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[Innovate] August/September 2009 Issue

  • 1.  [Innovate] August/September 2009 Issue

    Posted 08-06-2009 22:00
    Innovate (www.innovateonline.info) is published bimonthly as a public
    service by the Fischler School of Education and Human Services at Nova
    Southeastern University and is sponsored, in part, by Microsoft.
    The August/September issue includes articles on the role of virtual
    realities in (and as) the classroom, an article on one university's
    efforts to ensure that faculty members get the support and
    encouragement they need to produce consistently high-quality online
    courses, and an article that describes a business school's development
    of a computer-based testing lab to accommodate their growing
    enrollment.

    In our first article, Ulrich Rauch, Marvin Cohodas, and Tim Wang
    describe the Arts Metaverse, a virtual learning environment for the
    three-dimensional reconstruction of important archeological artifacts
    and sites, allowing students access to places and works they would not
    otherwise be able to experience. In addition, students may create
    reconstructions as well as visiting particular sites. Embracing the
    principle that engaging students in the construction of a virtual
    teaching and learning environment can create a participative learning
    experience, the Arts Metaverse Project aims to enable students and
    academics to become joint researchers in creating and sharing
    knowledge beyond the walls of the university. See
    http://tinyurl.com/l438lx

    Our next two articles describe efforts to create learning
    environments in Second Life. Mary Anne Clark offers a map to Genome
    Island, a virtual laboratory complex constructed for teaching genetics
    to university undergraduates, Genome Island also provides a public
    space where anyone interested in genetics can spend a few minutes or a
    few hours interacting with genetic objects. See
    http://tinyurl.com/mwuuy6

    Anne Hewitt, Susan Spencer, Danielle Mirliss, and Riad Twal report on
    a collaborative initiative to create a virtual simulation exercise
    focused on key competencies for students in a Master of Healthcare
    Administration program. The exercise they design provides a previously
    unavailable virtual counterpart to the tabletop exercises
    traditionally used to teach emergency preparedness, allowing online
    students to gain important hands-on experience and opportunities for
    interaction. See http://tinyurl.com/koqvkw

    Albert A. Angehrn and Katrina Maxwell describe a simulation that does
    not rely on a virtual world. Rather, their simulation, designed to
    teach collaboration skills to managers and decision makers, relies on
    an episodic video story to create a simulation narrative.
    Participants, who may be online or on site, use group decision support
    technology to facilitate their collaboration with a small team around
    a series of mission-critical dilemmas; the decision a team makes at
    each juncture determines how the narrative develops. The simulation
    provides a learning experience that can help managers, decision
    makers, virtual teams, and online communities reflect about the
    challenges and opportunities of collaboration and group decision
    making. See http://tinyurl.com/kl7swd

    Next, Hong Wang, Lawrence Gould, and Dennis King share the
    comprehensive approach their university has developed to quality
    assurance in online education. A central component of their program is
    effective cooperation among administrative, professional, and peer
    support systems to guide faculty members in creating and administering
    quality online courses. Through these efforts, Wang, Gould, and King
    argue, their university has developed a collaborative course
    development process that provides faculty members the support they
    need to design and administer high quality online instruction. See
    http://tinyurl.com/l62f2b

    Patrick Moskal, Richard Caldwell, and Taylor Ellis describe the
    development and evolution of a computer-based assessment lab at their
    college of business administration, detail the lessons learned from
    their experiences in developing the lab and accommodating continued
    growth, and discuss plans for further development. As a result of
    sound initial planning and continual development in response to
    faculty and student needs, the facility has been remarkably successful
    in streamlining the administration of assessments for CBA, presenting
    a model for other institutions considering implementing computer-based
    assessment on a large scale. See http://tinyurl.com/ndddtu

    In Innovate-Ideagora this month, Denise Easton and Alan McCord
    announce the consolidation of Innovate-Live, Innovate's venue for
    author webcasts, with Ideagora; webcasts and webcast archives will now
    be accessed through Ideagora's home page. Noting a pattern in the
    nearly 50 discussions currently active on Ideagora, McCord and Easton
    suggest a list of five core issues driving change in education.
    Readers are invited to contribute to an Ideagora discussion about this
    list by suggesting their own list or by exploring how technology may
    shape an approach to these questions. See http://tinyurl.com/lgl3b5

    We hope that you enjoy this issue. Please use the discussion board
    within each article to raise questions or provide additional
    commentary. Your comments will be sent to authors for their response,
    which will become part of the record for their article. Also, please
    forward this announcement to appropriate mailing lists and to
    colleagues who want to use IT tools to advance their work. Please ask
    your organizational librarian to link to Innovate in their resource
    section for open-access e-journals.

    Thanks!

    Jim
    ----
    James L Morrison
    Editor-in-Chief, Innovate
    http://www.innovateonline.info
    Fischler School of Education and Human Services
    Nova Southeastern University
    http://www.schoolofed.nova.edu/home.htm