Agora

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Agora is the name given to a project proposed by student members of the University Senate. Read about it below in chronological order. CUIT has announced that it plans to roll the Agora project into it's developement of Sakai as a replacement for Courseworks.

Agora
In response to a University-wide concern about the decentralized nature of the scholarly community, the Student Affairs Committee (SAC) developed the Agora proposal: an online gathering place for Columbia University faculty, students, and alumni to freely exchange ideas across all academic disciplines. The SAC, in partnership with the Online and the Libraries & AcIS

committees, will continue to develop a proposal that would provide a free online-forum to engage in transdisciplinary matching of scholars.
-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/annual_reports/03-04/stu-ann.htm">2003-2004

University Senate Student Affairs Committee Report</a>


4. The “Agora” Project
The Committee heard presentations on the initiative to set up a project enabling members of the Columbia community (students and faulty and researchers) to indicate their research interests and network with others who shared those interests. (This project was also the subject of a presentation at the full Senate meeting in March.) The Committee’s support for this initiative was sought by its sponsors. Committee members asked a number of questions about the value and implications of this project, and resolved to discuss the matter, without the need for any further presentation, at an early meeting in Fall 2004.
-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/annual_reports/03-04/libfin.htm">2003-2004

University Senate Libraries and AcIS Committee Report</a>


--Report from Student Affairs on the Agora Project, and other issues: Student caucus co-chair Nathan Walker (Stu. Obs., TC)  said the caucus would report on its Agora project, as well as on on two other resolutions that the caucus had passed in a meeting

just before the plenary.

Joined by other student senators at the podium and projecting slides onto the screen from his laptop computer, Mr. Walker said the Agora project was a yearlong student initiative to use the University’s online resources to seek a transdisciplinary integration of knowledge available at Columbia. The name of the project derives from the Greek word agora, or gathering place.

Sen. Coilin Parsons (Stu., GSAS/Hum) added that Agora would be an online forum bringing together people from all over the University in new ways. The only such forums now, aside from the University Senate, are institutes with scholars from different Columbia schools. But institutes rely on already established relationships among scholars. Agora will encourage new  relationships. The group decided that in order to make Agora a comfortable, productive space, it will remain within the boundaries of the Columbia community, and will not include other scholars or alumni.

Sen. Parsons said the Agora initiative would be part of a plan to create a web portal with a unified log-in page, based on people’s log-in and password. This would provide access to the online tools people are already using, including e-mail, libraries, course works, student services, a university calendar, the center for career education, and Agora.

Sen. Parsons showed a slide with a basic scholarship profile of a Columbia person..  The first five details provide simple information from the University directory, but each person’s profile can be as deep as he or she wants, including research interests, a curriculum vita, publications, etc. He said it would also be possible to conduct searches using these profiles.

Sen. Noah Raizman (Stu., HS) gave an example of a search in Agora, combining two research interests, which provided a half-dozen profiles on the screen. Another approach would be to invite people with similar interests to join a new project. Someone interested in, say, HIV research, could link to professors throughout the University, or students who have traveled in countries with the AIDS epidemic, and create a page where these people can come together, with a message board, opportunities for chats, links to other sites, a calendar function, and a capability to conduct polls of people in the project.

Sen. Bulliet, speaking as a member of Alumni Affairs, said excluding alumni would be a disservice to them but also to current students, who may be alumni by the time they have mastered Agora.

Mr. Walker said the reason the population to be served in the proposal was limited was that the data source for the project was the Columbia University directory. He added that his committee would take this point seriously.

Sen. David Bayer (Fac., Barnard) cited two design concerns, based on a previous experience at Barnard. One was about pitfalls of unified log-in and a single portal.
-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/minutes/03-04/SenMins032604.htm">Minutes, University Senate Meeting March 2004</a>


--Student Affairs: Nathan Walker (Stu. Obs., TC), co-chair of the studentcaucus, summarized issues from

the last Senate session that the group is still pursuing:

  • Agora Project: Last year students proposed a technological solution to Columbia’s “disconnect,” an online space to connect Columbia scholars based on their broad academic interests, and to provide a trans-disciplinary model for new scholarship. Committees now working on Agora will prepare a stakeholders’ document to the Provost, with a budget, and hope to start developing the project at the end of October.

-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/minutes/04-05/septmins.htm">Minutes, University Senate Meeting September 2004</a>


Agora
The Agora Project, led by Noah Raizman and Nathan Walker, is an online collaborative space and networking tool designed to foster collaboration between scholars in the <st1:city><st1:place> Columbia community. ‘Agora’ was conceived and elaborated by members of the Student Affairs Committee last year and has been making great progress towards moving from the theoretical realm to the practical. Since the April 2004 presentation to the Senate, which met with great enthusiasm, the SAC worked with several members of the information technology division of the University as well as with the Committee for Online Learning and Digital Media to develop a proposal for allocation of resources. The proposal is now awaiting approval by the Provost and Executive Vice President of the University.
            The Agora would create an unified web interface for students, integrating CourseWorks, Cubmail, SSOL, bulletin boards and a customizable university calendar using the open-source Sakai platform currently in development by a consortium of Universities, including Columbia. The centerpiece of Agora is a scholar-matching and a project creation module, allowing any student to create a collaborative space centered on a specific intellectual interest and post links to resources, integrate events into the calendar, and communicate with others who share the same interest. The goals of Agora are to foster collaboration with scholars in different schools of the University and overcome the insularity and fragmentation of individual schools or degree programs. With the Provost's support, we hope to develop a working model in the next academic year.
-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/annual_reports/04-05/studentar0505.htm">2004-2005

University Senate Student Affairs Committee Report</a>


Agora
The committee vetted the student initiative for a research portal and worked to bring DKV and AIS together to help in its development. The proposal is currently under consideration by the provost’s office.
-<a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/senate/annual_reports/04-05/onlineann05.htm">2004-2005

University Senate Online Learning and Digital Initiatives Committee Report</a>