Which tools to use and why?

For most things you want to do on the Web there is usually a choice of tools available. You may need to select the best one(s) to suit your situation.

If you work for one organisation, chances are they'll already have a bank of tools for you to use. If you work across organisations, you may wish to use whatever tools the organisations have in place and then supplement them with your own. Or, if you prefer, you can pick some tools that work well for you and encourage others to use them too!

Popular tools

Some tools are popular and commonly used time and again. Depending on the situation they include:

Now, the tools evaluated ..

Anecdotal evidence suggests that people who work electronically choose their tools according to personal preference and what works in a given context. The following information and linked pages describe a range of commonly used tools. Each summary includes:

Not all of the noted tools are free or open source (yet!). For a quick reference guide to free and open source educational software, click to view Marty Cielens’ great list of Open Source tools for training and business.

Email i.e sending and receiving of messages electronically.

Discussion Boards

Discussion boards provide a space where people can post messages and respond to what others have posted. They can be publicly available but in the education context many are private and specific to a group in a learning situation. These often require a login and password to access and post messages (as do some publicly available ones).

Discussion boards or forums tend to come as part of a package rather than as standalone beasts. For example, Pelion's website which uses Moodle, has a number of discussion boards as well as chat, links to other sites, resources etc. Other sites, like Yahoo, provide discussion boards which can be set up as list-servs (like group email but you don’t have to remember to press ‘Reply all’ as everyone on the list automatically gets all responses), calendar, photos, database, chat, links, polls –you name it and they probably have it (or will have tomorrow). There are so many options that knowing what you want to do, or use the tool for, becomes critical.

Other e-learning technologies

Surveys, Quizzes and Crossword Generators

Instant Messaging

Voice Over the Internet Protocol (VOIP)

Short Message Service (SMS)

Mind or Concept Mapping

Blogging

Learning Management Systems (LMS)

Content Management Systems (CMS)