by Greg Ritter
My co-blogger, Jan Poston Day, was interviewed as part of a story by KERA, a Texas public radio station, on the use of iPods in the classrooms of El Centro Community College in Dallas. El Centro, part of the Dallas County Community College District, uses the the Tegrity Campus Building Block with their Blackboard Learning System to provide enhanced podcasts to the students. Enhanced podcasts include images or video synchronized to the audio so both the visual and audio components can be played back on a photo- or video-capable iPod.
What’s the draw? Talking about El Centro echocardiology professor Catherine Carolan’s experience, reporter Bill Zeeble says:
These days, Carolan’s sold on Ipods and the portability they permit. Many students come from full-time nursing jobs, & have families, homes, & other responsibilities. For Sharla Scovel, who’s 52 and lives 30 miles away, the Ipod lets her study diagrams in the grocery store line, or listen to lectures while commuting to work.
You can read the entire transcript of KERA’s story or listen to the MP3 version.
by Greg Ritter
Blackboard’s chairman, Matthew Pittinsky, was interviewed this
past Friday by The Innovation Insider, a blog on
business innovation from Fortune Magazine. Part of
what Matthew’s talking about is inspired by the upcoming keynote by Malcolm Gladwell at BbWorld ’06:
"We’ve seen
widespread adoption of software by colleges and universities that want the Web
to play a major role in campus-based and distance learning programs (breadth),
and we’ve seen great traction on campus by faculty in terms of the percentage of
courses that use eLearning systems to supplement or deliver instruction (depth).
Now, the focus is on going beyond putting courses online through a standardized
system. It’s about personalizing the course environment to be discipline and
pedagogically specific to the subject in question."
You can read the whole interview for
more of Matthew’s thoughts.
by Greg Ritter
The Instructional Technology gang at Keene State
College in New Hampshire has a relatively new
blog, KSC Instructional Technology. They recently wrote about some of their Blackboard successes:
Tracy Mendham, and adjunct professor who teaches ENG 101, learned how to help her students avoid some end of semester anticipation by using the grade book function in the Blackboard software suite. … Getting students to use Blackboard is relatively easy because they are interested in using the technology that’s available to them, Mendham said. But she does need to take some class time to introduce her students to the site. Students are far from the only people who need some time to get used to using Blackboard….once students get used to using Blackboard they start expecting professors to use it.
(There’s a lot more to the post. Read the whole thing.)
That kind of student influence is a story
we hear from lots of our customers. Many people in the educational technology
realm are familiar with the ideas in Everett Rogers’ work on diffusion of
innovations (especially as popularized in Geoffrey Moore’s 1991 book Crossing the
Chasm). In short, technology adoption occurs in a bell curve. And it’s
the back end of that bell curve where the students hold the most influence.
by Greg Ritter
Marc
Canter writes about Ruckus
Networks‘
plan to offer an online
music service at no charge to students in higher ed. (Link via Stephen Downes’ OLDaily; it’s a few days old, but I had some catching up to do
after being out sick).Ruckus is a
online
music
& video service targeted
specifically at higher ed institutions.
(Full
disclosure: Ruckus is a member of the
Blackboard Developer Network and a
sponsor of the upcoming
Bb World ’06 conference.
) Up until recently, students at
campuses that had a deal with Ruckus could pay
a
relatively low monthly fee for an
"all-you-can-listen" access to the music offered
by Ruckus. But
, according to Canter, whose
company partners with Ruckus, it looks like
they’ll start offering that service for
free.