1 / 32

Distance Learning: What is It?

Distance Learning: What is It?. Presented by Raymond P. Kulig www.dhvideoconferences.org. D/L. Distance Learning: What do we mean by that? Distance learning is any method of teaching where the teacher and student are not physically in the same room.

risa
Download Presentation

Distance Learning: What is It?

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. Distance Learning: What is It? • Presented by Raymond P. Kulig • www.dhvideoconferences.org

  2. D/L • Distance Learning: What do we mean by that? • Distance learning is any method of teaching where the teacher and student are not physically in the same room. • Methods include the telephone, television, satellites, cable, data networks, CD-Rom, the US Mail and other techniques.

  3. D/L • Distance Learning does not necessarily exclude classroom teaching • Over 400 colleges and universities offer D/L accredited courses

  4. Two-Way Interactive Television • Two-way interactive video is one of the most common ways to teach • DHMC was a leader in this field • Some university systems have as many as 50 videoconference systems • Current technology allows TWIV to connect to locations world-wide using common communication standards

  5. Two-Way Interactive Videoconferencing • Conferences between seven locations are common. • 384K “standards” method of transmission is the current popular format. • Growth of this technology will continue as prices drop and needs increase. • TWIV is moving toward the internet.

  6. Two-Way Interactive • The industry is moving rapidly to allow this technology to run computer programs and spread sheets simultaneously • MERGE: All D/L methods on one screen

  7. Satellite Based Systems • Satellite delivered training is the best way to deliver a single message to a large audience in many locations • Technology can be expensive and confusing • Can be easily depreciated over time.

  8. Satellite • Most efficient way to deliver training to multiple sites (ie: more than 10 locations.) • Receive equipment is inexpensive and easy to maintain. • Favored choice for large corporations

  9. Satellite • Signal is received by all • Questions are phoned, faxed or e-mailed • Sometimes can be delivered by web-based mediums

  10. Satellite • Several different methods of delivery(C,KU,VSAT) • Uplinking and studio equipment is expensive • Uplinking fees can be expensive • No face to face interactivity

  11. Satellite at DHMC • DHMC receives over 50 hours per year of D/L by satellite • DHMC has done only one D/L course by satellite in this decade • DHMC has no facilities for transmitting satellite D/L

  12. CD-Rom • CD-Rom based training is an easy D/L way to teach • One CD-Rom can be shipped to multiple sites inexpensively • Dartmouth Medical School’s Interactive Media Lab is a leader in this field • Only one or two CD-Rom training programs being used at DHMC

  13. Videotape • Similar to CD-Rom in benefits although can be more expensive • Generally is used as PART of D/L • Once produced, tapes can be cheaply duplicated and distributed • DHMC is a leader in using videotape based learning for patients

  14. Web Based Learning • Web based D/L is the most common platform for D/L • This method can be used in conjunction with all of the other technologies • Can be used on private networks (intranet) or over the internet • A variety of software platforms exist.

  15. Web Based Learning • Telephone and use of e-mail are a critical part of successful web based D/L • Start-up can be costly. May add to a teachers workload • Who owns the work?

  16. Web Based Learning • Student enrollment increased from 750,000 to 1.5 million since 1998 • Few teachers are taking courses to learn how to teach on-line • Many on-line courses, like in-person courses, lack audio-visual materials.

  17. Computer Web Based Systems • Readily available throughout the region. • Leading platform for distance learning applications. • Highly interactive even when time shifting is required. • Will increase in usage and effectiveness as new features are added.

  18. Computer Web Based Systems • Often requires more work on the part of the teacher. • Use of visuals may be hampered by user’s network. • Requires the most training and support when multiple applications are used.

  19. Streaming • Streaming video will likely become a dominant method for communication during the next 5 years. • It will bridge the gap between all of the other technologies allowing for a more seamless method of communication. • Streaming video coupled with advances in computer and web technologies will have a major impact in D/L.

  20. Streaming Software • Real Player aka Real One • Media Player • QuickTime • Macromedia’s Flash

  21. Plus and Minus • 24/7 lectures and conferences • PowerPoint presentations look great • e-mail interactivity • Slow home modems prevent some usage • Patience is a virtue missing in our day and age

  22. Web Conferencing • Powerpoint’s, etc., • Works like a web site • Polling, on-line chat • Telephone audio or streamed audio • Streaming works best on higher speed connections

  23. Web Conferencing • www.placeware.com • www.webex.com • www.genesys.com • www.presentonline.com

  24. Real World • Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2001 devotes an entire section on Distance Learning • Video Streaming may be the next wave that transforms D/L • D/L will gain students as the speed of the Internet increases

  25. Real World • Major colleges and universities are using D/L. They include Cornell, Columbia, New York University and University of Phoenix • University of Phoenix is all on-line and claims 18,000 students

  26. Real World • What software platform do you use? • How do you integrate various technologies • How do you teach the teacher? • How do you bridge the generation gap?

  27. What This Means • Distance Learning will be a major way to teach within the next ten years • It will require considerable funding if it is to be competitive and successful • Teachers must be willing to learn how to use the new technology

  28. What This Means • It will require cooperation between A/V departments, Information Systems, teachers & the governing bodies that make up an institution. • Much will be learned through trial and error

  29. What This Means • D/L will never replace in-person teaching. It will however, enhance such training and replace or make possible other training

  30. What To Do Next • Put into place a working group to guide the program along but not to impede it • While no one technology or program will be the answer, it is important that you do not provide too many options. Technical support will suffer if you do. • Goals must be clear

  31. Web Sites • University Of Phoenix On-Line Campus www.uophx.edu/online • Distance Education and Training Council www.detc.org/ • Applied Business Telecommunications www.abctelecon.com • United States Distance Learning Association www.usdla.org

  32. Distance Learning: What Is It? • Presented by Raymond P. Kulig • www.videoconferences.org

More Related