Best Bets Archives
Administration
Assessment and Evaluation
Assistive Technologies
Associations and Organizations
Free Information Sources
Innovative Technologies
Instructional Resources
Laws and Legislation
Student Support Services
Current Issue of BEEP
Past Issues of BEEP
Printable Versions
Best Bets Archive
Project Eagle
For a subscription to BEEP, contact the Project Manager: lechnerj@spcollege.edu
|
|
A Look at Leading Edge E-Learning Technologies
"Using technology to improve learning requires
new methods and materials."
(Dr. Sylvia Charp, Editor-in-Chief, T. H. E. Journal)
This issue offers a sampling of intriguing new
technologies to enhance the delivery of e-learning in a variety of ways. It is
not an endorsement of any product, and offers neither the last word nor a
comprehensive overview of resources. Instead, the diverse items included here
are intended simply to highlight some new ideas and whet the imagination of
planners and users of educational technology.
Hardware and Digital Technologies
- BluetoothTM microchip. A much-heralded
innovation that will allow devices of all kinds (computers, cell phones,
even cars) to communicate and transfer data. Slow in being fully
implemented, the chip is predicted to revolutionize wireless
communications by 2005.
- Connected touch pad. Portable LCD
display, keyboard and modem combination that plugs into any home phone
line for Internet use.
- CueCatTM. An inexpensive bar
code scanner that connects to a computer for easy access to Web sites it
recognizes.
- Digital photo album. A
portable unit that can display any downloaded images simply by plugging it
into an electrical outlet.
- Digital photo printer. Portable
printers that plug into and print from digital cameras or computers.
- Group response systems. Wireless devices
that allow electronic feedback between participant and presenters in
interactive meetings.
- Interactive flip chart. Allows the user to
make any standard paper flip chart interactive with a PC, utilizing a
traditional pen while simultaneously saving the information as a file.
- Internet TV. High tech TVs that
can surf the Internet, send email and more. A move beyond WebTV toward the
true convergence of the Internet and a standard television set.
- "Internet2: Making the
Connection." Article by Apryl Lundsten and Eileen Flick
in Syllabus 14(8), March 2001, gives an update on the status of
this effort.
- Notepad portfolio. Device
that captures handwritten notes on ordinary paper and sends them to
handheld devices like Palm organizers.
- Portable SoundStationTM Satellite. Hardware bundle
that allows portable audio-conferencing.
- Portable whiteboard. A
14" "capture bar" that rolls up into a briefcase-sized package
for easy transport.
- Quicktionary IITM. A pen-shaped
scanner that translates words into one of ten languages.
- Streaming video. Examples of what
various departments at Stanford University (CA) have added to their Web
pages.
- Touch-interactive screen. Converts
a standard monitor into a touch-interactive device.
- Touch-screen electronic book. Article by Jessica
Ludwig in the Chronicle of Higher Education, 3/19/01, describing an
electronic book that can be leafed though using a touch-screen.
- Video-flexTM camera. Small, portable
camera that enlarges images and displays them on a TV.
- Video on demand. Examples from the Futures Channel, a
commercial educational enterprise.
- Wearable computers. A concept
of some vintage that has many unusual possibilities. Recent and related
are digital camera, Global
Positioning System, and MP3-audio wristwatches.
- Wireless networks. Overview
by Jean Shields in Technology & Learning, 21(8), March
2001,of how a state-of-the-art wireless network is constructed and
functions. Another source of wireless information is the Wireless Solutions column in Converge,
March 2001.
Innovative E-deas in Specific Subject Areas
- BitBopŠ Tuner. Formerly
the Radioactive TunerŠ, this Internet radio product finds and downloads
music on the Web as requested by individual Internet users.
- Computer Lab Instruction Software. Allows monitoring
of student screens and quick response to student questions or problems.
- Concept Mapping Software. Latest version of
sophisticated InspirationTM diagramming and outlining software for students of all
ages.
- Connected University. New
commercial Web service that offers just-in-time online courses on specific
technology-related subjects for teachers, administrators and technology
coordinators.
- Digitizing Tablets. Designed for
CAD/CAM, GIS Mapping, and other industrial users, this line of products
converts film images, graphics and drawings into accurate digital
information.
- Electronic Screen Reader. Converts online
text to speech with control of how text is displayed and read. Designed
for those with learning, visual or reading impairments. Product of CAST, which also hosts an informative Web site with news on
technologies for those with disabilities and has created Bobby, a free online service that allows Web page
authors to identify barriers to access by individuals with disabilities.
- Online Tutoring. Web-based
tutoring on demand in a variety of academic subjects.
- Robotics on the Web. Whether it's the
LEGO-based ROBOLABTM System for beginners or the Lab-Volt AutomationTM product for job training, Web sites exist to teach
robotic concepts.
Finding the Best of Existing E-Learning Technologies
Selected Educational Technology E-Sources
(Good for keeping up with the latest developments)
Some Upcoming Educational Technology Conferences
Syllabus Conferences - April and November
E-Learning
Conference and Expo - April
International Conference on
College Teaching/Learning - April
International Conference on Technology
in Education (Florida State University) - May
National Education
Computing Association - June
Ed
Tech Conference 2001 - July
Annual Conference
on Distance Teaching and Learning (University of Wisconsin)
- August
International Conference
on Advanced Learning Technologies - August
Association
for Advancement of Computers in Education WebNet-World Conference
- October
Educause
2001 - October
League for Innovation
- - November
Florida Educational Technology
Conference - March 2002
The contents of BEEP were developed under a grant from the U. S. Department of Education (DOE). However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the DOE, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.
|
|