Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
10/31/2003
For students in the Tucson classroom, their counterparts in Silicon Valley
appear almost life-size on a curved screen situated across the front wall of
the classroom. Remote students interact real-time with life-sized images of
both the instructor and their distant classmates. Professors have the ability
to switch the video conferencing system to “lecture mode,” sending
the image of the Silicon Valley students to the rear wall, behind the students
in the Tucson classroom.
The Eller College of Business and Public Administration at the University
of Arizona implemented a distance learning program to build a model that would
utilize modern technology and provide a more virtual experience for the students
and professors.
It was the university’s first experiment with distance learning technology,
and in pursuing the venture, we wanted to avoid a traditional Web-centric distance-learning
program where students complete course work on their own time and in isolation.
This approach is effective in that a student across the country can complete
the same course work and read the same material as his or her counterpart on-campus,
but it lacks the collaborative, interactive and team-oriented approach that
Arizona felt was a crucial component to the business school experience.
The experiment launched with an evening MBA program jointly offered to students in Tucson and Silicon Valley (the latter through a TeleSuite system at the 3Com corporate headquarters in Santa Clara, taking advantage of the system in off-peak hours).
The physical space of the classroom is designed so that students in Tucson sit in tiered rows a moderate distance from the front wall, connected real-time to Silicon Valley by a high-speed wireless network. Live microphones are distributed to cancel ech'es and several cameras are mounted inside of the walls and ceilings throughout the room to create an illusion of direct eye contact between all participants. Overhead lights are positioned to illuminate participants’ faces and lights are temperature-controlled. The Tucson-to-Silicon Valley link is managed centrally through TeleSuite. Video, data, and voice are transported via a T1 line, allowing for instant, real-time visual and audio communications.
The program is designed to give students an immersive, interactive, and lifelike experience. Classes are held in the evenings, meeting once a week as part of a 22-month long course of studies. Class sizes range from 28 to 30 students with approximately one-third of those students participating remotely through the TeleSuite system. To date, two classes have graduated through the program, with a third in its second year.
Most importantly, students that live and work in Silicon Valley can enroll in Arizona’s MBA program and feel that they belong to a group of students who are all going through the same experience at the same time. The most frequent comment received from our students is that the experience is as close to being there as possible.
Microsoft Monday rolled out the highest level of its enterprise support programs to date, adding a new offering called "Microsoft Services Premier Ultimate." The offering builds upon the company's existing Premier services program.
Our culture is redefining itself and we are redefining how we see learning. It is time for educators to get out of the box of seat time, finally, and consider evidence-based learning.
Trent Batson takes a look at the National Science Foundation's Report of the NSF Task Force on Cyberlearning, "Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge."
Over the last six years, Stewart Mader has staked his career on the power of wikis. Mader first worked on wiki adoption initiatives in the IT department at Brown University, becoming fascinated by their power and potential. In this first half of a two-part interview, Mader talks about powerful ways to use wikis in education, content ownership issues, and how wikis tend to be used--and why.
The Sakai Foundation has released the Sakai Collaboration and Learning Environment 2.5.2, the first maintenance update to the open-source learning management system since the 2.5 release in March. The new version includes performance enhancements, as well as a number of bug fixes and other enhancements.
Microsoft has made substantial changes to its virtualization licensing program, changes that will lower the cost of using virtualization for many customers.