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Teaching and Learning via the Network
Project UWired
Project Number 21 - 1994
Paula Walker
Assistant Director of Libraries
for Undergraduate Services
University of Washington Libraries, DF-10
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 543-1947
Fax: (206) 685-8485
pwalker@u.washington.edu
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
Pam Stewart
Director, Planning and Facilities Infrastructure
Computing & Communications, AG-44
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington 98195
(206) 685-7955
Fax: (206) 543-4641
pks@u.washington.edu
Oren Sreebny
Computing & Communications
University of Washington
Academic Computing Center, GH-45
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 543-5227
oren@cac.washington.edu |
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Andrea Bartelstein
Reference/User Education Librarian
Odegaard Undergraduate Library, DF-10
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 543-2060
Fax: (206) 685-8485
andi@u.washington.edu
Michaelann Jundt
Director of New Student Programs
University of Washington
34 Communications, DS-60
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 685-2705
Fax: (206) 685-8299
mjundt@u.washington.edu |
Louis Fox
Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Education
University of Washington
34 Communications, DS-60
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 685-4745
Fax: (206) 685-8299
lfox@u.washington.edu
Abstract
The primary goal of Project UWired is to build an electronic community at
the University of Washington that integrates electronic communication and
information navigation skills into instruction and learning. Targeting a
selected group of students and faculty for intensive technology and
instruction and use, UWired will serve as a prototype for integrating
computer use into higher education and across the disciplines. Similar
projects on other campuses have provided faculty or students with the
equipment. But few have provided sustained, discipline-specific
instruction about electronic resources and their applications in the
classroom. UWired will go beyond technology. Bringing together
librarians, computing experts, faculty, staff, and students, its purpose
is to create an electronic community in which communication,
collaboration, and information technology become an ongoing, integral
part of teaching and learning at the University of Washington. UWired is
the first in a series of steps toward this end.
UWired has targeted seventy-five students for intensive technology
instruction and use during the 1994-95 academic year: each student will
be given the use of a laptop computer with modem and will attend a
year-long technology seminar. During Autumn Quarter 1994, the students
will be divided into three groups; within each group the students will be
enrolled in the same courses. All the faculty and teaching assistants
instructing these courses will also be involved in the project, receiving
the use of a laptop computer and attending an intensive pre-quarter
technology seminar. The general tools on the laptop will include an
office package of software (spreadsheet, database, word processing,
desktop publishing), reference materials (databases and discipline
specific tools), and additional software as chosen by the faculty and
students within each of the three groups. We will also have a projection
unit for faculty and student presentations. UW Libraries and Computing &
Communications staff will take an active role in the training program,
teaching the students and faculty how to become active users of
communications and access tools such as E-mail, the Internet, Mosaic,
Gopher, FTP, and UWIN (the University of Washington Information
Navigator). The credit-bearing student seminar will teach students the
skills needed to use their hardware and software, and help them explore
the Internet as a resouce for self-education. Continuing into Winter and
Spring Quarters, when the seventy-five students will no longer be grouped
into the three course clusters, the seminar will emphasize
computer-related projects and will help students learn how to use their
technological skills in their different classes. Throughout the entire
year, the seminar will encourage project-based collaborative learning and
the incorporation of the resources on the Internet more fully into
students academic lives.
The UWired seminar will initially be a part of the General Studies
curriculum. Eventually, we plan to develop a new curricular area for
information and communication technologies. During June and July 1994,
about 75 students will enroll in the two-credit seminar which will take
place throughout the 1994-95 school year (Autumn, Winter, and Spring
Quarters for 6 creditas total). In the following year, after we have
researched the benefits and best practices of this program, we hope to
involve most new students in such a program.
Project Criteria
Because different UW units are collaborating on Uwired (Undergraduate
Education, Computing & Communications, and the UW Libraries), we have the
unique opportunity to involve a wide range of UW personnel in the
instructional process. Not only will faculty and graduate students be
teaching the UWired students, but upperclassmen will serve as peer
leaders and learners, Computing & Communications staff will help with the
training, hardware, and maintenance, and UW librarians will teach UWired
faculty and students about accessing, retrieving, and evaluating
electronic information.
UWired has great potential for collaborative learning among students,
allowing them to form electronic study groups, co-author assignments,
discuss course material with students at other universities across the
nation and around the world. The student technology seminar will
emphasize this use of technology for communication and collaboration.
Additionally, because we want students to be able to learn skills that
will be applicable to future classes and programs at the UW and
eventually, to their professions, the technological instruction will
focus on software and compjter skills that can be used across the
curriculum and at various levels of disciplinary sophistication.
Students will learn about information access, retrieval, and equally if
not more important, information evaluation. And UWired students will
also become knowledgeable about computer hardware and proficient with
computer software, more specifically worldware or software that has an
enormous range of applications, like spreadsheets, word processing, and
databases. The technology seminar will show students the benefits of
using their electronic communication and information navigation skills
throughout their academic careers and into their professional lives.
UWired also has great potential for collaboration among faculty whether
in their teaching, their research, or departmental duties. The UWired
instruction for faculty will emphasize integrating computer use into
their classroom practices -- from designing assignments that require the
use of electronic tools, to establishing electronic discussion groups
among students, to using computer projections for classroom
demonstrations. As well, the faculty seminar will help instructors
identify useful instructional software and provide suggestions for how
they might integrate it into their courses. And the opportunity to
address, discuss, debate, and advise students electronically will allow a
daily connection between teacher and student and will continue the
process of teaching and learning outside the scheduled time and physical
space of the classroom.
In preparing UW students for their future lives as professionals and
citizens, UWired presents an exciting opportunity. Indeed, how our
community and our country deals with the Information Age will have
enormous impact on our democratic way of life and on our nation's ability
to compete internationally. As explained in a recent report by the
American Library Association's Presidential Committee on Information
Literacy, "to promote economic independence and quality of existence,
there is a lifelong need for being informed and up-to-date." In an
information society, information literacy is a shared right and a shared
responsibility.
Audio-visual requirements
We will need either an X-terminal or a 486 PC with DOS/X, capable of
demonstrating Mosaic. We will also need an LCD Panel and overhead
projector that is compatible. The LCD model we use is Boxlight Infocus
7600 WS, and the special overhead projector is a Dukane 670.
CNI
21 Dupont Circle Suite #800
Washington, DC 20036-1109
202.296.5098
<http://www.cni.org/>
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