Brant,
Very clear. But a couple of notes:
Regarding educaitonalAlignment’s TargetName, in this case I would suggest using the alpha-numeric code and/or GUID provided buy the CCSSO/NGA Center in the name. In this case I suppose that is “CCSS.Math.Content.3.NTB.A.1” or something like that.
Greg,
This is where the proposed educationalAuthority as an organization entity -> http://schema.org/Organization is still needed in the spec as an attribute of the educaitonalAlignment or perhaps the educaitonalFramework. I had thought you added it. This would add CCSSO/NGA center to the alignment and together the TargetName/GUID is sufficient to match the aligned skill even if the TargetURL is not from the CCSSO but rat the equivalent URL form AB (http://www.academicbenchmarks.org/search/?standard_id=20962&topic_id=2225022) , ASN (http://asn.jesandco.org/resources/S1143480) or any other look-up reference hosted by some system for the Common Core.
Joshua Marks
CTO
Curriki: The Global Education and Learning Community
I welcome you to become a member of the Curriki community, to follow us on Twitter and to say hello on our blog, Facebook and LinkedIn communities.
This is where the proposed educationalAuthority as an organization entity -> http://schema.org/Organization is still needed in the spec as an attribute of the educaitonalAlignment or perhaps the educaitonalFramework. I had thought you added it. This would add CCSSO/NGA center to the alignment and together the TargetName/GUID is sufficient to match the aligned skill even if the TargetURL is not from the CCSSO but rat the equivalent URL form AB (http://www.academicbenchmarks.org/search/?standard_id=20962&topic_id=2225022) , ASN (http://asn.jesandco.org/resources/S1143480) or any other look-up reference hosted by some system for the Common Core.
Stuart,
I think we are in agreement, _somewhat_. The educationaAuthority for the framework should be CCSSO/NGA Center for the CCSS framework, regardless of the URL provider for that framework. Jurisdiction might be an more descriptive name then educationalAuthority. Or perhaps even more accurate for this use is something like frameworkAuthority or frameworkPublisher as an Organization. CCSSO does not really fit your definition of jurisdiction, does it? The adopters of the standard are the jurisdiction, which are the states and districts applying the CCSS. Hmmm.
Joshua Marks
CTO
Curriki: The Global Education and Learning Community
I welcome you to become a member of the Curriki community, to follow us on Twitter and to say hello on our blog, Facebook and LinkedIn communities.
From: lr...@googlegroups.com [mailto:lr...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stuart Sutton
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2012 11:59 AM
To: lr...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Adding tags from another ontology
On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 11:03 AM, Joshua Marks <jma...@curriki.org> wrote:
The collective effort of every publisher adding tags for framework, framework ownership, competency to comprtency relationships, etc. on every tagged resource is huge compared to the limited number of framework promulgators adopting a common markup, and adding a few tags to existing data driven pages that use info already in their database.
So I will reassert that it would be best to promote a standard markup and vocabulary for the aligned thing in an educatonFramework (tags within the targetUrl page). Joshua, I understand that this is beyond LRMI but the strategy has advantages for LRMI stakeholders, it lessens the burden on publishers, more consistent results for consumers, lets standards 'promulgators' do what they do.
...to Greg's point schema.org already has a way of dealing with external enumerations like LCC and language codes...and ownership, etc. so it may not be a matter of inventing any new terms, just a matter of establishing the convention of what to expect for the markup on the page that a targetUrl points to when it is to an item in an educational framework.
In answer to Brandt’s question about other taxonomies….. LCSH was the most highly emphasized taxonomy, of course. This is a pretty good summary of our world of taxonomies: http://www.slideserve.com/anila/knowledge-organization-library-tools-and-taxonomies-for-the-web
I'm the subject specialist for our Business & Education programs, which is where classification can start to diverge. Discipline librarians focus on specialized information exchange systems like SIC, NAICS, etc. There are individual educational taxonomies from researchers like Patricia Alexandria, but you’ve probably already taken those into consideration.
The most frequent education-oriented taxonomy that I use is ERIC subject headings. But any subject heading classification can be notoriously out of date at times. I might be forgetting an obvious classification system, though. I'll noodle it over!
Another thing to consider is that library science cataloging coursework is changing all the time. I was in courses in 2004, which is practically eons ago, from a web cataloging standpoint. Here is an example of what’s being taught these days:
...we use terms that describe more complex relationships (ASN has adopted such a vocabulary) such as exact match vs part of vs 'same concept at a lower developmental level', that may go beyond your concern, but we can say something about threlationship between e.g. "Use place value understanding to round whole numbers to the nearest 10." Compared to "Use place value understanding to round whole numbers to the nearest 10 or 100."
Should the framework, authority and other important attributes all be in the alignment object or should it be discoverable from the targetUrl? It is much easier for publishers of learning resources to tag content with targetUrl and trust ASN, AB, corestandads sites to have the other important information such as ownership/publisher/authority of the framework and relationship of the learning standard item to others in the framework, e.g. "This competency is a child of ...targetUrl". ...and it avoids data quality issues such as one tagger saying the related competency is part of the "ccss" framework and another saying it is part of "common core state standards for mathematics"
Brandt,
I certainly share your concern. However that does not mitigate the fact that there are already multiple data look-up representations for the common core that exist, and are being used by different groups and orgs. To complicate this further, granular decomposition of the lowest level skills in the common core seems to be needed and re-sequencing and organization is in play as well at the state level and within the assessment consortia. But you would have better visibility to this then I. This is why the GIM-CCSS initiative is so important, to avoid the potential fragmentation of the core. None the less, I see no way around the fact that there will be multiple data sources for the CommonCore standard used by system vendors and publishers right now. They ALL should provide and reference the canonical (unique) URI from the CCSSO or some GIM-CCSS related service if one is defined. How this will express the further granular decomposition and alignment is completely unknown at this time and the goal of the GIM-CCSS initiative as I see it.
Joshua Marks
CTO
Curriki: The Global Education and Learning Community
I welcome you to become a member of the Curriki community, to follow us on Twitter and to say hello on our blog, Facebook and LinkedIn communities.
I think the inter-framework relationship stuff is what Jim is pointing to.
Joshua Marks
CTO
Curriki: The Global Education and Learning Community
US 831-685-3511
Good point! I agree with your description of the problem.I've been thinking about how to use the Learning Registry for this sort of thing. You could post records that say something like "ABC is equivalent to XYZ" where ABC and XYZ are URLs. Other relationships might be "is a superset of" and "is a subset of". The latter two relationships would be valuable for the GIM-CCSS project. By using the Learning Registry, the data would be available to all vendors -- either to support automatic retagging or on-the-fly translation.Of course, someone would have to define the schema for these records as the Learning Registry only manages the transport. I believe that the ASN folks are planning to do something like this.