Teaching and Learning via the Network
Meeting of the Minds
Project Number 01 - 1994
Steve Acker
Associate Professor
Communication Department
Ohio State University
3016 Derby Hall/154 N. Oval Mall
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1339
(614) 292-6157
Fax: (614) 292-2055
Acker.1@osu.edu
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
Jim Bracken
Head Librarian and Associate Professor
University Library
Ohio State University
224 Main Library
1858 Neil Ave.
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1339
(614) 292-2786
Fax: (614) 292-7859
Bracken.1@osu.edu
Kathleen Davey
Associate Director
Academic Technology Services
Ohio State University
7 Lord Hall
124 W. 17th/Columbus
Ohio 43210-1339
(614) 292-5984
Fax: (614) 292-3299
kdavey@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Steve Acker
Biographical summary Associate Professor of Communication.
Teaching/research areas collaborative inquiry, new media technologies,
designing communication systems for social systems.
Jim Bracken
Biographical summary Head librarian, Communication, Theater, and
English.
International index/search strategies for telecommunications.
Electronic access to information on telecommunications in the
European Union. 17th Century Printing technologies.
Kathleen Davey
Biographical summary Director of division that provides
professional instructional, media, and
computer applications design, development, and production services.
Expertise in evaluation, user-centered design, needs assessment.
Abstract
Meeting of the Minds (MoM) is: (1) an interdisciplinary design team at
Ohio State University, (2) a groupware front end for Mosaic, in turn a
front end to the World Wide Web, and (3) an approach to collaborative
education that integrates telecommunications and face-to-face meetings.
MoM, which has been used in various iterations with two undergraduate,
two graduate, two cross-university (one of which is international)
classes, is discussed in these three ways below.
An Interdisciplinary Design Team
Ohio State University has funded a
design team to improve interdisciplinary understanding and to work in
very rapidly changing (time sensitive) areas of inquiry. Our design team
consists of a Communication Department faculty member, a Public Policy
School faculty member, a librarian in charge of Communication, Theater,
and English, an Associate Director of our Academic Technology Service,
the director, two programmers, and an evaluation specialist from our
Center of Instructional Resources, and graduate/undergraduate students
interested in collaborative inquiry.
A Groupware Front-End
We have developed MoM on the Macintosh platform,
and will extend it to Windows in 1995. Using a client-server approach,
MoM allows groups of students to share a workspace we call "working
document." Working document manages serial access to a group-authored
electronic paper. It provides editing, commenting, and hypertext linking
to "public documents." Public documents are the writings and arguments
of individual students and works they reference in developing their
thinking. WAIS-based searching on the working document and on the public
documents helps provides access to large amounts of information.
Students submit their created and found documents using the MoM program
which automatically converts them to HTML-formatted documents that are
deposited in a Mosaic-browsable database. We use documents to mean
audio, still image, quicktime movie, and text-based material. From
public labs at the university, or from properly-equipped home computers,
students can submit any of these "documents" for sharing by the group.
Each document is prefaced by a form that includes an abstract, key words,
file size, file type, and who submitted the document. This form is what
allows WAIS searches to operate productively across multimedia.
The class is broken into groups of 5-7 students who are given access to a
password-protected Home page. They can read any of the other group's
Mosaic databases, but can only submit documents, edit, comment, and link
in their own.
Collaborative Education
Our goal for Meeting of the Minds is to help
make traditional lecture courses viable as multiple student-centered,
interactive courses, and to make university education available to the
"new traditional student," In the case of Ohio State, the new "typical
student" is 25 years of age, working more than 20 hours per week, and
committed to family, work, and community, as well as university
obligations. These time poor students need strong out-of-class
technical/social networks to leverage their time spent in the classrooms
with fellow students and faculty. At this stage, we are only working
with classes of 20-60 students, most of whom use public facilities rather
than home. However, our university is making significant commitments to
home-based access through site licensing of "Homenet," a software package
developed at OSU that supports SLIP connections to our campus computer
resources.
Project Criteria
Team involvement: The team meets on a regular basis and now has
succeeded in learning each other's vocabulary and blind spots. The
team's faculty offer the courses, designers provide e-mail assistance to
student users and interative development of MoM based on problems, the
librarian compiles information resources and consults with students,
academic technology services also provides network support/trouble
shooting, and equipment loans.
Use of network resources: MoM is client-server based, operates on SONET
and from home on HomeNET (SLIP connection). MoM incorporates the Mosaic
browser and can generate links between the Working document among the
multiple WWW databases.
Student-centered: Classes are structured along three objectives: to
teach research/learning as a collaborative discovery process to student
teams, to promote group and individual authorship, and in the process,
audience perspective-taking skills, and to encourage students teaching
other students (and the faculty!).
Information literacy: Incorporates Mosaic/WWW, Lexis/Nexis, e-mail,
list serves, and groupware. Argumentation theory in an information-rich
environment.
Relevance to undergraduate program: MoM is used in our senior capstone
courses in which students research rapidly evolving communication
problems/issues, develop a group (social) response to the problem, and
then present it. At the graduate level, we use MoM to re-write
telecommunications policy for the National information infrastructure,
and to support an international joint course to get diverse cultural
perspectives on communication policy and design.
Departure from lecture format: Our courses privilege student-student and
student-material exchanges as much as faculty-student. Approximately 1/3
of material in the course is faculty presented or assigned. The
remainder is shared student resources and electronic and face-to face
exchanges.
For a first hand sense of what we are doing please access:
http://table.acs.ohio-state.edu:70/0/MOFTHEM/MOFTHEM-Home.html
Enter the password "notyet" to see our students' work on the National
Information Infrastructure. Or, enter "CAST" to see our collaborative
research paper for the "Finding our Way" conference.
Course Descriptions
Communication 659: Undergraduate capstone course in Communication and
Society. 25 students per section, one or two sections per quarter.
Communication 850C: Graduate course in Policy and Design of the National
information infrastructure. Involved joint classes with Cornell's
Multimedia Lab group. 14 students per quarter, one quarter per year.
Communication 850D: Graduate course in comparative telecommunications
policy. Jointly taught with University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Involves 3 week travel to host country by visitors and then use of
telecommunications (MoM, e-mail, videoconferences) for ongoing
research/joint student papers. 10-15 student per quarter, one quarter
per year.
Public Policy and Management 660: Masters level course in Public Policy.
60 students per quarter, one quarter per year.