Archive for December, 2007

Interview with Franklin King: E-Learning Leadership Series

This week’s interview is with Franklin King, Associate Vice President for Distance Education at Jacksonville State University. His leadership has expanded educational opportunities for many individuals from diverse backgrounds and contexts. This interview is a part of a series of interviews with e-learning and distance professionals.

What is your name, and what is your involvement with distance education and/or technology?

My name is Frank King. I am the Associate Vice President for Distance Education at Jacksonville State University, Jacksonville, Alabama . I am also a Professor of Instructional Media.

How did you get interested in distance education?

Our regional university serves a rural area in the northeast section of Alabama . Many of our students are employed and are non-traditional. Some are involved in shift work and require flexibility in their scheduling.

On a personal level, in the early 90s a mother contacted me about her son that had been paralyzed in an accident. She desperately wanted him to continue his education and to feel that he was still a part of a learning community. At that time, there were fewer options. Her desperate cry for help completely changed my attitude towards technology and the need to search for new answers.

Similar requests have come from parents of young men and women who have been incarcerated. I believe that no one should be denied the right to learn and to belong within an educational community based solely upon an unfortunate event or bad decision.

What is your favorite new trend in distance education?

A willingness to explore new options to reach students in which the best use of a variety of technologies is utilized. I remain confident that there is no one best way to reach all students.

What is your favorite technology?

My favorite technology, on a personal level, remains interactive video-conferencing. I feel that it is underutilized and is an excellent augmentation to existing internet based courses that can result in a well balanced hybrid.

What kinds of instructional materials do you use in elearning or distance education?

Like the State of Alabama with its pioneering Alabama Connecting Classrooms and Educators Statewide (ACCESS) initiative, we make use of both the Internet and IVC. We utilize Blackboard as our course management system.

Do you have a favorite social network (LiveJournal, MySpace, FaceBook, etc.)?

FaceBook Its popularity among students ensures its vibrancy.

How do you view them in e-learning?

While not having a personal site on one of the social networks, I see the merit and the benefit of such utilization. It certainly augments the use of e-mail, cell phone usage and other personal formats in a very convenient way allowing for general postings and the sharing of information. In many ways, it is a social eportfolio that can be used effectively, or it can serve as a future detriment to the student when unwisely used.

Do you have a favorite web application (Google Scholar? MapQuest? iGoogle? Del.icio.us?).

I do use Google Scholar. For much work, however, Google is sufficient and the materials are more readily available.

What is your favorite quote? Or, what’s a book that caught your eye recently?

“A perfection of means, and confusion of aims, seems to be our main problem,” Albert Einstein

Watch the latest videos on YouTube.com

Please scroll all the way to the bottom and check out the blogroll.

Posted by Susan

Online Education in the News — December 3-9, 2007

Updates on: the Joan Ganz Cooney Center, Excelsior College and online education, e-learning in India, and how to create an educational video

In a December story for The New York Times, reporter Elizabeth Jensen reports on a new nonprofit research and production institute, the Joan Ganz Cooney Center created by the Sesame Workshop, which produces Sesame Street. The goal of the institute will be to bring more educational content and value into digital media designed for children who have outgrown Sesame Street. Read excerpts from the article by checking out this blog. — School Library Media

In response to an article about his institution, John Ebersole, President of Excelsior College in Albany, NY writes about the current status of online education, and points out that more than 60 percent of the nation’s academic leaders rate online instruction to be “as good or better” than traditional classroom-based offerings. — Times Union

Journalist Sherin Mammen reflects on the current state of e-learning in India in this comprehensive article that includes a review of the evolution of online education. — Times of India

In this panel experts in the field will discuss methods and tips for producing programs that make the most of online video’s advantages in order to create a better learning experience. — Brightcove

Programs in the News - December 3-9, 2007

Updates on:

and more!

Until recently, blind and visually impaired students found it extremely difficult to study certain subjects and pursue careers in science and technology because they could not see graphs and other visual representations. But now, a team at NASA has created easy-to-use software called MathTrax that allows students to graph equations, interact with the data and understand it all through text, tones and spoken language. — Scoop World

The Virginia Department of Education has teamed up with Pokemon USA, Inc., to provide administrators, teachers and parents with engaging, high-quality instructional resources to help them teach students how to stay safe online. The “Internet Safety Program” was launched last night at the start of the Virginia Department of Education’s Educational Technology Leadership Conference in Roanoke, Va. — Earth Times
Pokemon Learning League Web Site

The City of Birmingham, Alabama has signed a memorandum of understanding to purchase 15,000 XO laptops from One Laptop per Child, while the Ministry of Education of Peru has also signed an agreement for the initial purchase 40,000 XO laptops with the option to order an additional 210,000 units. — Linux Electrons

In September this year, the Macedonian government announced one of the most ambitious educational technology projects ever proposed: to provide 180,000 of its school-age children with computer access. — ZD Net

Conferences in the News — December 3-9, 2007

Updates on: India’s primary education effort, and educational conferences in Oman and Kuwait

India is committed to universalizing primary education by 2010, said Congress president and the ruling UPA coalition chief Sonia Gandhi while inaugurating a two-day meet on global literacy. Gandhi also underlined the need for achieving the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015 at the Global Literacy Conference, organized jointly by UNESCO and the Indian human resource development ministry.
The conference is a follow-up to the White House conference on global literacy held in September 2006. — Earth Times

Oman’s annual “Conference of English Teachers and Supervisors” (CETS) 2007, organized by the Ministry of Education, will be held beginning Dec. 10. This annual conference is aimed at improving and upgrading the professional skills of the English language teachers in the 1,047 government schools spread all over the Sultanate to enable them to implement best practices in the teaching methods. — Times of Oman

The National Conference for the Promotion of Education in Kuwait from Feb 17 to 19 will deal with basic educational themes namely usage of technology and role of the private sector for promotion of this vital sector.  — Kuwait Times

Research in the News — December 3-9, 2007

Updates on: Student achievement in Asia vs. Europe, gender stereotypes among teachers, and IT in the classroom

An international study of education has found some Asian countries have overtaken European ones in student achievement. The Program for International Student Assessment ranked 57 countries based on the results of tests given 15-year-old students, the BBC reported. The information was gathered by the Organization for Economic Development. — Earth Times

Gender stereotypes and economics may explain why the number of male teachers in U.S. public schools has hit a 40-year low. The National Education Association says men currently account for less than a quarter of the country’s 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, The Detroit News reported Monday. — Earth Times

Indiana University researchers are embarking on a study to determine how teachers should use laptops, the Internet and other technology in the classroom. IU will work with the Granato Group, a Virginia-based information technology firm, to conduct the research, which is one of the largest undertakings ever by the education school. — Indystar.com

Games in the News — December 3-9, 2007

Updates on:

A PlayStation 2 version of “Rock Band,” the eagerly anticipated music game, should be available by mid-December. The game lets you live out your childhood dream — virtually — as you play guitar, bass and drums and sing your way to stardom. — CNN

Schools in the News - December 3-9, 2007

Updates on:

       

Appalachian State University and Clemson University are partnering in research, development, and implementation studies related to 3-D virtual worlds through the newly established Carolinas Virtual World Consortium. — Ashville Citizen Times

Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, is deploying new data visualization and analysis tools for its Key Performance Indicators (KPI) initiative, a project that will be used to “assess the present state of business, measure performance and progress toward goals, and inform decisions on future courses of action,” according to the university. — Campus Technology

IT News - December 3-9, 2007

Updates on:

  logo_wtag.gif

Sun Microsystems announced the availability of the first component of its new virtualization platform, and laid out a roadmap for opening the platform’s source code. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based systems company bills its xVM Ops Center virtualization management tool as a “highly scalable datacenter automation tool for complete management of heterogeneous global IT environments.” — Campus Technolog

Jenzabar released an update to its Jenzabar EX enterprise resource planning solution. The new 2.7 update adds “significant” enhancements to two of the suite’s modules, according to the company, and incorporates various other improvements throughout. — Campus Technology

On January 6th, Intel will supposedly release their 2.8GHz X9000 ($851), 2.6GHz T9500 ($530), and 2.5GHz T9300 ($316) CPUs with 6MB of L2 cache. — Engadget The Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, is celebrating the C64’s 25th anniversary. Computer pioneers reflected on the C64’s achievements and contribution to the industry. Jack Tramiel, the founder and CEO of Commodore, will attend, along with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and William C. Lowe, father of the IBM PC. — CNN

Click here to read a brief history of the C64. — Moby Games

At the University of Pennsylvania, librarians provide help to students through both instant messaging and an outside live help service facilitated by Velaro, a long-time provider of live help software that recently launched an academic-focused Live Help initiative. Velaro currently provides live help and Web-based chat support for universities including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Indiana University, Duke University, and the University of Wisconsin. — Campus Technology

Publishers in the News - December 3-9, 2007

Updates on:

  

Houghton Mifflin Co. is selling its college textbook unit to Cengage Learning for $750 million so it can focus on its publishing business geared toward kindergarten through 12th grade, as well as trade and reference publications. — International Herald Tribune

CourseSmart LLC, a new company backed by the nation’s biggest textbook publishers, is betting that many tech-savvy students looking to save some money will select e-textbooks over traditional ones. The Belmont, Calif., company is still in beta, refining its digital-book format and its business model. It offers about 2,000 e-textbooks now and hopes to have far more by next fall. — The Boston Globe

HM Riverdeep, the Ireland-based parent company of US educational publisher Houghton Mifflin, received U.S. Justice Department approval last week to acquire Reed Elsevier’s Harcourt US education. The $4 billion deal is expected to culminate by either mid-December or early next year. — Authorlink

Marvel Entertainment and Del Rey Manga, an imprint of Ballantine Books at the Random House Publishing Group, announced plans to publish two new manga series based on Marvel Entertainment’s highly popular X-Men series. — Anime News Network

AuthorHouse, the world’s leading self-publishing company, announced it will help three deserving organizations: The Denver School Museum; SKIP, Inc.; and the Rainbow Repertory Theatre realize their dreams of publishing a book. Each group will receive a standard paperback publishing package grant through AuthorHouse’s Authors Across America initiative. — PR-USA

Guess who turns 50 this year? TheGrinch! To celebrate, Random House has released a retrospective of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” that includes the original text plus 32 pages of commentary compiled by Charles D. Cohen, a Dr. Seuss expert. — GoErie.com

CTB/McGraw-Hill, a national leader in PreK-12 and adult education assessment solutions, was selected by Indiana to provide a comprehensive formative and benchmark assessment system that will enhance classroom instruction and track student progress toward state standards in Grades 3-8. — Reuters

McGraw-Hill Professional, a leading global provider of information resources for the scientific and medical communities, announced the relaunch of Scriver’s Online Metabolic & Molecular Bases of Inherited Disease (OMMBID). This encyclopedic resource for medicine and biology provides physicians, geneticists, researchers, students, and educators, online access to the acknowledged leading reference for human genetics and inherited diseases on a new platform with enhanced features, a redesigned interface, and monthly content updates. — CNN

Games in the News – December 3, 2007

Vivendi, a maker of online games, announced plans to acquire a controlling stake in Activision, a company with emphasis on developing games for consoles, in a deal that would create a rival to Electronic Arts as the world’s largest independent video game publisher. — New York Times