4 Universities Roll Out Lecture Capture

Four universities--the University of Texas-Pan American, Columbus State University, and two University of Missouri campuses, Columbia and Kansas City--have gone public with their adoption of lecture capture software from Tegrity. Tegrity Campus 2.0 is a Web-based service that enables institutions to capture course lectures--including slides, audio, video, document camera activities, instructor pen, and interactive whiteboard. Students can access the recordings via Web browser, iPod, or mobile device. The recordings include indexes that enable the user to search for any word or phrase presented in class in text form, such as content on a PowerPoint slide or in a computer application.

The University of Texas-Pan American in Edinburg adopted Tegrity Campus after a two-year evaluation process. The university, which has about 17,500 students, expects to deploy the service campus-wide. "I am excited that we will be implementing the Tegrity system," said Paul Sale, provost. "We have already had many positive responses to its anticipated rollout and we are sure that we can add to Tegrity's already excellent record of increased student achievement and retention."

Columbus State in Columbus, GA chose Tegrity Campus 2.0 for three reasons, the school said in a statement: to enhance the achievement of its 7,000 students, to extend its distance learning curriculum, and to improve student retention rates. "Our goal is to equip our students with the best technology resources in order to help them succeed academically," said President Timothy Mescon. "We believe that students appreciate the investment we're making in providing them with a strong lecture capture solution that helps them study more efficiently and learn more effectively."

The University of Missouri, which recently signed a master agreement with Tegrity, will deploy the service at two campuses, one in Columbia and the other in Kansas City.

The Columbia campus, with 29,000 students, has run Tegrity for a semester. "With Tegrity, you can easily make the in-class experience available 24/7 in multiple formats for multiple audiences," said Danna Vessel, director of educational technologies. "There has been tremendous faculty interest in and acceptance of Tegrity at Mizzou because it allows content capture from any classroom or location without the need for special equipment or processing. Instructors are amazed at how easy it is to use, and it allows them to do what they do best--focus on the teaching and learning going on in their class rather than the technology."

The Kansas City campus, with 15,000 students, piloted the service in a few classrooms starting in fall 2007 and then expanded from there in each successive semester. The university reported it will go campus-wide with the service soon.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Training the Next Generation of Space Cybersecurity Experts

    CT asked Scott Shackelford, Indiana University professor of law and director of the Ostrom Workshop Program on Cybersecurity and Internet Governance, about the possible emergence of space cybersecurity as a separate field that would support changing practices and foster future space cybersecurity leaders.

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Launches Claude for Education

    Anthropic has announced a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.

  • AI microchip, a cybersecurity shield with a lock, a dollar coin, and a laptop with financial graphs connected by dotted lines

    Survey: Generative AI Surpasses Cybersecurity in 2025 Tech Budgets

    Global IT leaders are placing bigger bets on generative artificial intelligence than cybersecurity in 2025, according to new research by Amazon Web Services (AWS).

  • university building surrounded by icons for AI, checklists, and data governance

    Improving AI Governance for Stronger University Compliance and Innovation

    AI can generate valuable insights for higher education institutions and it can be used to enhance the teaching process itself. The caveat is that this can only be achieved when universities adopt a strategic and proactive set of data and process management policies for their use of AI.