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Building the eLibrary

STEM is an acronym for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. Government has long identified STEM education as a major priority, built on strong subject teaching. Alice Coates, National STEM Centre Project Officer, provides an introduction.

Alice-CoatesAbout the author:  Alice Coates is the National STEM Centre Project Officer. The National STEM Centre is building the UK’s largest open collection of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) classroom teaching resources to provide a treasure chest of inspiration for teachers and lecturers of STEM subjects.

In 2008 the National STEM Centre was set the challenge, by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation, to create an electronic library of resources to support teachers of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Gatsby was set up by David Sainsbury (now Lord Sainsbury of Turville) who is passionate about science and engineering education.

The purpose of the National STEM Centre is to provide straightforward access to high-quality resources, information and guidance that supports teachers and schools.

Initially starting as a physical library based in York, it quickly became imperative to broaden the accessibility of the resources to all teachers across the UK.  As a result, in July 2010 an electronic library was quickly developed, digitising a range of archive resources, alongside the collation of a significant contemporary resource collection.

The National STEM Centre now houses the UK’s largest collection of STEM teaching and learning resources, allowing teachers online access to material previously only available in hard copy.

The challenge

Since its establishment in 2008, the National STEM Centre has:

  • Developed a high-quality resources eLibrary that currently provides teachers free access to nearly 8,000 teaching and learning materials
  • Built a freely available high-specification online Community infrastructure to foster teacher-to-teacher support
  • Built a communications website to provide teachers of STEM subjects with easy signposting to support available from other STEM education partners

 

Phase 1: Building the eLibrary:
The specification and build of the site was closely contributed to by a group of qualified and experienced teachers who were able to advise on the most likely ways that teachers would use the site and what they would expect to find – influencing the design and functionality throughout the build. Following an open tender process for the build it was decided to use a bespoke Content Management System developed by Interactive Web Solutions.

  • Forging relationships with publishers
    The initial development phase of the eLibrary involved identifying key resources that teachers would like to see on the eLibrary and approaching the publishers of these resources. All resources are housed on the National STEM Centre website, rather than links to other sites, so the copyright holders permission is required.
  • Hosting a wide range of resources online
    Resources in the eLibrary collections range across materials for the 5-19 age group, and include resources produced by government, learned societies, charitable foundations and commercial publishers. There are a growing number of contemporary materials – including print, multimedia, and practical resources.

Library-small

As the eLibrary was developed to store resources, rather than link to them, it was built in such a way that it would support resources in a myriad of formats including all Common Office formats, PDF, JPEG, audio/MP3, video/MP4, Flash, websites and interactives. Minimum risk for user difficulties is achieved for all resources added to the eLibrary, with the website providing maximum flexibility for incoming resource formats from resource providers to ensure compatibility. For example, watching videos using the Flash video player installed in the user’s browser.

  • Search engine
    Teachers are notoriously time-poor so it was vital to enable teachers to find relevant resources in the eLibrary as quickly as possible. Qualified teachers supported the process throughout advising on how they would search for resources, what search terms they might use and what filters would be appropriate.

This feedback led to significant investment in a search engine on the site using Solr (pronounced ‘solar’). Solr is an open source enterprise search platform from the Apache Lucene project (http://lucene.apache.org/solr/). Its major features include full-text search, hit highlighting, faceted search, dynamic clustering, database integration, and rich document (e.g., Word, PDF) handling. Solr is highly reliable, scalable and fault tolerant, providing distributed indexing, replication and load-balanced querying, automated failover and recovery.

For the eLibrary search results are weighted in the following way to ensure the most relevant resources are returned (title, keywords, description, inside the document).

  •  Scalability

The eLibrary is ever growing in terms of number of resources and number of users both in the UK and abroad. There are now over 7,900 resources in the eLibrary and this will continue to grow. The eLibrary currently receives an average 90,000 visits per month. The website was built in such as way to enable it to scale with the increasing number of users and resources. For example, two Solr instances are used so that if one of them is very busy (mainly caused by it reindexing from the database), and begins to get too slow, the other one can take over. The other technology in use is Gearman (http://gearman.org/), a generic application framework that sends work to other machines or processes that are better suited to do the work.  This greatly reduces the time is takes for pages to generate.

eLibrary

Phase 2: Building the Online community
To increase engagement with resources in the eLibrary work started to build a National STEM Centre online community area. This now comprises ‘groups’ which allow discussion and sharing of resources and information, and ‘lists’ (creative packages) which allow any registered user to package resources together –  ranging from a list of favourites to a fully explained scheme of work.

The National STEM Centre increasingly makes use of web-based technologies as a route to reach teachers. As there are over 8,000 resources in the eLibrary it is important to develop other routes for teachers to find resources most relevant to them. This includes the development of eLibrary resource packages (‘lists’) tailored closely to teachers’ current needs. In building the network of teacher advocates in the online Community who offer teacher-to-teacher support, this strongly promotes the Centre’s services to teachers in the UK through social media routes.

Next steps:

The vision for the National STEM Centre is for all teachers of STEM subjects to use the eLibrary. In the latest research undertaken in May 2012, ‘Search behaviour of teachers and technicians finding online teaching resources’, the National STEM Centre eLibrary featured in the top ten places that teachers and technicians go to find teaching resources.

There is still work to be done to continue to develop the collection of resources, particularly adding design and technology and computing resources, and to ensure that as many teachers of STEM subjects as possible are aware of and utilise the eLibrary.

Alice Coates

STEM Project Officer
www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/

 

Complementing the eLibrary resources, the National STEM Centre has also created a database of web links to STEM careers resources, making these available to all. These resources can be accessed through an API or widget that can be embedded on any website:
www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/stem-in-context/careers-database

 

USEFUL LINKS

National STEM Centre eLibrary
www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/elibrary/

National STEM Centre online community
www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/community

Gatsby Charitable Foundation
www.gatsby.org.uk/

Interactive Web Solutions
www.iwebsolutions.co.uk/

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