About Elluminate
Rather than trying to fit this into a series of Twitters, here are a few off-the-top notes about Elluminate (and other synchronous online classroom tools) based on my experience with them.
We (at the University of Alaska) chose Elluminate as our statewide application only after a long and voluminous evaluation of what was out there and pilots and small-scale use of two major competitors (Macromedia Breeze/Adobe Connect and Horizon Live).
Our number one concern was that we wanted an application that worked well over low-bandwidth connections, including satellite latency– many of our students are in remote Alaskan locations with consumer satellite or distributed satellite connections. In this respect, although Adobe Connects asynchronous tools were attractive, and had a following, it simply could not compete. Elluminate Live is front-heavy (the initial download of the Java application the first time a user connects to a server, but only the first time) is quite large (in some areas we distribute the client on CD) but the stability and ability to deal with low-quality connections is unequalled. To my knowledge no other platform has the same kind of caching/store and forward ability that Elluminate does.
A few other features that tended to be lacking in other competitors:
- authentication through Blackboard is possible (but NOT required– perhaps 30% of our users come through Bb, 40% through another proprietary system, and 30% at large)
- structured recordings available through a single URL (from the recordings link students can browse the calendar to replay sessions), ability to handle 50+ users (obviously, classes are not typically that large… but for us, other uses of Elluminate have been key to getting reluctant users in– we’ve had working groups of 50-75 admin/staff/faculty before, and presentations and guest presentations can reach over 100)
- Presence indicators — the ability to “see” more of what is happening in the classroom. Not just emoticons and hand-raising, but the halos that show who is typing in the chat, who is loading images, etc. makes time management and understanding of the class activities *much* easier
- Granular control of tools– there are times when it is very useful to be able to control what tools are available… not just for control, but because instructors can streamline and not be distracted with tools they won’t be paying attention to
- Breakout rooms and multiple moderators– our philosophy is all about getting students to “do” and instructors to lecture less… the ability to use breakout rooms with multiple “moderators” in each room and easily move students and/or material back and forth is a key to facilitating student activities
- Half-duplex audio– although Elluminate can be set to allow up to four people to talk at once, the vast majority of our instructors prefer the single-speaker model, where one person at a time “has the floor,” and they leave it that way even now
- Instant polling tools, which make it easy to “sense” the room and be more flexible and spontaneous when teaching.
That’s some of the good stuff that separated Elluminate (at the time) from others. Some of the more touted Elluminate features for education, particularly video and the quiz tools, see almost no use at all. Part of that is philosophical– as an organization we don’t really believe that the video capability available in these applications (even with good connections) adds significantly to courses; part is operational– the quiz tool is simply clunky and it’s just easier to use other tools.
Support has generally been quite good– the biggest issues almost always involve lack of Java on student computers and/or lack of privileges to allow the Elluminate system to install it if it isn’t– but support is still needed!
And Elluminate is expensive. They do offer steep discounts (we run Elluminate on our own servers, I assume they are flexible in their hosted offerings as well), but it isn’t free. However, as much as I gravitate towards free and small tools to fill needs (the personal living network), this is an area where we really felt that paying for a commercial system provided significant advantages.
In my opinion, playing the part of Captain Obvious, it depends on an organization’s needs. Is the sync classroom service mission critical and aimed at significant adoption or is it an ancillary tool or is it just another arrow in the quiver? Will the system also be used to serve internal, admin, staff, or external presentation needs, where large populations of users need to be accommodated?
The real issue with any of these tools isn’t finding one that works, it is learning– and then teaching colleagues– how to teach in a way that takes advantage of the capabilities and doesn’t merely replicate the lecture mode in a distributed format. That’s deadly. As I always say, the only thing more deadly than the PowerPoint drone and lecture model is that same model through a mediating tool like Elluminate…

January 8th, 2008 at 12:28 am
[...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]
January 8th, 2008 at 6:06 am
Wow! Thank you so much for posting this timely evaluation.
January 8th, 2008 at 8:39 am
Elluminate generally seems to be very well received by distance students who find it much more congenial than audioconferences for classes. My only concern about the program is that it (like Blackboard) promotes traditional models of classroom interaction–raise you hand to speak, watch this PowerPoint presentation, etc.–when we should probably be looking toward more engaging models. Still, it’s the best tool we have at this point.
January 8th, 2008 at 9:10 am
I agree that avoiding replication of _ineffective_ lecture modes is indeed important; however, always the devil’s advocate (well, at least 50% of the time), have to ask, first, if this is a blanket condemnation of the lecture mode regardless of delivery method, or if the technology itself interferes with, disturbs, or detracts from the traditional lecture (which may in a classroom actually be effective).
Anyway, your comments prompted me to muse about the effectiveness of lecture mode in general, with some references back to the deadliness of us of technology to deliver that lecture that you mention: How Does Video-Conferencing Affect a Straight Lecture?
Oh, and I took note how you started your post with “Rather than trying to fit this into a series of Twitters…” suggesting that Twitter’ing this up was your first instinct, reinforcing the idea that blogging has in fact been diminished by Twitter!
January 8th, 2008 at 5:52 pm
That last paragraph is one interpretation of the fact… but the more accurate one (in my biased opinion) is that the conversation was started– by someone else– in Twitter and I prefer to blog my lengthy responses rather than flood Twitter
I don’t really think that Twittering has diminished blogging in a qualitative sense, only in the quantitative sense due to thoughts that really didn’t fit well no longer being shoe-horned into the blog format.
But, hey– I’m well known for my incredible optimism!
January 9th, 2008 at 10:41 am
Hear, hear. “Shoe-horned into the blog format” is an excellent description, and one reason why Twitter is so appealing to me. I /want/ to record my thoughts and events, but making a blog entry /feels/ like it should be more fully constructed, edited, and reflected on.
January 9th, 2008 at 10:56 am
Hey Chris. You did a great job of summarizing the good and not so good aspects of the synchronous systems and how Elluminate is a good choice. Some colleagues and I recently publish and article comparing Elluminate and Adobe Connect that may interest you http://jolt.merlot.org/vol3no4/hilbelink.htm After this was published, I was approached by someone about the tool WiZiQ http://www.wiziq.com. Have you heard much about this one yet? Just curious if you have you tried it. I have not had a chance to take a look yet, but as you know I am always on the look out for both cheaper and better! – Shauna
January 9th, 2008 at 11:08 am
Hi Shauna! We miss you in the frozen north
I’m sharing the link to your paper with some friends right now.
Ironically, it was a Twitter discussion that included WizIQ as an option that prompted me to make the post– it was just too much to fit into Twitter. Here’s the post with some pointers to a few things about WizIQ that are “missing”:
http://twitter.com/fncll/statuses/574692502
Performance has also been a bit of an issue, but I don’t know for sure if that was just a local issue.
The alternatives are coming on strong… most are not there yet for reliable, systemic us (imo).
February 25th, 2008 at 4:27 pm
Watching satellite TV on your PC…
Here’s a new technology that might threaten the market position of satellite TV or cable TV services – Satellite TV on PC….
April 17th, 2008 at 9:24 am
[...] Lott, commenting on his institution’s acquisition of Elluminate video-conferencing platform as a tea… concludes, The real issue with any of these tools isn’t finding one that works, it is learning– [...]
May 20th, 2008 at 3:23 pm
Hi
Does anybody know anything about webex , how does it compare to elluminate