Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
11/1/2002
There are any number of reasons that prevent potential students in remote areas from relocating to pursue educational opportunities. Yet many of those students are willing to use advanced technology to further their education. In the 1980s, Washington State University (WSU) served this demand by creating a distance-learning network.
WSU's approach to distance learning relies on two separate networks, one that is IP-based, the other ISDN. WSU was one of the first universities in the country to create learning centers designed for communities so small that a branch campus was not feasible. In these communities, the university establishes a classroom linked to the main campus via videoconferencing and the Internet.
"Through the distance-learning networks and learning along with remote research and extension centers, Washington State University is able to offer 120 distance-learning classes per semester," says Randy Cross, multimedia specialist for the College of Agriculture and Home Economics and manager of the IP-based network. "We are one of the busiest distance-learning networks in the country."
The Washington Higher Education Telecommunications System
The Washington Higher Education Telecommunications System (WHETS) is the
university's ISDN-based distance-learning network. Operational since 1987,
WHETS links university classrooms electronically across the state to enable
live, two-way video interaction for distance learning. Courses are offered
among sites on a common schedule that coincides with courses taught on
each campus. "Interactive video communications allows the university to
offer a wider range of courses at all locations," says Cross.
WHETS currently serves more than 22 academic programs with about 110 courses per semester and 10,000 hours of instruction annually. The university is finalizing plans to allow access to and between similar systems in other states. In addition to delivering academic courses, the university community leverages the network for faculty and administrative meetings, student advising conferences, and staff development programs.
In total, WHETS supports more than 1,200 hours a year of videoconferences and meetings to support instruction, research, and public service. An additional high-speed data service uses the excess capacity of the digital transmission system to provide voice and data services between campuses. The WHETS network currently includes a mix of video communications end-points. Cross says the network, which includes Polycom's VS 4000 among its video technology, is moving rapidly to standardize on Polycom systems.
WHETS has served as a model for higher education institutions, driving a proposal to expand it to all higher education campuses in the state, according to Cross.
The Washington Educational Conferencing Network
WSU's College of Agriculture and Home Economics represents 35 percent
of the institution's total student population and hosts the university's
IP-based distance-learning network—the Washington Educational Conferencing
Network (WECN).
Beck Technology recently announced that it will donate its DProfiler software platform to colleges and universities for use in construction-related coursework.
Microsoft is initiating the fourth in a series of datacenter upgrades to enable its cloud computing services, according to a Microsoft blog post Tuesday. And, like everything else in the software world, being highly modular is a good thing.
Now that we are conducting at least a part of our business of education virtually and often meeting in virtual environments, let's explore the really big question for academics in a Web 2.0 era...
A college or university without a Web site is inconceivable today, but with every site comes the challenge of managing content. Some sort of automated system is a given, but how much should the site's content management system integrate with other aspects of the campus computing infrastructure?
How IBM's new release is following through on old challenges... big ones.
North Idaho College will be implementing a new classroom capture system as part of an effort to provide accessible education to students with disabilities. The college will be using SpeakerBox from ClearSky Systems for the lecture capture program beginning in January 2009.