I was lucky enough to go to Berlin for the DC2008 Dublin Core Metadata Initiative conference. My reasons for going were two-fold: firstly we were presenting a poster, about which John has written; secondly there were some workshop sessions related to education metadata.
DC-Ed application profile
On Tuesday afternoon, Sarah Currier led a DC education application profile task group meeting. You may know that this task group is drafting an “application profile module” for describing educational properties in Dublin Core resource descriptions. And the key thing here is that it is only the educational properties that are in scope for this profile, not everything that you need to know about a resource to use it in teaching and learning, not things like license details, accessibility details, title or location, just the education-specific properties. The aim is that the application profile module will specify how to describe these properties in such a way that can be “plugged into” DC descriptions built from terms that are generic or that are specific to other domains, to give you a full description of everything you need to know.
The group is basing its methodology on the Singapore Framework for DC application profiles, which calls for (among other things) functional requirements, a domain model, and a description set profile. Sarah presented a summary of the requirements that have been extracted from the use cases and scenarios that have been collected, and related these to a domain model. (Lorna and I have been discussing this with Sarah to make sure that she gets to benefit from the LMAP work we’ve been doing–more on that soon). It turns out that the educational properties that need to be described are frequently not properties of the resource per se but rather of the audience it is put before and the topic being studied.
Help needed
That’s all good progress, but there’s loads more work to do in agreeing the details of what property goes with which entity in the model to best fulfill the requirements, and then there’ll be some work on the description set profile. And there weren’t that many people in the room, none of them with much time to spend on this work. So there’s a real need for more people to help. It’s an open group, if you have resources to put into metadata for education you could do a lot worse than putting them into this work. The contact details for Sarah and her co-moderator, Diane Hillman, are on the DC Education Community page.
DCMI IEEE LTSC Taskforce
On the Wednesday there was a working group meeting lead by Mikael Nilsson about the work of the joint DCMI and IEEE LTSC taskforce which aims to recast elements from the IEEE LOM in a form that is consistent with the Dublin Core Abstract Model. This work has been on hold pending the drafting and approval of formal project authorization requests for the IEEE and some updates to the DC abstract model. Those pieces are now in place, and Mikael and Pete Johnston have been making progress on the actual work of recasting the LOM elements into a flat entity-relation model, dealling with issues such as how many namespaces the LOM element set and vocabularies require, what should be the URI convention and so on. The work covered by the IEEE PARs will be to create a standard for an RDF vocabulary for LOM elements and recommended practice for expressing LOM instances as Dublin Core descriptions. Extra outputs of the task group, not quite covered by these PARs but closely related could include a DC Application Profile for the LOM, i.e. a DC description set profile relating to the second PAR, and a GRDDL transform from LOM in XML to DC LOM application profile in RDF.
FYI: DCMI = Dublin Core Metadata Initiative; IEEE LTSC = Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Learning Technology Standards Committee; IEEE LOM = IEEE 1484.12.1 – 2002 Standard for Learning Object Metadata.
Bringing it together
There is obvious overlap between the DC-Ed application profile and the DCMI/IEEE LTSC LOM work, the differences are that the former is looking anew at what is needed to describe educational resources, the latter is a straight translation of what exists outside of the DC sphere. Another initiative outside of the DC sphere which got some discussion time in the task force meeting is the work at ISO/IEC SC36 on Metadata for Learning Resources (MLR). The hope expressed in the meeting was that the framework for ISO MLR would be defined in such a way as to maximize its compatibility with current efforts in Dublin Core: the current draft of ISO MLR doesn’t do that, it remains to be seen how much effort will be required to re-align it.
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