The Road to 24/7
- By Linda L. Briggs
- 03/26/06
In the move to anywhere/anytime computing, four institutions find that innovations and gutsy pilots may deliver huge dividends.
WHAT IF A COMMUTER college in New York City could reach every student at once by cell phone
during a city transportation strike? What if universities could license news content from public radio content
providers and make it searchable? What if students could subscribe to recorded lecture content as podcasts,
enhanced with instructor notes and slides?
Wireless and mobile technologies are now everywhere, and 24/7 computing is as pervasive a term as the actual capability
promises to be. Sometimes, in fact, the push toward mobile technologies can seem overwhelming. But every wireless
project d'esn’t have to involve redesigning the network and investing in mega-dollars worth of hardware and
software. Nor d'es every project need to extend across the entire campus and involve every student. Rather, as with the
examples above, small pilots can pave the way for the biggest projects and can serve as a test ground for larger rollouts.
But what are new and effective hands-on ways that your own campus can enhance learning with mobile wireless devices like smart phones, PDAs, iPods,
and more? Administrators at the four
schools that follow have been involved
in relatively small pilot projects that are
yielding promising results.
PILOT PROJECT |
SCHOOL |
HARDWARE
/ SOFTWARE | PROVIDER
OR PARTNER |
Use cell phones as academic
tools to deliver information to
students and enhance sense
of community |
Baruch College,
a senior
college of The City University
| Applications work with virtually any cell phone |
Rave Wireless |
Offer recorded lectures as
podcasts to enhance mobile
access to content |
Santa Clara University,
Santa Clara, CA | Tegrity Campus for recording lectures; any MP3-capable device for listening |
Tegrity |
Distribute smart phones(combined cell phones/PDAs) to 120 students; study how they’re used |
Wake Forest University,
Winston-Salem, NC | Two smart phone models: Cingular Siemens SX66, Pocket PC; Sprint Nextel 6600 |
Cingular Wireless;
Siemens;
Sprint |
Make select radio news content available for download and search |
Duke University,
Durham, NC | Any MP3-capable device, including iPods, PDAs, and computers |
Public Radio
International |
Cell Phones at Baruch College
Instead of fighting student cell phone
use, some schools are embracing it. At
Baruch College in New York City (one
of 10 senior colleges of The City University
of New York), CIO Arthur
Downing is working with Rave Wireless to supply students
with cell-phone-accessible applications
for academic-oriented uses.
Downing explains that although the
school’s 15,000 students have good
access to computers on campus, and
wireless coverage is fairly pervasive, students
wanted more. “They want to check
things quickly,” he explains. “Rather
than [adding more computer] labs and
kiosks, we wanted an easier way to get
our Web-based applications to them.”
A Baruch survey conducted before the
pilot program revealed that 90 percent of
students carried cell phones with them
everywhere. So in a pilot program last fall
(which will result in a campuswide rollout
of the program in fall 2006), Baruch
began offering a growing variety of Webbased
applications that can deliver information
to students via cell phone. The
pilot involved 100 students; some 500 alltold
are currently signed up, and Downing
hopes to have three-quarters of the
Baruch student body on board when the
program g'es live in the fall.
“We don’t have a wealthy student
body,” Downing says, and most students
don’t carry a laptop or a PDA. And since
all Baruch’s students commute, spending
less time on campus as conventional students,
there’s little time to connect with
others or take advantage of university
services. “So, right now anyway, our
[cell phone] applications are meant to
help them use their time between classes
most efficiently,” Downing says. Among
other things, he explains, “We’re trying
to build a sense of community.”
Check on changes/availability, and
connect with peers. The software that
allows the school to deliver academic
information to virtually any cell phone is
supplied by Rave Wireless. Students can
receive text message alerts about class
changes or cancellations, and can join
cell phone “channels” to correspond with
students of similar interests. The applications
Baruch and Rave are offering
also allow students to use cell phones to
check on the availability of loaner laptops
and study rooms.
An administrative console allows the
school to deliver messages to all students,
or a select segment. Yet, rapidly
notifying all of Baruch’s commuter students
about class changes and other news
is crucial. For example, Downing points
out, during New York City’s recent transportation
strike, the cell phone service
would have been an invaluable way to
immediately reach all students with
schedule changes or other updates.
Instantaneous class feedback. One application from Rave that Baruch is
testing allows students to use their
phones to instantly “vote” during class,
in response to assessment questions from
professors. Baruch has tested the technology
in a psychology class, but found
obstacles. For example, most faculty
members simply don’t want students
using cell phones in class for any purpose.
“It d'esn’t matter if it’s part of the
instruction,” Downing says. “The professors
don’t want students taking the
phones out and turning them on.” Also,
the pilot revealed that cell phone signal
strength in classrooms isn’t as strong as
expected for some carriers. Since students
are using various providers, that’s
an issue yet to be resolved.
At Baruch College, students can receive cell phone
text-message alerts about class changes or
cancellations, and can join cell phone ‘channels’ to
correspond with students of similar interests.
Pens and Podcasting at Santa Clara University
Podcasting is suddenly everywhere, and
in response, vendors are stepping up to
make podcasts easier to capture, enhance,
deliver, and catalog. Santa Clara
University, a Jesuit Catholic university
of 8,000-plus students in California’s
Silicon Valley, is making innovative use
of recorded lectures by experimenting
with podcasting.
In its simplest sense, podcasting means
making audio or video files available for
download over the Internet, to devices
such as computers, iPods, and PDAs. A
subscription system “feeds” the content,
allowing users to receive new files automatically.
Apple’s iTunes store is the most well-known
example of this, but plenty of other sites
offer podcasting services, as well. For
example, news content providers such as
CNN and National Public
Radio now offer podcasting,
as do Yahoo!,
Slate, Forbes, and The New York Times, among others.
Lecture capture and note-taking. At
Santa Clara, the school is using a lecture
capture solution from Tegrity as part of its podcasting
experiment. Tegrity Campus is enterprise
software that automatically records and
organizes lectures as audio or video files.
Via the Web, students can listen to a lecture
after it has been delivered, while
viewing any associated materials added
by the instructor during the lecture.
As the software records the lectures, it
enhances them by breaking the content
down into chapters, and by adding visual
elements such as Web sites, slideshows,
spreadsheets, or written remarks. In
addition, Tegrity has partnered with
Blackboard, and
Campus integrates with the Blackboard
courseware management system; Tegrity
says that Campus is compatible with all
CMSs, including WebCT, Datatel, and
Campus Management. As for Santa Clara, the university
is using ANGEL Learning
Management System from ANGEL
Learning as its courseware management solution.
At Santa Clara, the Tegrity solution
also includes a special digital pen for taking
notes on regular paper during class.
The system digitizes the students’ handwritten
notes as they are taken down, then
automatically synchronizes the notes
with the recorded instruction. Later, in
front of a computer, students can view
their notes online, exactly as they were
written in class, and can click on any
notation to hear the instructor explain a
particular concept again.
According to Santa Clara CIO Ron
Danielson, the solution works well
because it means that students don’t need
a computer in class. “We haven’t got a lot
of classrooms with power or networking
capabilities,” Danielson says, and students
rarely bring a laptop to class. With
Tegrity, “the students can simply come in
to class, and use the [Tegrity] pen to take
notes as they usually do.”
Danielson, who also teaches, likes the
fact that regardless of how students listen
to lectures later, each class is recorded.
That can free students from madly
taking notes while he speaks, and
because they can listen instead of transcribing,
the technology, he asserts, “is a
great learning tool.”
Wake Forest CIO Jay Dominick sees academic
potential in today's improved smart phones.
Streaming or podcast. In the podcasting
pilot at Santa Clara, Tegrity is now
formatting lectures both for conventional
streaming video use online, and as podcasts.
There is no extra charge from the
vendor for the podcasting capability,
which the company includes as part of
Tegrity Campus. With the podcasts
added, students can now access course
content not just via the Web, but through
any MP3-capable device, such as an iPod
or other MP3 player. That makes content
access extremely mobile—available
while a student stands in line for coffee,
works out, or traverses the campus.
Students also can choose to subscribe
to course podcasts through Apple’s
iTunes. Tegrity sends an e-mail to each
student at the beginning of a course with
an invitation and link to subscribe. Depending on the receiving device—
such as newer iPods with video capabilities—
students can also view slides and
class notations from instructors on their
MP3 devices.
As the podcast pilot continues, Danielson
says administrators will be watching
closely to find the answers to questions
such as: How many students will access
podcasts, compared to the number who
use the material available online as
streaming media? And where will they
listen? “We’re very curious about what
the use of this extreme mobility will be
as students review the recorded lectures,”
Danielson says.
Smart Phones at Wake Forest
“Smart phones” combine the features of
cell phones with information-management
features common to PDAs—features
such as Wi-Fi connectivity, contact
management, and e-mail retrieval. At
Wake Forest University (NC), CIO Jay
Dominick sees a definite future in such
small, mobile, data-access devices—
especially as the technology continues
to improve. Results from a pilot project
the school conducted with smart phones
in fall 2005 are promising, but still
inconclusive.
Moving students from cell phones to
smart phones. The private liberal arts
university ran a pilot project this past fall
in which 120 students were given a Pocket
PC smart phone: either a Cingular
Siemens SX66 Pocket PC, or a Sprint
Nextel 6600. The
devices in the pilot combine the functions
of a cell phone and a mobile computer
with wireless access, and are equipped
with instant messaging, text messaging,
and various customized software. The
caveat: While all the devices had cell
phone capabilities, it was up to each student
to decide whether to move his or her
cell phone service to the new device. The
university’s questions as they conducted
the pilot included: How much would students
use the devices? How would select
instructors incorporate them into classes?
Would cell phone service combined with
PDA capabilities prove useful?
Some of the results are inconclusive,
and that may be because Dominick simply
hasn’t yet had a chance to study all
of the data. Even so, on the heels of the
experiment, Wake Forest is considering
where to go next with the devices. Some
definite trends emerged, as well as some
interesting ways to use mobile devices
in classrooms.
The study showed that, for one thing,
cell phone connectivity is key to making
a device valuable. A PDA is simply
another digital device unless it becomes
a student’s cell phone; then, it becomes
indispensable.
The latest PDAs: good news—and
bad. Chemistry professor Robert Swofford
volunteered to participate in the
study because he’d been part of an earlier
Wake Forest pilot with Hewlett-
Packard iPAQs just three
years earlier. The early PDA models
(now looking cumbersome and limited)
have come a long way in just three years,
and Swofford wanted to see how the
newer devices with cell phone capabilities
could enhance his classrooms.
“When this new pilot was proposed, I
elbowed my way into it,” he says. “I
wanted to see how things had changed.”
The good news is that robust Web
applications and far better networking
capability (including 802.11-standard
wireless coverage campuswide) have
made the devices far more usable than
three years ago. The bad news: Not
enough useful software is available,
Swofford found, especially for chemistry
courses. Swofford used one Flashbased
chemistry-specific application
that the Wake Forest IS department had
written for the previous pilot and which
again proved useful. But although he
had great ideas for more applications,
developing them in-house would have
been time-consuming and costly, so he
decided against requesting more. Still,
the professor found creative ways to use
the devices in class, with interesting
conclusions that suggest further experimentation
with mobile devices at Wake
Forest would be beneficial. (See box below: “3 Smart Ways to Use a Smart
Phone in Class.”)
3 Smart Ways to Use a Smart Phone in Class
If you’re wondering how to successfully
integrate a PDA or other small wireless
device into class, Wake Forest University chemistry professor Robert Swofford
used smart phones in three ways during a
pilot of the device conducted in fall
2005. He found all of them to be effective,
particularly in enhancing communication
between instructor and
student. Swofford tested the
smart phones in a first-year
chemistry course.
First, to encourage students
to bring the devices to
class, he began each class with
a one-question quiz, asking a simple
question about the reading assignment,
and awarding students a small
amount of credit for responding. Students
sent their responses (with their names
included) to his computer via the wireless
connection, where he could tabulate
them instantly.
Second, he used the wireless connectivity
abilities of the devices during class
to collect immediate feedback throughout
the lecture. Several times during each
class, he paused and asked students to “vote” electronically on whether they
understood a concept. The results were
collected into Swofford’s wireless notebook
computer. Since votes were anonymous,
students responded frankly,
allowing him to immediately decide
whether to repeat a point or continue.
Third, he encouraged students to use
the devices immediately after class,
while still in the classroom, to send
post-class feedback. The amount of
feedback was surprisingly high, he says,
which he attributes to the immediacy
the devices allowed.
Radio Content at Duke University
Recent experiments with the Apple iPod
at Duke University (NC) are wellknown.
But smaller, less-noticed pilots at Duke are examining other ways that
wireless and mobile devices can be put
to new classroom use.
The iPod has opened up the university
to new ideas around the role of audio in
learning, according to Lynne O’Brien,
Duke’s director of the Center for Instructional
Technology. Once podcasting
became available last year, says O’Brien,
new projects sprang up as faculty and
students found new ways to use MP3-
capable devices, beyond listening to podcasts
of lectures or other course material.
Radio as device audio. In one current
pilot project, Duke is working with
news radio publisher Public Radio
International (PRI) to create
a model for making relevant radio
content available to universities. Working
together, the two hope to create a
model that will work for other schools
as well. The project began with a small
pilot in fall 2005, and will expand to 20
faculty members this spring.
“We said, if [students] are carrying
iPods and PDAs and using them all the
time, well, radio is all about audio,”
O’Brien recalls. “So how can we make
that relevant?” Duke has had content
available via streaming audio over its
Web site for some time. But in the partnership
with PRI, the two are examining
issues such as how to make specific
radio content available for selective
download, what content should be
offered, and what faculty and students
might do with such content.
The business model is also under discussion—
would universities such as
Duke license the content from PRI? At
what cost? Would they use a university
licensing model, or a more consumerbased
approach?
A key question Duke is asking its
librarians is this: How could students
and faculty search content for what they
want? “If you wanted that perfect fiveminute
interview with a figure in the
Middle East,” O’Brien asks, “how
would you find it among hours and
hours of news programming?”
From the limited fall pilot, O’Brien
says short clips of timely news programming
seem most useful. Faculty
members have also used specific interviews
tied to a subject under discussion.
Writing professors have had students
listen to radio content about specific
books, and journalism students, predictably,
have found various broadcasts
useful. Foreign language programming
is also of interest, via the British Broadcasting
Corp. (BBC).
O’Brien says PRI approached Duke
specifically because of the publicity
surrounding its iPod experiment. Part of
the payoff from Duke’s bold iPod project,
then, may be a surge in new pilots
such as this one.
At Duke University, where students are carrying
iPods and PDAs and using them constantly, radio content can now become relevant.
Test the Waters
Whether it’s digital pens at Santa Clara
University, iPods at Duke, or an academic
use for cell phones at Baruch College,
small mobile devices are big news.
Some make use of the campus wireless
network, some utilize cell phone networks,
and some, like Wake Forest’s
smart phones, use both. In either case,
even small pilot projects like the ones
highlighted here can help you test the
waters with students, faculty, and staff.
That, in turn, can help you prepare for
what’s ahead with wireless. And more
functionalities are sure to develop as
mobile technologies leap forward.
As Santa Clara CIO Ron Danielson
concludes, “The mobility issue is really
interesting. All of higher education is
going to have to come to grips with it,
whatever the format of the mobile
device.”