Tucked away in the corner of a Thursday evening poster session was my pick for Educause 2007’s coolest session of the week, Lafayette College’s use of the content management system Drupal for:

two highly flexible and distinctly different online spaces: a departmental Web site full of easily edited and highly searchable documentation, current news, and dynamic RSS feeds, and a campus-wide community space where blogging, photo sharing, podcasting, and class discussions coexist.

Very cool! The poster, From Blogs to Brawn: Deploying Flexible Web Applications, was presented by Courtney Bentley, Instructional Technology Program Coordinator at Lafayette College.

soapbox.pngThe community space side of the equation, which Lafayette calls Soapbox 2.0, puts Drupal’s blogging, polling, and photosharing modules to work for students, faculty, and staff. Their use of the Organic Groups module makes it easy for any registered user to create a group, whether it be for a student initiated class study group, an instructor led class blog, a student sporting group, or an administrative unit looking for collaborative project space.

This flexible, user driven collaborative space is a great model to follow as we look to building our own collaborative spaces.

To get a sense of how it is working at Lafayette, be sure to check out their Hall of Fame page with stats on the Soapbox’s first year: http://ww2.lafayette.edu/~soapbox/hof/

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4 Responses to “Lafayette College is impressive on the Soapbox”

  1.   Dan L Says:

    I found this after you forwarded me the info about the Gleason Library - also very interesting! However, I wanted to comment specifically on this post because I know Cid is talking about working on something very similar for UW-Madison/AT. It’s exciting to see that someone else has already done this successfully!

  2.   doug Says:

    Hi Dan - We’ve got a few similar projects in the mix here at LSS as well! Let me know if you’d like to collaborate!

  3.   Jeff B Says:

    Keep me in the loop too. I’d like to keep exploring the potential for L@UW-related spaces…instructor-based social areas or student learning spaces. I really like the sound of the organic groups concept, especially for study groups.

  4.   doug Says:

    Will do, Jeff! Thanks for the comment.

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