Abstract

Abstract. There does already exist a wide variety of tutorials and on-line courses on Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing very often used in academia. Many of them are still rather static and tedious or target high-knowledge learners. E-learning is, however, increasingly applied by many organizations and companies for life-long learning (like e.g. the EduServ courses of EuroSDR), but also for training of resellers and in order to save the expenses and time of travelling. A new issue of this project when taking into account the ethnic mentality in some countries like Saudi Arabia where it is impossible to mix the females and males at any institution type or for instance to teach ladies by a male teacher face to face, many academic workshops have been done separately twice by foreign organizations to adapt this situation. This paper will focus on these issues and present experiences gathered from a Master Thesis on "E-learning in Digital Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing for Non Experts using Moodle" at HFT Stuttgart in co-operation with a software vendor and a reseller and experiences from a current European Tempus IV project GIDEC (Geographic information technology for sustainable development in Eastern neighouring countries). The aim of this research is to provide an overview on available methods and tools and classify and judge their feasibility for the above mentioned scenarios. A more detailed description is given on the development of e-learning applications for Digital Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing using the open source package Moodle as platform. A first item covers the experiences from setting up and handling of Moodle for non-experts. The major emphasis is then on developing and analyzing some few case studies for lectures, exercises, and software training in the fields of Digital Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Feedback from students and company staff will be evaluated and incorporated in an improved design and sample implementation. A further focus is on free software and tools to allow an easy integration of dedicated methods as audio and video flashes, quizzes for self evaluation, dynamic training, web-conference, etc. into the e-learning platform. The overall objective is to evaluate on how far it is currently possibly to allow the non-experts from academic and non academic sectors to get the initial experience and knowledge in Digital Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing in a modern, flexible and economic way. The time and the skills required for developing web-based materials will thus be investigated in more detail. Additionally, the quality of the developed e-learning application will be assessed based on a list of quality criteria developed.

Highlights

  • In the last decades e-Learning has become an essential part at all education levels for institutions and companies with partly quite different needs

  • There does already exist a wide variety of tutorials and on-line courses on Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing very often used in academia

  • This paper will focus on these issues and present experiences gathered from a Master Thesis on “E-learning in Digital Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing for Non Experts using Moodle” at HFT Stuttgart in co-operation with a software vendor and a reseller and experiences from a current European Tempus IV project GIDEC (Geographic information technology for sustainable development in Eastern neighouring countries)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the last decades e-Learning has become an essential part at all education levels for institutions and companies with partly quite different needs. The need to manage content and users at institutions led to the development of Learning Management Systems (LMS) either commercial or open source. There are already more than 250 providers of commercial LMS and over 40 open source LMS such like Moodle and are likely to gain a foothold in higher education sector (Carabaneanu, et al, 2006). Many organizations use it for lifelong learning (e.g. the EduServ courses offered by EuroSDR (European Spatial Data Research, EuroSDR, 2012). It is being observed, that most teaching personnel lacks extended programming skills to create learning materials that grab learners’ interest and encourage them for further study.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call