are rare.
How good are campus support structures (in the eyes of the faculty)?

Faculty ranked seven of eight support dimensions as “below average,” including support for online course development, course delivery, and students; policies on intellectual property; recognition in tenure and promotion; and incentives for developing and delivering online courses. Only technology infrastructure was rated average.

Faculty give the lowest ranking to their institution’s incentives for developing and for delivering online courses.
Observations

Using the data, the Commission identified a number of key leadership and policy issues for campus presidents, chancellors and chief academic officers to consider, including:

Campus leaders need to better understand the characteristics of the online teaching populations on their campus and use communication strategies that target and engage all faculty members.

Campus leaders should maintain consistent communication with all faculty and administrators regarding the role and purpose of online learning programs as they relate to academic mission and academic quality. Further, campus leaders, administrators, and faculty must all work together to improve the quality – or perceived quality – of online learning outcomes.

Campus leaders have the potential to expand faculty engagement by better understanding what motivates faculty to teach online.

Campus leaders and faculty governing bodies need to regularly re-examine institutional policies regarding faculty incentives, especially in this era of declining financial resources. Perhaps most importantly, campus leaders need to identify strategies to acknowledge and recognize the additional time and effort faculty invest in online as compared to face-to-face teaching and learning.

The Commission recognizes that some of these observations and recommendations may appear rudimentary for some campuses, especially those institutions that are further along in implementing or supporting more “mature” online learning programs. However, the institutional participants and faculty respondents reported that many of these fundamental issues of structure, finance, and faculty support and engagement have resurfaced or emerged in new ways as programs have matured over the years.

To obtain a copy of Online Learning as a Strategic Asset, download the pdf files:

Volume I: A Resource for Campus Leaders
Volume II: The Paradox of Faculty Voices: Views and Experiences with Online Learning

Source: http://www.sloan-c.org/APLU_Reports

วันอังคารที่ 20 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2552

ELATEwiki: E-Learning and Teaching Exchange Wiki to Support Faculty Development

Author(s):Roger McHaney, Kansas State University
Institution(s) or Organization(s) Where EP Occured:Kansas State University

A small team at Kansas State University recently launched an e-learning and teaching exchange to enhance and support faculty development. This project was initially intended to serve the K-State community but has been broadened for use by all institutions of higher learning. This site is constructed using wiki technology, which permits access, multimedia expressiveness, remote collaboration, tracking, and reversibility of postings. Taken holistically, these attributes make a wiki approach ideal for sharing ideas and encouraging synergistic improvement of teaching practices. Articles posted on the wiki can include text, videos, images, and embedded Web applications and may be shared via RSS feeds. Other tools on the site are derived from MediaWiki and its open-source capabilities. The wiki includes an overall ontolDescription of the Effective Practice:

How this practice supports a primary pillar---access: ELATEwiki is intended to provide the means for members to post, share, enhance, and interact using a dynamic and evolving information exchange. The wiki approach facilitates rapid online communication and has already been used in a variety of ways. First, it allows expert teachers to share their knowledge in a fast and effective way. It allows these experts to correct and improve on ideas contributed by others. Second, novice teachers can use ELATEwiki to learn new techniques and explore ideas for improving their teaching. They can also contribute cutting-edge ideas and ensure new knowledge is made available to more established teachers. Third, ELATEwiki supports classroom access to material. Not only is the material on ELATEwiki available as a student resource, it can be used as a site for developing and posting student projects that are visible to the entire world. This sense of moving a project beyond the classroom and making it a valuable artifact tends to motivate performance and encourage collaboration between student team members, peers, experts outside the classroom, and teachers. And finally, ELATEwiki’s access feature ensures that meaningful and effective access will follow the student as they move from academic to professional life. ogy, templates, categories, seeded entries, input boxes, and menus that all ensure users can easily useEvidence of Effectiveness:

ELATEwiki was soft launched in March of 2009. In the first four months, the main page of the Website received over 15,000 visitors. The number of entries on ELATEwiki went from 0 to more than 150. Over 70 individuals registered as users. Currently, the wiki receives around 500 visitors a day.

Equipment necessary to implement Effective Practice:
Computer and Internet access. The project is complete and can be used by anyone at no cost.

Estimate the probable costs associated with this practice:
Learning curve time. Anyone can immediately use ELATEwiki to acquire information. Editing, contributing, and adding multimedia content will require about 1-3 hours of exploration and learning about MediaWiki and about features implemented on ELATEwiki.

Relation to other Pillars:

ELATEwiki relates well to the remaining four pillars. For instance, it promotes collaborative, active learning among students, faculty, and outside experts. A community of users is brought together using wiki technology over the Internet (Learning Effectiveness). ELATEwiki was developed with a budget of $900.00 and plenty of voluntary labor. K-State has demonstrated its institutional commitment by providing server space and donating other services (legal, hardware, software, and media coverage). Additionally, internal upper management support from the Provost’s office and distance learning administration provided visibility for the project (Cost-Effectiveness and Institutional Commitment). Faculty and student satisfaction are increasing through access to the tool and by providing a new means of interaction for the classroom setting and for exploration and research projects outside the classroom.

References, supporting documents:and join the community.

Benkler, Y. (2006/ 2007). The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Richardson, W. (2006). Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
Tapscott, D. & Williams, A.D. (2008). Wikinomics. New York: Penguin Group.
Useful Links:
ELATEwiki
MediaWiki.org
Wiki
Other Comments:
Shirky, C. (2008). Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing without Organizations. New York: Penguin Group.

Surowiecki, J. (2004/ 2005). The Wisdom of Crowds. New York: Random House.

Source: http://www.sloanconsortium.org/node/1864

วันศุกร์ที่ 4 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2552

บทคัดย่อผลงานวิจัย เรื่อง การจัดการเรียนการสอนออนไลน์ด้วยระบบ Open Source LMS ”ATutor” : กรณีศึกษาของมหาวิทยาลัยศรีนครินทรวิโรฒ

ผลงานวิจัย เรื่อง การจัดการเรียนการสอนออนไลน์ด้วยระบบ Open Source LMS ”ATutor” : กรณีศึกษาของมหาวิทยาลัยศรีนครินทรวิโรฒ โดย ผศ.ดร.สุณี รักษาเกียรติศักดิ์, ดร.ขนิษฐา รุจิโรจน์, อ.วราภรณ์ วิยานนท์, อ.สาโรช เมาลานนท์ ที่นำเสนอในการประชุมวิชาการวิจัยสถาบัน ประจำปี 2547 วันที่ 10 – 11 กันยายน 2547 ณ ศูนย์ประชุมสถาบันวิจัยจุฬาภรณ์ กรุงเทพมหานคร ดังนี้

บทคัดย่อ

ในปัจจุบันหน่วยงานการศึกษาได้ตื่นตัวกันเป็นอย่างมากในการใช้เทคโนโลยีสารสนเทศและการสื่อสารหรือไอซีที (ICT) ในการจัดการเรียนการสอนแบออนไลน์ หรือ e-learning ซึ่งเป็นยุทธศาสตร์หนึ่งของการพัฒนาองค์กรสู่สังคมฐานความรู้ ในการดำเนินการดังกล่าวจำเป็นอย่างยิ่งที่จะต้องหาระบบในการจัดการเรียนแบบออนไลน์ (Learning Management System หรือ LMS) มาใช้ ระบบเหล่านี้มีทั้งที่เป็นระบบเชิงพาณิชย์ที่ต้องเสียค่าบริการในการใช้งานรายปี และระบบแบบ Open source ซึ่งไม่มีค่าใช้จ่ายด้านซอฟต์แวร์ และหน่วยงานสามารถนำมาปรับแต่งให้เข้ากับสภาพแวดล้อมของหน่วยงานได้ มหาวิทยาลัยศรีนครินทรวิโรฒได้ทดลองปรับแต่งใช้ระบบ Open source LMS ชื่อ “ATutor” ของมหาวิทยาลัยโทรอนโท ประเทศแคนาดา (http://www.atutor.ca) ตั้งแต่ภาคการศึกษาที่ 1/2546 (มิถุนายน 2546) ใน version 1.1 และพบว่าเป็นระบบที่มีองค์ประกอบของระบบการจัดการเรียนการสอนออนไลน์ที่ครบถ้วน ติดตั้งง่าย ใช้งานง่าย และมีความเชื่อถือได้สูง ระบบได้มีการพัฒนาอย่างต่อเนื่องและรวดเร็ว โดยในปัจจุบัน (สิงหาคม 2547) ระบบ ATutor ได้เผยแพร่ให้สาธารณชนได้ใช้ใน version 1.4.1 แล้ว และมหาวิทยาลัยศรีนครินทรวิโรฒได้ปรับเปลี่ยนระบบเป็น version 1.4.1 ในภาคการศึกษาที่ 1/2547 นอกจากนั้นแล้วมหาวิทยาลัยศรีนครินทรวิโรฒยังได้ดำเนินการวิจัยและพัฒนาปรับแต่งการใช้งานเพิ่มเติม เช่น การเชื่อมต่อระบบ ATutor กับฐานข้อมูลของมหาวิทยาลัย การพัฒนาระบบการวิเคราะห์ข้อสอบใน ATutor เป็นต้น ตลอดจนการจัดทำเอกสารประกอบการใช้งานและเอกสารประกอบการอบรม และการเขียนบทความวิชาการเพื่อเป็นแรงกระตุ้นอย่างต่อเนื่อง อีกทั้งยังได้ดำเนินการถ่ายทอดและแลกเปลี่ยนประสบการณ์ในการใช้งาน เพื่อสร้างเครือข่ายการใช้งานร่วมกันระหว่างหน่วยงานการศึกษาในประเทศไทยให้เป็นอีกทางเลือกหนึ่งของการใช้ระบบ LMS แบบ Open Source ที่ไม่มีค่าใช้จ่ายด้านซอฟต์แวร์ ได้จัดโครงการสัมมนาปฏิบัติการขึ้นครั้งแรกในวันที่ 24-25 มกราคม 2547 โดยจัด 2 หลักสูตรพร้อมกัน คือ หลักสูตร 1: การใช้ระบบ ATutor สำหรับอาจารย์ผู้ใช้ระบบ และ หลักสูตร 2: การติดตั้งและดูแลระบบ ATutor สำหรับผู้ติดตั้งดูแลระบบ รับหลักสูตรละ 30 คน จัดรุ่นที่ 2 ในวันที่ 1–2 เมษายน 2547 และรุ่นที่ 3 ในวันที่ 10-11 กรกฎาคม 2547 โดยในรุ่นที่ 3 มีการเพิ่มหลักสูตร 3: การปรับแต่งระบบ ATutor ด้วย PHP และ MySQL สำหรับผู้ที่ผ่านหลักสูตร 1 หรือหลักสูตร 2 มาแล้ว และจัดต่อเนื่องในวันที่ 12-14 กรกฎาคม 2547 ในการจัดในรุ่นที่ 2 และรุ่นที่ 3 มีผู้สมัครเข้าร่วมโครงการเกินกว่าจำนวนที่จะรับได้ มีผู้เข้าร่วมโครงการทั้งสิ้นในการจัดทั้ง 3 ครั้ง จำนวน 248 คน จากหน่วยงานการศึกษาทั้งสิ้น 100 หน่วยงานทั่วประเทศ หลายหน่วยงานได้มีการติดตั้งระบบ ATutor ในหน่วยงานและมีการอบรมบุคลากรในหน่วยงานแล้ว หลายหน่วยงานอยู่ในระหว่างการเตรียมการเนื่องด้วยต้องรองบประมาณในปีถัดไป คาดว่าในปีงบประมาณ 2548 จะมีหน่วยงานที่ผ่านการอบรมดำเนินการติดตั้งและใช้งานระบบ ATutor กันมากขึ้น แต่อย่างไรก็ดีการเติบโตที่ยั่งยืนต้องอาศัยนโยบายและวิสัยทัศน์ของผู้บริหารหน่วยงานอย่างมากที่จะเป็นผู้ผลักดันให้การดำเนินงานบรรลุเป้าหมาย