$2 Million Federal Grant Bolsters NEO Distance Learning Program

A $2 million Department of Education Title III grant designed to help institutions of higher education better serve Native American students is going to help Northeastern Oklahoma A&M (NEO) upgrade its distance learning offerings.

Awarded in late-September and distributed over a five-year period, the grant will be used to develop three online degree programs (hospitality management, early childhood education, and criminal justice). The funding will also cover the cost of four new staff members, the installation and maintenance of high-quality streaming video services for NEO's online courses, and a number of other IT initiatives.

Jeffery L. Hale, president of the Miami, OK-based college, said the school's location in northeastern Oklahoma's "Indian territory" puts it in the position of being able to vie for such grants. The new programs are not limited to Native American students, but, Hale said, this group is the focus of the grants.

Home to 39 federally recognized tribes, Oklahoma has one of the largest American Indian populations of all the states. "In our tiny county alone we have nine federally recognized tribes," said Hale. "For a long time roughly one in five of our students has been American Indian."

With the funds NEO will hire a technology specialist who will develop online support services for students and a distance education curriculum designer who will help faculty members redesign their courses. The college also has plans to hire a project director and an administrative assistant.

Classrooms will be equipped to capture, stream, preserve, and distribute real-time classroom materials to students' computers and mobile devices. New equipment will include single-channel encoders, Cisco switches, a media server, a storage server, wireless network cameras, and various software programs and applications.

The equipment will improve the quality of NEO's online courses and allow for increased interaction between the instructors and students and also between students enrolled in the face-to-face version of the class and students enrolled in the online version.

Several classrooms will be equipped with iPads to allow students in classrooms to collaborate with pupils who are enrolled in the same class. "They'll be able to work on shared projects using Google Docs, wikis, and other applications," said Hale.

Hale said NEO's internal planning team is currently finalizing a job description for the school's new project director, who will oversee the grant distribution for the next five years. Once the project director is in place, the school will hire the additional technical support personnel, said Hale, "and start gearing up to get these new degree programs online and in use."

About the Author

Bridget McCrea is a business and technology writer in Clearwater, FL. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • interconnected cloud icons with glowing lines on a gradient blue backdrop

    Report: Cloud Certifications Bring Biggest Salary Payoff

    It pays to be conversant in cloud, according to a new study from Skillsoft The company's annual IT skills and salary survey report found that the top three certifications resulting in the highest payoffs salarywise are for skills in the cloud, specifically related to Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud, and Nutanix.

  • a hobbyist in casual clothes holds a hammer and a toolbox, building a DIY structure that symbolizes an AI model

    Ditch the DIY Approach to AI on Campus

    Institutions that do not adopt AI will quickly fall behind. The question is, how can colleges and universities do this systematically, securely, cost-effectively, and efficiently?

  • minimalist geometric grid pattern of blue, gray, and white squares and rectangles

    Windows Server 2025 Release Offers Cloud, Security, and AI Capabilities

    Microsoft has announced the general availability of Windows Server 2025. The release will enable organizations to deploy applications on-premises, in hybrid setups, or fully in the cloud, the company said.

  • digital brain made of blue circuitry on the left and a shield with a glowing lock on the right, set against a dark background with fading binary code

    AI Dominates Key Technologies and Practices in Cybersecurity and Privacy

    AI governance, AI-enabled workforce expansion, and AI-supported cybersecurity training are three of the six key technologies and practices anticipated to have a significant impact on the future of cybersecurity and privacy in higher education, according to the latest Cybersecurity and Privacy edition of the Educause Horizon Report.