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Promoting Student Engagement Through Classroom Technologies

Promoting Student Engagement Through Classroom Technologies. Campus-Wide System Design, Implementation and Support. James Gregory, University of Minnesota jgregory@umn.edu. Pedagogical Premise.

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Promoting Student Engagement Through Classroom Technologies

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  1. Promoting Student Engagement Through ClassroomTechnologies Campus-Wide System Design, Implementation and Support. James Gregory, University of Minnesota jgregory@umn.edu

  2. Pedagogical Premise • The Software & Information Industry Association’s Report on the Effectiveness of Technology in Schools consistently finds that the ultimate effectiveness of technology is determined by appropriate implementation of, rather than inherent features in the technology.

  3. The Challenge: • Advanced data-projection capability • 300+ classrooms • Easy-to-use systems • Reduced maintenance costs • Improved classroom uptime

  4. OCM Technology Upgrade Plan: To bring laptopprojection capability, internet access and student wireless networking to all centrally scheduled Twin Cities classrooms (approx. 300) at the University of Minnesota under a Classroom One-Stop umbrella.

  5. PROJECTION CAPABLE CLASSROOM STANDARD • Includes basic tech infrastructure for teaching & learning • fixed data/video projection capability • internet connectivity at instructor station • wireless student networking • smart control system with networking option • user friendly laptop interface • standardized operating protocol familiar to UofM faculty • standard input devices (VCR and DVD) • may have other modular “add-on” capabilities • slide projectors, document cams, • installed computers, special I/O devices • “Hotline” phone for instructor • accessibility features • flexible growth potential - able to interface new devices • Baseline for UMTC general-purpose classroom technology • Included in Facilities Construction Standards (Appendix DD)

  6. Presentation One-Sentence Summary: Standardized, ubiquitous, easy to use, metacontrolled classroom technology systems will have a measure of success evident in the degree of faculty and student satisfaction, which has long term strategic and financial impact.

  7. Analyzing UofM Classroom Standard • Control • fixed data/video projection capability • internet connectivity at instructor station • wireless student networking • smart control system with networking option

  8. Analyzing UofM Classroom Standard • Standardization • standard user friendly laptop interface • standardized operating protocol familiar to UofM faculty • standard input devices (VCR and DVD) • standard “Hotline” phone for instructor • standard modular “add-on” capabilities • slide projectors, document cams, • installed computers, special I/O devices • accessibility features

  9. Analyzing UofM Classroom Standard • Growth • flexible growth potential – extendibility to new devices • baseline for UMTC general-purpose classroom technology

  10. TECHNOLOGY

  11. IntroductionNetworked Classroom Control Systems:A New Paradigm for Design, Operation and Support. • Metacontrol = Control of control systems. • CAMS =Classroom Automated Management System

  12. Basic Tactile Control Panel Not “just a keypad” • Single User View • No Option Overload • Simplicity • Lower Cost • Lower Maintenance • ADA Friendly

  13. Remote Control Features Remote Control of: • Projector (on/off) • Sources (laptop, VCR, DVD, Doc Cam) • Video/ Audio Mute • Volume Level • System Lock-out • Service Mode

  14. Add-on’s Modular “add-on” capabilities Special I/O devices

  15. UofM CTS CAMSClassroom Automated Management System • Monitor classroom status • Receive alerts on problems • Hotline phone assistance • Manual takeover of controls • Compile data • Remote lockout • Schedule service • Remote shutdown for service • Theft alarms

  16. Classroom Technical Services (CTS) OCM Management Server OCM Operator OCM Monitoring Hotline Classroom System Data System QA & Problem Response Network Network Phone Network SOURCES Laptop Wireless Hub Hotline System QA & Problem Response Classroom System Data Central Classroom VCR UofMProjection Capable Classroom System DVD Additional I/O A/V Switcher AMX Netlinx Controller DATA/VIDEO PROJECTOR Volume Control Audio Amp User Friendly Control Panel © 2005 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota

  17. CTS Technical Staff Maintenance Classroom Technical ServicesUofM Central Classroom Automated Management System Campus Police Department Dispatcher Fault Alert Theft Alert Networked Control Classroom Management Server OCM Operator System Monitoring & Reporting Monitoring Hotline System QA & Problem Response Classroom System Data Network Classroom System Data Classroom System Data 300Networked Central Projection Capable Classrooms In 60+ Buildings © 2005 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota

  18. IMPLEMENTATION

  19. OCM University of MinnesotaOffice of Classroom Management OCM is the central point of contact, and single point of responsibility, for all general purpose classroom issues on the three Twin Cities campuses

  20. UofM Classroom Technology Growth

  21. Diminishing “Help Line” Calls

  22. “Help Line” Call Analysis

  23. UofM Helpdesk for Instructors “Hotline” phone for instructor

  24. Extensive Reporting for Efficient Planning

  25. System Operation Normal

  26. Theft Prevention • Real time monitoring by the Campus Police through CTS management system • Local alarm and siren activated by removal of projector or control lines • Password protection on classroom data projector

  27. MANAGEMENT

  28. Total Cost of Ownership Includes the obvious and not-so-obvious costs of operating and maintaining the technology systems.

  29. Classroom Lifecycle and Maintenance Costs Support Facilities Technology

  30. IT, Systems and Services in Higher Education (NACUBO document) The more standardized a technology environment is, the lower the costs of support. Faculty, students and even technology staffs scorned this notion for many years until the burdens of support and the consequences of poor support grew so intense they were impossible to ignore.

  31. Technology Investment Strategic Priorities • Standardization • Ubiquitous Technology • Ease of Use • Help Desk Functionality • Metacontrol of Classrooms

  32. Financial ROI (Direct Financial Payback) • Classroom Tuition $ • Efficiency • Economy • Return on tuition • Risk Management • Security • Technology Risk • Training • Controls Reduce Requirement • Equipment Tracking • Minimize Equipment Checkouts

  33. ROI(Indirect Financial Results) Matrices: • Increased Scheduling Efficiency • Higher Classroom Utilization • Reduction in Staffing Requirements • Reduction in Classroom Downtime • Provides Reports & Trend Analysis • Faculty Attraction/Retention • Increased Adoption of Technology • Promote Leveraged Partnerships

  34. Technology System Conclusions • Classroom One-Stop Responsibility is Important • Standardization of Systems is Paramount • Ubiquitous Application to Classrooms is Necessary • Ease of Use of Faculty Interface is Required Continued….

  35. Technology System Conclusions • Future Technology Demands will Continue to Grow • Lifecycle and Maintenance Budgets must be Obtained and Justified • Metacontrol of Classrooms is Essential • Investment in above will Pay for Itself http//:www.classroom.umn.edu

  36. Promoting Student Engagement Through ClassroomTechnologies Campus-Wide System Design, Implementation and Support. James Gregory, University of Minnesota jgregory@umn.edu

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