[Web4lib] New Study Explores how Colleges Train Faculty and
Students in Use of the Web
Primarydat at aol.com
Primarydat at aol.com
Wed Apr 4 09:02:11 EDT 2007
Primary Research Group has published a new report – Trends in Training
College
Faculty, Staff & Students In Computer Literacy, ISBN 1-57440-085-1 – that
explores how technology trainers and educators at American colleges are
plotting and scheming to improve the computer literacy skills of faculty, staff and
students. The report presents case studies from nine institutions of higher
education, including-- Brooklyn Law School, Florida State University College
of Medical, The Tuskegee Institute, University of West Georgia, Clemson,
Indiana University Southeast, Texas Christian, and others.
For the Teaching and Learning Technology Group, a non-profit corporation
that counsels colleges in proper technology instruction and implementation,
cross-departmental and administrative collaboration is a key factor. Technology
literacy is a philosophy, not just a program of study, and continuous needs
assessment, always focused on educational outcomes, followed up by action at
all levels, is the key to success.
Indiana University Southeast has developed a new informatics major that
fills a gap between casual information technology training, inadequate for many
students, and the computer science major, insufficiently practical for some.
Florida State University College of Medicine has developed a highly detailed
and integrated informatics program for medical students; the program is
integrated into virtually every course offered by the College. For Florida
State, the key has been broad institutional support, including the provision of
laptops to students, as well as the necessary support personnel to service
them.
At the South Carolina Center of Excellence for Instructional Technology
Training at Clemson University, the mission is to support teacher training and
teacher preparation.
Chris Peters, the director of the Center, notes that its mission, like that
of the Indiana University Southeast informatics program, is to allow IT
professionals to assume some of the load of teaching technology-related classes
within a particular discipline, in this case, K-12 teacher training.
At the University of West Georgia, Melanie Clay, the Director of Distance
Learning, has found success in training the hundreds of distance learning
instructors employed by the college by taking a cue from Japanese auto
manufacturers, whose just-in-time inventory management methods significantly improved
efficiency in auto manufacturing.
The Appalachian College Association, an organization set up largely to
improve the quality of instruction in higher education in Appalachia, developed a
novel approach to computer literacy, by educating both instructor and student
together. Martin Ramsay, Chief Technologist for the organization, won a
grant to develop a special program that pairs professor and student in a
three-day technology workshop
At the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, technology coordinator Jacqueline
McArthur has been able to increase the number of regular Blackboard users among
faculty from twenty five to one hundred and twenty five in just a few months.
At Brooklyn Law School, the development of a training oriented computer
laboratory, combined with discreet but timely marketing, has helped to break
down the walls between technology end users and trainers. Lloyd Carew-Reid, a
technology-training specialist at the School, believes that timely marketing –
through brown bag lunches, scheduled visits, and short but highly focused
drop in sessions – are keys to taking technology training to the end user.
For more information about the report, visit our website at
www.primaryresearch.com
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