Rochester Institute of Technology Pilots 'Classroom as a Learning Tool'
        
        
        
        The Rochester  Institute of Technology (RIT) has teamed with a private partner to create a  "classroom as a learning tool" pilot in an effort to create a space  that encourages active learning.
Features of the redesigned  classroom include moveable furniture, interactive whiteboards and large  monitors for easy lines of sight from anywhere in the room.
    
        
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            RIT's "classroom as a learning tool" features moveable furniture, multiple monitors and interactive whiteboards. Image courtesy of RIT. | 
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The classroom is the result of a  collaboration between RIT's Innovative  Learning Institute and "Steelcase's Learning  Innovation Hub program, which centers on advancing research on the impact of  active learning while providing institutions with opportunities to pilot active  learning methods," according to a news release.
Four faculty members, chosen for their  responses to questions about how they would use the room and the technology and  how the space could be used to enhance their teaching and help create  interactive learning opportunities, will teach in the space. One of those  chosen is Assistant Professor Sandra Connelly, of the RIT College of Science, who will lead a biology  course in the room.
"The greatest thing that this room  provides is personal interactive space — meaning the students don't see me as a  talking head but instead as someone who can sit with them, write on the white  boards right beside them and truly have a one-on-one experience in the space,  with me, the course learning assistants and their peers," said Connelly, in  a prepared statement. "My students who need that one-on-one connection are  jumping at the opportunity to meet there. The space is relaxing, and just  informal enough to make learning (and teaching) come more easily."
As part of the pilot, Steelcase will  gather information from the instructors and their students in an effort to  study how much and in what ways the physical environment affects student  behavior and learning outcomes. The university will also use the feedback "to  develop new teaching modalities and provide that information to our faculty  through online and other training," said Ian Webber, assistant  director of the Innovative Learning Institute, in a news release.
"We are very pleased about this  partnership with Steelcase Education, which will help RIT create the best  learning environments possible for our students," said RIT President Bill  Destler, in a prepared statement. "We expect that our faculty will learn a  great deal from how the design of this classroom impacts learning that can be  applied to other spaces across the campus."
Founded in 1829, RIT serves approximately  15,000 undergraduate and 2,900 graduate students with about 1,500 faculty  members at "nine colleges emphasizing career education and experiential  learning," according to information on the university's Web site.  Visit rit.edu for more information about RIT.  Learn more about Steelcase Education at steelcase.com.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].