1 / 31

Collaborative Technology in Distance Education: Engaging the Remote Audience

Collaborative Technology in Distance Education: Engaging the Remote Audience. Richard Anderson Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of Washington. Engagement of remote audience. UW Distance Learning Course Experience with audio – video conferencing Classroom Presenter

kirsi
Download Presentation

Collaborative Technology in Distance Education: Engaging the Remote Audience

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Collaborative Technology in Distance Education: Engaging the Remote Audience Richard Anderson Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of Washington

  2. Engagement of remote audience • UW Distance Learning Course • Experience with audio – video conferencing • Classroom Presenter • Support for student interaction

  3. UW CSE Professional Masters’ Program (PMP) • Course based Masters’ program for working students • Metropolitan Area Program • Some courses offered as distance courses • Synchronous • Video conferenced

  4. Video conferenced instruction • Instructor lectures to two classrooms • Classroom cameras • Audience mics to allow student discussion

  5. ConferenceXP • Internet based distributed classroom • UW Professional Masters Program • Classes between UW and Microsoft since 1997 • Trial use of ConferenceXP Spring 2002 • MS Faculty summit: How to fail at video conferenced teaching • Production use of ConferenceXP starting Spring 2003 • MS Faculty summit: How to succeed at video conferenced teaching • Winter 2004: HCI Course taught by Richard Anderson SHOW EXAMPLE (HAL PERKINS)

  6. Off-line viewing

  7. Engaging the remote audience • Interest • Engagement • Latency only matters if there is interaction

  8. Pedagogy to support interaction • Conscious actions of the instructor promote interaction • Feedback lag • Delay in asking questions

  9. Video • How important is high quality video ? • Visual feedback is important for instructor • Increasing resolution of remote video had big impact for instructor’s perception of remote students

  10. The gaze problem Display of Remote Students Camera • Many studies show the importance of gaze • This is something we have not done right (yet!)

  11. Audio • Instructor voice easy • Audience much more difficult • Hard to predict sound quality throughout room • Goal • Cross site audience to audience communication • Instructor concern • Can remote students hear local students

  12. Presentation tools • Survey of instructors regarding distance learning identified presentation tools as the number one issue • PowerPoint is also a pain for the same reason it's a pain in non-distance classes - the slides impose a rigid structure on the lecture, and make it more difficult to adjust to the interactions that occur during it. "

  13. Classroom Presenter • Tablet PC based Presentation system • Distributed application for writing on images • Writing is most valuable in interactive situations

  14. Classroom Presenter Instructor view Projector view

  15. Examples

  16. Examples

  17. Interactive feedback • Pushpin feedback • Real time feedback associated with slide content • Activity meters • Real time summarized feedback • IM • Messages sent to instructor

  18. Structured activities • Planned, student exercises were the most effective means of engaging remotes students

  19. Classroom exercise • How many motors are in your car?

  20. Computer support • Student submissions • Students write on copies of slides with personal devices • Students submit to the instructor • Instructor display results • Structured Interaction Presentation System

  21. Trace the path of Hurricane Isabel

  22. Instructor view of ink submissions

  23. Structured Interaction Presentation System • Exercises embedded in instructor slides • Students use personal devices • Results shared between students and displayed to students

  24. “Mock” class using 24 CS students, staff, and faculty NOT on CS 50 minutes long Took ~1 hour to convert static => interactive Designed INSIDE PPT USING SIP, etc.

  25. Conclusion • Mechanisms for engaging students in distance learning • Pedagogy • High quality audio and video • Collaboration applications • Questions? • anderson@cs.washington.edu • www.cs.washington.edu/homes/anderson/

More Related