From EduTechWiki - Reading time: 12 min
Blackboard Vista is a commercial learning management system (LMS). Blackboard Inc. sells several products. A first LMS, branded "Blackboard", was (probably) available in 1997. This entry describes Blackboard Vista (2008), i.e. just one of Blackboard's products. It is derived from WebCT VISTA, if we understand right. WebCT was one of the first LMSs adopted by higher education.
This entry describes a few features of this LMS, provides some hints and includes some discussion.
Course designers, teachers and students can use different tool sets available through different views. A course designer/teacher has access to all three views. Here is a short overview:
Below is a screenshot that shows the three views (tabs on to left), the course and designer tools menu and the workarea to the right.

In some institutions, teachers may only have access to the "teach view". I.e. these teachers are more like tutors in the sense that they use Vista to manage a class, but they can't change the design of course (sequences or resources).
Finally, each user has a "My Blackboard" page.
To design a course, you basically define activities that learners should do over time using different resources (contents and tools).
Let's first look at the palette of available resources. Both tools and contents are available through the course tools menu.
In Vista speak, course tools refer to all tools that will be used by learners. Course designers have to select and configure tools, add contents and maybe "arrange" (i.e. sequence) learner activities.
A course is arranged around Course Content (first item in course tools) or around Learning Modules or simply around the Course tools menu that provides direct access to all tool sets. Course tools refer a set of tools we shall outline below. They are available to designer, instructor and student (although in different ways).
Items of the course tools menu can be hidden from students. You may link to some tool (or rather instances of these tools) from various places. E.g. from a course content folder you may link to a specific forum.
There exist four families of course tools:
Depending on how permissions are set up, you can configure most of these course tools. "Build view" gives more options than "Teach View". There are 2 configuration opportunities:
A note on terminology: WebCT sometimes uses a somewhat strange terminology and that may be a bit confusing. E.g. "tools" are called "contents", "pages" you create are called "files" (because they become files). "Add Content Link" means that you can add tools (including content tools other than simple files). You'll have to get used to this...
Organization of contents can be done in several ways. We will describe three.
Method 1: You may decide to use just a small selected subset of course tools (e.g. forums and assignments) and then maybe add folders to the default page and that include some contents. In this case, students will use various tools according to their needs (e.g. they will directly click on assignments in the course tools bar). This is a recommended minimal configuration for classroom teaching.
Method 2: You can create folders in the course content tool. Each folder then could represent a learning unit. E.g. you could organize a class by topic or lessons (week 1, week 2, etc.) by creating a folder for each. You then can add course tools ("add content links") to each folder. In this case, you may want to hide (not remove) some course tools in the menu.
Below is a picture of a folder representing a learning unit:

Additional information:
Method 3: Alternatively, you could use Learning Modules. These work a bit like folders. You can create a mix of pages, headings and course tools and organize them in a hierarchical tree. Slightly more complex than folders and the result will show to the student as menu tree. Another way to create learning modules is to use a IMS Content Packaging or Scorm 1.2 authoring tool like eXe and then import the resulting learning object (i.e. a IMS-compatible zip file).
Here is a picture with a test content (I don't use this in production)

Notice on sequencing:
This section should introduce some tools in more detail (for now it's not very complete).
As we explained above, the course content tools allows you to define folders. For each folder you can:

You can create assignments with the corresponding tool from the course tools.
Assignments are defined by:
You can assign it to either
Grading can be parameterized in various ways and the the assignments also can be attached to a goal.
Associated with assignment definition is an Instructor tool, called "Assignment Dropbox". As a teacher you then can comment and grade submitted home work or reassign it. You also can profit from available monitoring tools
As a course designer you will use the "Build" Tab. It will give access to:
These are quizzing tools. The assessment tools allows to create three kinds of assessments:
Types of questions
You may set many parameters for an assessment
View, enter and manage grades.
Hint: If your student can't login to the system (because he doesn't know his login or password) you still can grade his homework though this tool ! You can't do this through the Assignment Dropbox. Also use this tool to override evaluations, e.g. to take away points for being late or other reasons.
This tool (from the designer tools) allows you e.g. to
You may as a designer, create grading forms and rubrics. These are easy to create and quite practical. A missing features is that you can't define negative scores, e.g. for being late. There is a default grading form, but you can create your own list of objectives/evaluation criteria and then use a common scale to measure performance for each. You then must assign a score to each cell. Below is part of a grading form (as seen in the edit grading form tool):

Most institutions will not care very much about course development, e.g. they happily will delete your course a few month after the course ends. Make sure to save all your contents in your personal file folder (use the file manager). Your course structure will be lost, but you still will have all your assets.
In some universities students will have trouble to get their login and/or their password. Make sure that the institution will strongly encourage students to understand that they should either get the login or not loose their password....
Finally, Blackboard does need Java to be correctly installed. This can be an issue in lab rooms. Make sure that Java correctly works with all browsers (not just IE explorer).
Blackboard is known for getting US patents (e.g. patent 6,988,138 on "Internet-based education support system and methods") that granted them rights for a combination of things that have been done with prior systems. In the opinion of Daniel K. Schneider, a model case for something that is deeply wrong with American patent law. See Alfred Essa's blog posts or Blackboard Wikipedia page for more details.
For more information, use Google. There are thousands of posts regarding this controversy.
I found the system fairly easy to use and to understand. Compared to earlier version of WebCT there is some clear progress.
What I liked:
What I didn't like:
I, Daniel K. Schneider, don't really know enough WebCT and Blackboard history to understand how their products evolved. I remember having played with WebCT in 1997 and bought a WebCT license in 1998 (Sparc Solaris 2.5 distribution) and before that we played with TopClass, a commercial variant of WEST, the first web-based e-learning platform. Back in 1995, Blackboard (the company) didn't exist and if I recall right, there wasn't any Blackboard product in 1997.
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 1997 10:07:50 +0100 From: "Murray W. Goldberg" <goldberg@cs.ubc.ca> Subject: Tool for Publishing Courses on the WWW To: cm-collab-learning@mailbase.ac.uk Reply-to: "Murray W. Goldberg" <goldberg@cs.ubc.ca> MIME-version: 1.0 Precedence: list X-Unsub: To leave, send text 'leave cm-collab-learning' to mailbase@mailbase.ac.uk Hi everyone. Over the last year we at UBC have been working hard on a tool that facilitates the creation of sophisticated web-based educational environments by educators with little or no technical expertise. We are looking for beta testers. The tool is called WebCT (http://homebrew.cs.ubc.ca/webct). .....
In the beginning, Web CT was cheap (less than $300). For 1999, we paid US $500 for 100 users. Then, in 2000, they had a pricing structure like this:
$335 for 1-50 student accounts $670 for 51-100 student accounts $1335 for 101-400 student accounts $1670 for 401-800 student accounts $2000 for 801-1600 student accounts $4000 for an unlimited number of student accounts
Then in 2001 it became.
$1500 for 1-400 student accounts $5000 for an unlimited number of student accounts
WebCT argued that the price increase wasn't much for students. What they effectively did was to kill small department or professor level use of WebCT. And indeed the policy to encourage universities to buy site licenses was rather successful. Prices went up again. This had as an effect that most European universities now rather use free open source LMSs. Free systems offer similar services overall speaking. Some (like Moodle) offer features that WebCT/Blackboard systems do not have.
Globally speaking, I don't like such systems very much, although they do provide useful functionalities. One of main complaints is that LMSs are closed at all levels. Between classes, between teachers, between contents, between the inside and the outside. The other is that an LMS offers not enough production tools and if they do offer them, they are not built in a perspective of knowledge building. Forums and blogs are not enough. Basically, and despite their patent claims, systems like Blackboard offer the same or even less than what PLATO did in the mid-seventies.