CourseInfo

CourseInfo
Private
Industry Educational Software
Founded Ithaca, N.Y. 1997
Founder Daniel Cane, Stephen Gilfus
Headquarters Ithaca, N.Y., United States
Area served
USA
Key people
Dan Cane, Stephen Gilfus
Products Teachers ToolBox, Interactive Learning Network 1.5 , Blackboard's CourseInfo
Revenue Unstated
Unstated
Unstated
Number of employees
7 (September 1997)
Website courseinfo.com
Footnotes / references
Merged with Blackboard Inc in 1997

CourseInfo LLC, one of the two companies forming Blackboard Inc. was founded in 1997 by Daniel Cane and Stephen Gilfus while at Cornell University. They joined together to officially form the partnership known as CourseInfo and developed the company into a small course management software provider. The product at the time was called the Teachers Toolbox. In 1998 the CourseInfo team met two principals of Blackboard LLC while pursuing a grant for adaptive testing. Shortly after the two companies joined together to form what is now known as Blackboard Inc.

Company formation

CourseInfo was formed in late 1996- early 1997 via a partnership agreement between Daniel Cane and Stephen Gilfus. Early on Dan Cane had begun developing web based scripts for professor Cindy van Es, at Cornell University, for her Statistics class.[1] This activity was mostly driven by Dr. van Es's desire for bringing technology in the classroom and Dan's creativity with new technologies on the web. At this time there is a famous quote from Bill Gates technical assistant saying "Cornell is Wired". As one of the five supercomputer centers holding up ARPANET - the precursor underpinnings of the internet - Cornell was on the bleeding edge of email, web and technology usage. Further, Cornell had been using computer based course technology such as PLATO dating back to the early 1970s.[2]

Product development

Blackboard overview

Blackboard Inc. was formed by the joining of two companies: CourseInfo LLC, founded by Daniel Cane and Stephen Gilfus, and Blackboard LLC, founded by Michael Chasen and Matthew Pittinsky. Originally the Blackboard company began as a consulting firm contracting to the non-profit IMS Global Learning Consortium. In 1998, it merged with CourseInfo LLC, a small course management software provider that originated at Cornell University. The combined company became known as Blackboard Inc. The first line of e-learning products was branded Blackboard CourseInfo, but the CourseInfo brand was dropped in 2000. Blackboard went public in June 2004. It operated publicly until Providence Equity Partners purchased the company in 2011. As of January 2014, its software and services are used by approximately 17,000 schools and organizations in 100 countries.[10]

See also

References

  1. "Senior's company helps to produce Web pages for college courses | Cornell Chronicle". News.cornell.edu. 1997-10-16. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  2. “Computer Assisted Law Instruction: Clinical Education’s Bionic Sibling” by Harry G. Henn and Robert C. Platt, 28 J. Legal Education 423-36 (1977)
  3. "LISTSERV 16.0 - AERA-K Archives". Listserv.aera.net. 1997-11-21. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  4. "School of the Environment - Home". Cquest.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  5. "LISTSERV 16.0 - AERA-J Archives". Listserv.aera.net. 1998-05-14. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  6. Betsy Corcoran (July 23, 2014). "Blackboard's Jay Bhatt Strikes Up the Brass Band". Edsurge. Retrieved September 2, 2014.