Murray Goldberg

Murray Goldberg (born October, 1962) is a noted Canadian educational technologist and a faculty member in the department of Computer Science at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver Canada. Goldberg is best known for being the founder of the elearning companies WebCT, Brainify, Silicon Chalk, AssociCom, and Marine Learning Systems. Goldberg was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada and raised in Edmonton until he moved to British Columbia to attend the University of Victoria in 1980. Murray graduated from UVic in 1985 and then went on to earn an MSc from the University of British Columbia. In 2004 he was awarded an honorary Ph.D. from the Southern Cross University.[1] Murray serves as director for various companies, public and private, and is a frequent consultant and speaker on the future of eLearning and social learning. Murray is also the chair of the British Columbia chapter of the Manning Innovation Awards.

Contents

Professional History

University of British Columbia

Murray began as a faculty member in the Department of Computer Science at UBC in 1993 and was awarded tenure there in 1998.[2] In 1994, his first year as a faculty member at UBC, Goldberg won the Killiam Teaching Prize at UBC.[3] Goldberg took a leave of absence from UBC in 1998 to lead WebCT full time.[4]

WebCT

In 1995, as a UBC faculty member, Goldberg was researching the effectiveness of Web-Based learning environments.[5][6] Goldberg found that the experience of building the courses for this experimentation was sufficiently time consuming and expensive that he decided to create a platform to enable the simple and rapid creation of web-based learning environments,[7][8] WebCT. WebCT was widely accepted as a catalyst in the world-wide boom of on-line learning that accelerated beginning in 1997.[9] By November, 2000 WebCT was purportedly serving 6 million students in 57 countries,[9] and by late 2001 10 million students in 80 countries at 2250 universities and colleges.[10] In 1999, Goldberg sold most of his stake in WebCT to Boston-Based Universal Learning Technology. The combined company took on the WebCT name.[8][11] Goldberg remained as president of the Canadian division of WebCT until 2002 when he left to co-found Silicon Chalk.

Silicon Chalk

In 2002 Goldberg co-founded Silicon Chalk and served as the president and CEO.[12] Silicon Chalk created software for use in laptop or computer enabled higher education classrooms. The software facilitated the recording of classroom presentations, student note taking, polling, file sharing, and other features.[13] The company never achieved wide spread success, though did have users in 70 universities and colleges when it was sold to Horizon Wimba[14]

Brainify

In 2007 Goldberg began work on Brainify(website), an academic social bookmarking and networking site for university and college students and professors.[15] Brainify was launched in January 2009 and Goldberg acts as the President and CEO. Members from 250 institutions had joined within the first 20 days of its launch.[16]

AssociCom

In June, 2010, Goldberg launched AssociCom (website), a professional networking and discovery platform with an emphasis on enabling member discovery, learning and connection within professional associations and societies.[17]

Marine Learning Systems

Also in 2010, Murray founded the company Marine Learning Systems (website). Their product, MarineLMS, claims to be the first learning management system for training in the maritime industry, with BC Ferries as their first customer[18].

Selected Awards and Distinctions

External links

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b Murray Goldberg & WebCT Wins Hyperion Award
  2. ^ Goldberg short speaker biography, New Mexico CHECS
  3. ^ Killiam Teaching Prize Award Winners
  4. ^ UBC Computer Science Department Highlights, 1998/1999
  5. ^ CALOS: an experiment with computer-aided learning for operating systems, Proceedings of the twenty-seventh SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, p.175-179, February 15–17, 1996, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
  6. ^ CALOS: first results from an experiment in computer-aided learning for operating systems, Proceedings of the twenty-eighth SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, p.48-52, February 27-March 01, 1997, San Jose, California, United States
  7. ^ Goldberg Pioneers On-Line Education, Synergy Magazine, Issue 2.1, October 1996
  8. ^ a b College Courses Taught with Tailored Software, The New York Times, December 21st, 2000
  9. ^ a b What you see is Now What You Get Taught, South China Morning Post, November 18, 2000
  10. ^ UBC prof leads Web education revolution, The Vancouver Courier, June 28, 2001
  11. ^ BC University Spinoff Finds Virtual Success, The Globe and Mail, January 31, 2000
  12. ^ AUSWEB Keynote Speaker Biographical Details
  13. ^ Silicon Chalk – Supporting Learning in the Classroom and Beyond
  14. ^ History of Virtual Learning Environments
  15. ^ Social Bookmarking Site for Higher Education Makes Debut, The Chronicle of Higher Education
  16. ^ Interactive Website digitally links colleges
  17. ^ What is AssociCom. Murray stepped down as CEO of the company to focus full time on Marine Learning Systems, though he continues to be involved as the chair of the board of directors.
  18. ^ Canada: First Learning Management System for Maritime Training Released, World Maritime News
  19. ^ Backbone Magazines Top 15 Canadians in Digital Media.
  20. ^ Manning Innovation Awards Principal Award Winner for 2004.
  21. ^ Honorary Awards at the Southern Cross University: Doctor of Technology
  22. ^ CANARIE IWAY Awards
  23. ^ UBC Killiam Teaching Prizes