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Teaching and Learning via the Network
Rice University Electronic Studio Project
Project Number 14 - 1993
G. Anthony Gorry
Vice President for Research
Graduate Study & Information Systems
Rice University
P.O. Box 1892
Houston, TX 77251
(713) 527-6054
Fax: (713) 285-5163
e-mail:tony@vprit4.rice.edu
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
Beth Shapiro (University Librarian)
Kevin Long (Director of Information Technology)
Leslie Miller, Kay Flowers, Martin Halbert
In addition, Rice has received grants from the Texas Environmental Center
and the Council on Library Resources in support of various aspects of
this project.
Abstract
The Virtual Notebook System (VNS), a system for collaborative
work originally created for biomedical applications, is being used
to create electronic studios that will enhance teaching and learning at all
grade levels. Electronic studios are under development for
university courses in the humanities, history of science,
architecture, political science, and art history. Also as part of this
project, VNS will be used to create an electronic reserve room for
the library. An electronic studio also is being developed to
communicate science and engineering information within
elementary schools and to develop an electronic environmental
library. Using advanced technology, electronic notebooks are
created that transcend important limitations of pencil and paper,
enabling members of a team or class to share and integrate
information in their collaborative efforts. The concept of the
electronic studio was prompted by the usefulness of an architect's
studio as a place in which work is organized and collected. Within
an architect's studio, the drafting table and storage cabinet serve as both
a work place and a repository for tools, design projects, and
personal possessions. Within the electronic studio, teachers and
students are able to transcend the limitations of a physical studio
and are able to accumulate and share notes, assignments,
documents, images, video and sound. Several electronic studio
applications will be tested in courses during the 1993-94 academic
year.
The electronic studio enables teachers and students to accumulate
and share notes, assignments, images, video, sound and documents.
The dynamics of multimedia computing are challenging paper as
the preferred medium for the development and dissemination of
educational materials. Within the electronic studio, teachers can
use workstations and networks to transform written theories into
demonstrations; and models into simulations. Audio annotations
can be heard, and musical scores played. The expansive nature of
the electronic studio distinguishes it from other educational
computing systems. An electronic studio can enfold information
from geographically dispersed sites -- for example, from libraries
and other archives across the nation. And unlike many computing
applications in education that are intended for individual learners at stand-
alone workstations, several users across a network can
collaborate on educational projects within a single studio. Also,
using the electronic studio, educational institutions in the state can
collaborate on the development and deployment of new curricula.
All of the five points of interest described in the call for proposal are
addressed. Electronic studio development is based on
utilization of the Internet; makes significant use of library
resources in a networked environment; involves collaboration of
librarians, teaching faculty, and computer professionals within the
University, and is reaching out to the broader community through
projects with the Texas Environmental Center and several schools
districts in south Texas and in the Houston area. Additionally, the VNS
software, while requiring a graphical user interface, is being
ported to a variety widely available platforms.
Audio-visual requirements
A connection to the Internet and a Silicon Graphics workstation
will be required.
CNI
21 Dupont Circle Suite #800
Washington, DC 20036-1109
202.296.5098
<http://www.cni.org/>
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