Monday, January 28, 2008

[ED-TECH] Teaching Workshop - Thursday @ 3:30 pm

Ed-Tech list members,

The participants at the workshop on Thursday will be working on issues related to student use of computers in the classroom. How can it increase learning? How can it decrease learning? How should we respond to this new capability?

Some instructors order students to turn off all computers during class. Some require that students using computers in class can only use them to take notes, and must sit in the front row of the classroom. Some are ignoring the issue, assuming it is no different from doodling or thinking. Some are beginning to change their classroom activities to take advantage of the computers.

The goal of the workshop will be to look at these alternatives, as a group. The workshop participants will generate new ways of integrating and/or controlling computers in the classroom. Registration is limited and required. To register, go to http://129.171.43.14/ and select the “Teacer vs. Technology” session.

Bill Vilberg

Assoc. Dir. of Instructional Advancement

[ED-TECH] FETC 2008 - Day 2

Ed-Tech list members,

Here is my report from Friday at the Florida Educational Technology Conference (FETC) in Orlando.

LuLu (http://www.lulu.com) – LuLu prints books on demand. What is the difference between LuLu.com and a vanity press? LuLu requires no upfront cost, unless you want an ISBN number. An ISBN number costs $98, I believe. LuLu was at FETC trying to get K-8 teachers to have their students create a book and then actually get a bound copy of the book. I am wondering about using LuLu for a yearly volume of essays by Excellence in Teaching award winners.

Astaro (http://www.astaro.com) makes a Security Gateway Appliance. You can buy the hardware device or download the software and use a PC. It does e-mail filtering, VPN encryption, anti-virus protection, intrusion protection, and more. I hear about this product every week when I listen to the Security Now podcast. It was interesting to see it.

Software Express (http://swextress.com) has another security cart. If you have more than 12 computers in a single cart, you need to use a timer to recharge the computers so that you don’t overload the outlet that the cart plugs-into. I hadn’t realized that.

Interwrite Learning (http://www.interwritelearning.com) makes the Interwrite PRS student response system that a number of people at UM are currently using. They also make a Bluetooth wireless pad, so you can work on the computer as you walk around the classroom. We need to get a couple of these pads and have some faculty try them out in class. It looks like it would be a nice addition, but you can’t really tell until you try to use it as your teach.

Maplesoft (http://www.maplesoft.com) “lets you explore, visualize, and solve even the most complex mathematical problems.” It used to be almost exclusively a symbolic solver. They have added many additional features that make it easier to use and show visual results. UM has a site license, so it is either free or very inexpensive to put this on UM owned computers. Contact Beth at 284-1138 for more information.

Remote-Learner (http://remote-Learner.net) is another Moodle hosting and/or support company. Their model is slightly different than Moodlerooms. Moodlerooms charges $1/student/year. Remote-Learner has different levels of support. Their highest level costs $20,000 per year. They will also sell and manage a Moodle Appliance Server so the learning management system (LMS) can be run here, with their assistance. I continue to be intrigued with Moodle as a possible alternative to Blackboard, at some point in the future.

Angel Learning (http://www.angellearning.com) licenses the Angel learning management system. I believe that it is in use at UM in Continuing Studies and on the Medical campus. Like Blackboard it is a commercial product. Like Moodle you can have direct access to the database, so you can add on functionality easily.

EarthWalk (http://www.EarthWalk.com) is one more maker of carts to hold a lab set of portable computers. In addition to the normal steel carts, they have a chest that holds the computers in foam rubber so they can be moved between locations and even transported in a car.

SoftChalk (http://www.softchalk.com), maker of LessonBuilder, is currently offering their $99 on-line training sessions for FREE. This is for a limited time. Click on the Training button on their home page to review and register for the individual sessions. We have a site license for SoftChalk LessonBuilder at UM, so you can download it from the http://www.miami.edu/software web site. SoftChalk also has a new version coming out that increases the instructor’s ability to customize the look of the material, and adds lots of new features. It will be placed on the download page after it is released. This is, in my opinion, a very nice way to create computer based learning materials. I apologize for not being able to promote it as much as it deserves. If you have any interest in developing some web materials to help your students learn, I urge you to take a look at this product.

Bill Vilberg

Thursday, January 24, 2008

[ED-TECH] FETC 2008 - Day 1

Ed-Tech list members,

I am at the Florida Educational Technology Conference (FETC) in Orlando. This is a K-12 conference, so I don’t attend the sessions, but the exhibit hall is filled with products that cross over to higher education. That is where I spend my time. Here is a report of what I found and thought about today.

Moodlerooms (http://www.moodlerooms.com) – Moodle (http://moodle.org) is an open-source (free) learning management system (LMS). Blackboard is a commercial LMS. Moodle is designed by an educator, so it has some really nice features. Since it is extensible (you can add things on to it) there is little that you cannot do with it. But some people are worried about moving to it, since they would not have any support. Moodlerooms provides that support and hosts the LMS on their machines, for $1 per student per year. They have a number of institutions that have moved from Blackboard to Moodle with their help. One example is LSU. The LMS cost at UM would drop from $300,000 per year to $30,000 per year. Of course there are lots of issues in changing platforms, particularly the effect on faculty who will have to learn a new system and move materials to it. I continue to be intrigued by Moodle, and moodlerooms solves one of the impediments to adopting it.

SMART Technologies makes the Sympodium writing tablets that we installed in the new classrooms. They have a new model out. It is the same size as our current tablets, but they are not touch sensitive. Our current tablets are supposed to use the pen when it is removed from its tray, and be touch sensitive when the pen is in the tray. The new model only uses the pen. That loses a capability but simplifies the system. If our tablets don’t work correctly, they are always touch sensitive. That means that they sense your hand when you write with the pen, or they read the wire attached to the pen if it brushes against the screen. So maybe we would be better off with the pen only versions. I need to ask people whether they use the touch screen with their fingers.

SMART Technologies also makes a personal response system (PRS) called Senteo. (These are often referred to as clickers.) UM currently has at least three versions of clickers in use: Interwrite PRS (http://www.interwritelearning.com/), iClicker (http://www.iclicker.com/), and Turning Point (http://www.turningtechnologies.com/). UM will be standardizing on one system, either one of these or some other, to place in the general purpose classrooms and to support with training and assistance. SMART’s Senteo has some limitations, the primary one being that it only works from within the SMART Notebook software. It is interesting to look at all the alternatives and analyzing their differences.

Intel, the chip maker, has material at http://www.intel.com/education for teacher training, engineering students, and more. All free.

Computrace LoJack for Laptops (http://www.lojackforlaptops.com/) by Absolute (http://www.absolute.com/) had a booth, promoting their system to return or erase lost/stolen notebook computers. UM has some software to encrypt the hard disk on a portable that everyone can get for free. LoJack costs about $50/year or $100 for three years, but provides a different capability.

nComputing (http://www.ncomputing.com) is a small company that makes an interesting device to reduce the cost of computers in a lab or classroom. Rather than buying 4 individual computers, you buy one tower computer, a bit more powerful than you might have normally purchased. Then you buy three more monitors, keyboards, and mice, and attach each set to an nComputing box. The reduction in computer costs and maintenance time is significant. A number of schools in Florida are moving to this solution in their labs, according to the people at the booth. It would be interesting to have someone at UM test this solution. They will provide free equipment to try it out.

Interlink makes a number of different remote control presentation controllers (http://www.smklink.com/index.php?id=Mzky). In supporting the renovated classrooms, we know that faculty want the ability to walk around the room and control the computer. We went with the Gyration air mouse (http://www.gyration.com/). There are alternatives, such as the Interlink, that we should probably review at UM.

Polycom (http://www.polycom.com) had a booth and I talked with them about the use of video conferencing to bring guests into a classroom or to allow students in other location to watch and listen to the class. UM has a lot of Polycom equipment, but access for faculty could be better, in my opinion.

StoreVault (http://www.storevault.com) makes a networked backup system that is interesting. I need the capability to back up all of our computers in the IAC so that we can completely restore any computer onto a new hard drive, should the original hard drive fail. This includes the data, the applications, and the operating system. I use Acronis True Image Home to back up my computer to an external hard drive. I can’t afford to take a week to reconfigure my computer after a major problem, I need to get everything running almost immediately, and I would expect that all faculty members need that same capability. Anyway, I will be looking carefully at the StoreVault solutions to see if they meet our needs in the IAC.

MozyPro (http://www.mozy.com/) is an on-line backup service. I am going to also look into this backup solution, since it provides the safety of physically separating the original media and backup media. If you backup to a hard drive that is next to your computer, and someone steals everything, you didn’t really have a backup. Ask Francis Ford Coppola (http://tinyurl.com/2w4ep6). In researching this tonight, I came across ADrive (http://www.adrive.com/) which offers 50GB of free on-line storage. For many people that would be MORE than enough to store their pictures, music files, and probably their complete My Documents folder. Note that there may be problems putting UM files on an on-line storage system like these.

Wimba (http://www.winba.com/) makes of the voice tools add-on to Blackboard that we have at UM. This is heavily used in our modern language courses. We have been working on getting a license signed since last summer. It looks like the final session to work out the details will be tomorrow.

Learning Objects (http://www.learningobjects.com/) makes the blog, wiki, and podcast tools that we have added to Blackboard at UM. It is always a pleasure to talk with them about the many capabilities they add to Blackboard. They recently added some features to their web sites, including a knowledgebase and use cases. The use cases (http://www.learningobjects.com/usageguide.jsp) can help faculty think about how the blog and wiki tools might be incorporated in their courses.

Centurion Technologies (http://www.centuriontech.com/) makes the Cornerstone product that we have installed in all the new classroom computers. This software allows anything to be done to the computer, but instantly restores it to the original condition on a reboot. It also has a control center that allows us to unprotect the computers early each morning so that Symantec Anti-Virus and Microsoft Updates can be processed, with no intervention on our part. I met one of the support people that has been of great help to us as we got things configured this year. By the way, UM has a license for 1,000 copies of the Cornerstone product. They can be obtained from IT on request. If there are public computers that sometimes get messed up and need to be maintained, I strongly endorse this solution.

I covered eight of the fifteen aisles today. Back tomorrow for the remaining seven.


Bill Vilberg

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

[ED-TECH] Student access to Insternet in the classrooms

Ed-Tech list members,

 

One of the questions that we regularly receive is “How can wireless Internet be turned off in the classrooms?”  Faculty members are concerned about students who are checking e-mail, instant messaging, watching youtube videos, or on facebook, during class time.  The course material is not easy and the faculty members want the students to pay attention to the course, not these other distractions.  Well, there is no way to turn the Internet off, especially in today’s world where iPhones can access the net from almost anywhere, including classrooms.  So…

 

The Instructional Advancement Center is hosting a workshop to discuss this issue and generate some options for how you might deal with it.  You are invited to attend.  The pre-reading consists of a New York Times article, from last November, titled, “New Class(room) War: Teacher vs. Technology” and available at the http://tinyurl.com/32d5dv address.  Please read it and then decide whether you would like to participate in this workshop.  If so, please register at the http://129.171.43.14/ IAC Events site.  Participation will be limited to 25 people, so register early if you want to be part of this discussion.

 

Teacher vs. Technology, Hosted by Bill Vilberg

Thursday, 31 January 2008, 03:30 PM — 04:45 PM

Whitten University Center Flamingo Ballroom (UC 226) Sections C & D

 

I look forward to a workshop where we come away with a better understanding of the issue and some concrete ideas for ways to proceed.  I hope you will be able to attend.

 

Bill Vilberg

Associate Director of Instructional Advancement

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

[ED-TECH] Making a Difference

Happy New Year!  May we all make a (positive) difference in the lives of our students in 2008.

 

Bill V.

 

 

--- BEGIN INSERT ---

 

        Yesterday was the first day of class and the first day I've been in class since

that fateful day of my cerebral hemorrahage way back on September 14th.  At the end of the

first class, a student came up to me after class.  "I want to be a teacher," he said.

"But, I came to college to get a good paying job.  If I can get kind of personal and ask,

what do you make?"

 

        "A difference," I replied without thinking.  "What do you want to make?"

 

 

Make it a good day.

 

      --Louis--

 

--- END INSERT ---

Monday, January 07, 2008

[ED-TECH] SoftChalk Short Courses - register now

Faculty members and Instructors,

 

The University of Miami has a site license so that instructors can use SoftChalk Lesson Builder to create learning materials for your students.  SoftChalk allows you to create some professional looking materials with very little effort.  The company is offering some free one-hour web courses on how to use the product.  I encourage anyone interested to sign up on the http://www.softchalk.com/training site.

 

If you want to install SoftChalk, go to http://www.miami.edu/software and click on the “Web Browsers and Tools” link.  SoftChalk LessonBuilder is at the bottom of the list of downloads.

 

I have included, below, SoftChalk’s message about the training.

 

Bill Vilberg

 

From: SoftChalk LLC [mailto:webinar@softchalk.com]
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2008 12:27 PM
To: Vilberg, William R.
Subject: SoftChalk Short Courses - register now

 

Hello Bill,

Sign up Now! SoftChalk's New Year's resolution provides quality training to YOU, our user community. And for the month of January the training is free!

Topics include:

  • Introduction/Overview
  • Media and Imagesbv
  • Sidebars
  • Learning Activites
  • Quizzes
  • Tables
  • Equation Editor

---- and more.....

For more information and to register for a class, click here! You will learn how easy it is to create instructional web pages with a professional look that re-enforce learning. So please register at http://www.softchalk.com/training.

With LessonBuilder you create SCORM compliant, Section 508 accessible web pages that integrate with all the major Learning Management Systems. Or the content can be simply placed on a CD or a web/file server!

For additional information you and your colleagues can:

  1. Review existing lessons at http://www.softchalk.com/lb_examples.html
  2. Review the Innovations in Online Learning archives of presentations done by our clients using SoftChalk. Go to http://www.softchalk.com/lb_WebinarRegistration.html#archives

Please feel free to forward this invitation to any of your colleagues who may have an interest in creating more engaging on-line lessons for their students.

Please contact us with questions or concerns.

The SoftChalk Team
Team@softchalk.com
www.softchalk.com
877-638-2425 (toll free USA/Canada)

 

 

Sender's Address: 22 South Auburn Ave, Richmond, VA 23221. Powered by . To unsubscribe, click here.