Blackboard Validates Mozilla Digital Badges

Mozilla's Open Badges initiative has received the official nod from educational technology company Blackboard, which has integrated digital badges into its learning management systems Blackboard Learn and CourseSites. The Achievements tool, as Blackboard calls the new functionality, allows educators and students to issue and receive virtual badges that represent an achievement. At the same time, both organizations have announced its participation in a massive open online course (MOOC) on the topic of digital badges.

Non-profit Mozilla's Open Badges infrastructure has several components:

  • A coding standard that makes badges interoperable;
  • A framework for building badge repositories;
  • A "backpack" that serves as a user repository for storing earned badges; and
  • A set of application programming interfaces for creating badges that are portable and verifiable.

The Blackboard integration will allow instructors to issue badges and digital certificates for course completion, milestones, and custom performance metrics, according to an explanatory video. The teacher can tie badge issuance to specific student performance metrics, such as completion of a set number of assignments in the course and a final grade of a certain percent.

Students are notified within the course site and in MyBlackboard when they've earned a badge or certificate. From within the course, they can also see what they've already earned and view the progress they've made toward an unearned achievement. The achievements can be published to the Mozilla backpack. The interoperable nature of Mozilla's badge standards also allows students to add badges to social networking profiles, Web sites, and online job applications.

"There is huge interest in finding new ways to measure and certify learning and mastery of concepts," said Jessica Finnefrock, senior vice president of Learn products at Blackboard. "We want to give educators and students high quality options to experiment with badging and credentialing, and by working with Mozilla we're doing it in a way that helps them measure competency and share achievements not just in their online courses but across the Web."

Starting on September 9, 2013, representatives from Mozilla, Blackboard, the WICHE Cooperative for Educational Technologies (WCET) and education service provider Sage Road Solutions will participate in a six-week MOOC titled, "Badges: New Currency for Professional Credentials." The course will explore the use of badges as evidence to show learning inside and outside the classroom to give a "more complete picture of knowledge, skills, and abilities."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • blue AI cloud connected to circuit lines, a server stack, and a shield with a padlock icon

    Report: AI Security Controls Lag Behind Adoption of AI Cloud Services

    According to a recent report from cybersecurity firm Wiz, nearly nine out of 10 organizations are already using AI services in the cloud — but fewer than one in seven have implemented AI-specific security controls.

  • stacks of glowing digital documents with circuit patterns and data streams

    Mistral AI Intros Advanced AI-Powered OCR

    French AI startup Mistral AI has announced Mistral OCR, an advanced optical character recognition (OCR) API designed to convert printed and scanned documents into digital files with "unprecedented accuracy."

  • robot waving

    Copilot Updates Aim to Personalize AI

    Microsoft has introduced a range of updates to its Copilot platform, marking a new phase in its effort to deliver what it calls a "true AI companion" that adapts to individual users' needs, preferences and routines.

  • teenager interacts with a chatbot on a computer screen

    Character.AI Rolls Out New Parental Insights Feature Amid Safety Concerns

    Chatbot platform Character.AI has introduced a new Parental Insights feature aimed at giving parents a window into their children's activity on the platform. The feature allows users under 18 to share a weekly report of their chatbot interactions directly with a parent's e-mail address.