OpenScholar – A Tool for Building Staff and project websites

Blackboard is a great tool for building course web sites. The Content Management System (CMS) used by the web office and various departments on campus is a reasonable content management system that Colleges, Schools and Departments can use (with training) to build decent Departmental teaching and Research Group showcase sites. But what if you’re a member of staff, or a postgraduate student and you want to make a shop window for yourself or your latest project? Blackboard’s not designed for that, the CMS is too unwieldy and the WordPress multi-user blogging platform isn’t specific enough.

OpenScholar – a new tool that has been developed at Harvard University – may be the missing link. Built on Drupal, OpenScholar is an open-source content management system, aimed at academics, which attempts to make it easy to create a personal or a project web site with the minimum of fuss. It provides particularly strong support for bibliography creation and leverages Drupal’s first-class content creation, content aggregation and community building tools.
The home page of the Scholars at Harvard site (itself powered by OpenScholar) provides a compelling demonstration of OpenScholar’s features as well as a shop window of the kinds of sites that can be created. The software itself can be downloaded and installed in a few minutes by anyone with access to an Apache web server and MySQL database (that’s all Mac users and any Windows machine with WampServer or similar installed). Perhaps we can ask one of the Learning Support team to give us access to a trial version!
I am grateful to Eric Durbrow at the The Efficient Academic Google Group who drew my attention to one of several articles introducing OpenScholar that have been published recently. I would also like to acknowledge the fact that David M. Berry posted a note about OpenScholar on Yammer four days ago.

5 Comments

  1. This looks an attractive way to build a dynamic site. I agree with Chris – please can we try this?
    David

  2. David, As a skunk works action, I can install it on the new Peer Support server (when it arrives) if necessary!

  3. We could run a test in LIS. There might be a preference there for Sharepoint though I'm afraid.

  4. Chris,

    Sharepoint is an office collaboration tool not a place to put your personal teaching or research profile. The whole point of OpenScholar, at least from my point of view, is it provides just enough functionality that the average technophobic lecturer can use it and enough useful functionality to ensure that they will.

    And if it can be linked to features such as Annual Professional Review, Stats Gathering for REF or whatever, so much the better.

    Of course, success is no guarantee of continued support! But at least a Drupal site and database is portable, so if the plug was pulled, we could route around it!

  5. "Sharepoint is an office collaboration tool not a place to put your personal teaching or research profile."

    I agree completely, just a heads up that others may not 🙁

    I'll have a word though.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.