Home > Educator, Students Provide Frontline Perspectives

Features

Educator, Students Provide Frontline Perspectives

6/4/2004

Based in Toronto, Canada, York University (www.yorku.ca) has an expanding enrollment of more than 40,000 students. An inevitable consequence to its growth is overcrowding—both in the lecture halls and the parking lots. The majority of the undergraduates are commuters, including mature students trying to balance career, family, and education. Many of York’s professors and administrators believed that providing a multimedia online learning venue would address the university’s growing pains and even improve the quality of students’ education. However, they wanted an online system that did not create additional work for the faculty.

Students Give Online Learning High Marks

In the fall of 2002, York University launched a pilot project using Sonic Foundry’s Mediasite Live to capture, stream, and archive the lectures for a popular, two-semester social sciences course that I teach. As a long-time advocate of education technology, I was excited to be the first professor at our university to use the system.

There were 200 traditional, classroom-based students and 50 students who accessed the weekly two-hour lectures online. Because Mediasite Live captures the speaker in both audio and video, and automatically indexes and synchronizes that information with virtually any visual instructional content from the class, each group received identical information. The eLearning students were still required to attend on-campus tutorials and take exams at the university.

I was surprised by how often the students said in their evaluations and personal comments to me that self-discipline was a key factor in being a successful distance learner. Praise for the convenience and flexibility of online learning was tempered with the proviso of having to make an extra effort to stay focused.

Another surprise was how much the online students needed to feel connected to the class. They truly appreciated that I acknowledged them during the lectures, even if I couldn’t actually see them. It started as a casual occurrence during the first term, but the positive response from the students encouraged me to make name recognition a standard practice thereafter.

From Fear Factors to Success Factors

The one big complaint about any technology-based teaching aid is the extra work created for educators. Professors fear they will need to re-create all of their instructional material, or perhaps change their whole style of teaching in order to provide a quality education experience for the burgeoning number of online students.

In the world of high technology and teaching, when a new application is introduced, there is always huge hype about its ease-of-use and about the variety and quality of learning tools it contains. Then reality clashes with fantasy, and there is the inevitable disappointment.

Mediasite Live is an exception to that rule. It worked smoothly from the beginning, performed exactly as promised and didn’t get in the way of what or how I teach. It was fun for my students and for me.With eagerness from the students about the technology, and since no additional work was required on my part, York bought four more Mediasite Live systems.



Recommended Reading
  • Sun, Stanford Working To Archive History

    In May in San Francisco, experts from leading universities, libraries, and research institutions around the world met as part of an ongoing effort to address a pressing issue: archiving the world's history, right up to today.

  • The Quilt Coalition Rolls Out XO Communications for High-Capacity Network Services

    The Quilt, a coalition of 28 regional network organizations, has added XO Communications Services to its authorized vendor list. The Quilt represents 200 universities and thousands of other educational institutions across the United States. With this new relationship, Quilt members can purchase XO's high-speed IP transit and network transport services at competitive rates.

  • Wimba Classroom 5.2 Expands Classroom Capture Support, Adds MP3 Downloads

    At the NECC 2008 conference in Texas this week, Wimba launched a new version of Wimba Classroom, the virtual classroom component of the company's Collaboration Suite. The new 5.2 release expands options for classroom capture and adds a variety of other functional and ease of use features.

  • Automation Chimera: Education Is Not Management

    The lure of automating workflow online so human intervention is minimized is continually reinforced in the minds of higher education administrators by examples of automated campus systems such as financials, student information systems, and other enterprise systems. But what's good for management is not always good for learning.

  • Cognos Releases BI Software for Linux-based IBM System z Mainframe

    Cognos, which IBM acquired in January, has released an update to its business intelligence software that will run on the Linux operating system on IBM System z mainframes. IBM Cognos 8 BI was being developed by the two companies prior to the acquisition, but assimilation of Cognos into IBM accelerated development.

  • Facebook and Collegiality: A Serendipitous Social Niche

    Facebook is a way to greet a colleague as if she or he is on your own campus: a wave at a distance, a hello at the corner burrito place, a honk as you both leave the campus parking lot. Informal collegiality has been extended over the miles.