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9/30/2003
The Internet has changed everything, including education at some of the world’s oldest and most traditional institutions. Here at Boston College, we honor our academic traditions and zealously preserve the standards that have consistently ranked us among the nation’s top universities. At the same time, eLearning has touched everyone on our campus, and we’ve managed to balance technology and tradition.
One of our Jesuit professors, for example, is having the time of his academic life with eLearning—at 74 years old. The professor asks his philosophy students to discuss topics over the Internet before and after regular classroom sessions. Students can post their arguments anonymously. Only the professor knows who said what and the peers know only that a classmate has posted a comment.
When students come to class, the professor opens his laptop and displays the most compelling comments on the big screen at the front of the classroom. Intellectual fireworks ensue. After decades of mild frustration trying to draw reticent students out of their shells, he is thrilled by how the “safety” of the Internet has increased the volume and quality of discourse in his class.
In another great example of the Internet on our campus, a professor of German music has started posting classical pieces online for his students. For years, he had taken great pains to assemble a CD-ROM of his selections and ask students to check it out of the library for homework. Students often arrived at the library only to learn that one of their classmates had already checked out the CD, forcing them to make multiple trips and sometimes miss out entirely. Now, at any time of the day or night, students simply go online and visit the home page for the music course. The home page, like all of our other eLearning content and tools, is powered by a leading course management system. Students simply point, click and stream the music into their dorms, homes—wherever they carry their laptop. Students love it, and so d'es the professor.
In the Graduate School of Social Work, every course has Internet content, whether it’s an article, study, movie clip, handout, quiz, chat room, newsgroup or simply a syllabus. Betty Cohen, reference librarian is one of two people who deserve special credit for pioneering eLearning at Boston College. The other is our very talented technologist Michael Connolly, associate professor and chairman of the department of Slavic and eastern languages. He first introduced eLearning to Boston College in the fall of 2000 and teaches all manner of languages online, everything from Swedish to Swahili, even Christian Latin.
The faculty chose WebCT for its flexible course management system that offers content, quizzes, chat, clips, newsgroups, polls, whiteboards, Web links and more with minimal training. One of the more interesting features is selective content release, which lets a teacher release lessons, quizzes or other content when certain conditions are met—a time or date, for example, or the successful completion of a preceding unit. Despite its flexibility, Boston College’s content management system is easy enough for a novice and powerful enough for an eLearning expert.
The Digital Arts Alliance, a consortium led by the Pearson Foundation that promotes digital arts in K-12 education, is expanding its membership with the addition of Fordham University. This follows on the heels of three other organizations joining the group back in July--the National Education Association (NEA) Foundation, the Foundation for Investor Education, and Employers For Education Excellence (E3).
Opinions are mixed on what the new Payment Card Industry (PCI) DSS 1.2 standard will mean for security pros going forward. However, the mandate is clear: protect data.
Research teams from six universities have been selected by NASA to become members of its Astrobiology Institute with the aim of exploring the "origins, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe." Teams were each awarded five-year grants, averaging $7 million each, according to NASA.
Amazon announced Wednesday that it is conducting a private beta test of Microsoft's server products running on Amazon's hosted computing platform, which is called Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Amazon expects to offer companies the ability to run their applications on EC2 using Microsoft Windows Server or Microsoft SQL Server sometime in the fall, according to an announcement issued by the company.
Implementing a customer relationship management (CRM) solution can require "difficult or even painful behavioral challenges" for administrators in higher education, according to Nicole Engelbert, a lead analyst with research and analysis firm Datamonitor. "It means re-orienting yourself to your students. That can be tough, so you need to be ready for that."
Here's a bit of trivia for your next high-tech happy hour: A "nog" (in addition to being a Christmas favorite) is a wooden block built into a masonry wall so that joinery structure can be nailed to it. For the founders of Piscataway, N.J.-based startup Bluenog this obscure bit of carpentry nomenclature was the perfect metaphor for an integrated software suite that includes a content management system (CMS), rich portal features and business intelligence (BI) capabilities.