Date: Wed, 8 Feb 1995 11:16:52 -0600 From: BITNET list server at UA1VM (1.8a) Subject: File: "SMITH LESSON" MAP-EXTRA: GUEST LECTURE As we bring the Roadmap workshop to a close, I want to give you an opportunity to think about what role the Internet will play in education in the years to come. I can think of no better person to speak on this topic than Richard Smith. "Richard Smith discovered the information resources of the Internet while doing work as a Ph.D. student at the University of Pittsburgh. He taught the use of the Internet in graduate courses and followed these by giving workshops called "Navigating the Internet" in 1991. In the summer of 1992, Smith decided to offer a course on Internet training -- over the Internet -- hoping to get 30 or 40 people to participate. A total of 864 people from more than 20 countries registered for his "Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop." A second workshop drew more than 15,000 participants from more than 50 countries. The result of these ground-breaking international workshops is that Smith has trained literally thousands of people around the world in how to use Internet resources. This led to Smith being dubbed the "Internet Mentor" in the January 1993 issue of American Libraries. He plans to do bigger and better Internet workshops in the future because he enjoys offering a service that is much needed and appreciated." (1) Ladies and Gentlemen, I am proud to introduce *my* mentor, Richard Smith: ----- Patrick Crispen asked me to write a segment for his Roadmap distance education workshop. I'd like to give some general thoughts on this new form of distance education and the new technologies that are becoming a prominent force in the education community. Vice President Al Gore speaks about building an information superhighway that will keep the United States competitive in the world of growing high technology. The National Information Infostructure (NII) is already in the making which will include present computer, television and telephone, and telecommunication technology, and promises that it will be available to everyone as every classroom, library, hospital and clinic in the country should have access to the network. (Recently Post Offices!) It is now so common that the comic strip Outland makes fun of it with their cyberpunk characters and MTV, Nightline, FX and other commercial entities are now on-line. This new means of communications is predicted to change the pattern of scholarly work. From the computer at home or office the educator can now access hundreds of library catalogs, journal indexes, reference books, full text books and journal articles, major art exhibits, employment notices, or federal government information. Communication with colleagues on topics as diverse as diabetes research, history of the Ancient Mediterranean, women in science and engineering, university administration or the Pittsburgh Pirates take place daily. There are thousands of discussion groups available on almost any imaginable topic. While this network of networks has its beginnings in the 1970's, it is only recently that this communication phenomenon has expanded beyond the computer and information science fields. Today librarians, health professionals, historians, lawyers, and many other professionals are finding the Internet a valuable research and education tool; the largest growing segment of the Internet community is commercial firms. Yet an important impact of this network has yet to be developed-- the delivery of information in formal education. There is now being generated formal credited courses via the Internet that may change the way that current distant education or distant learning takes place. This aspect of distance education will continue to grow as the number of schools equipped with telecommunications equipment and computers increase and costs of such equipment decreases. An initial attempt to use this network for education was an experimental course attempted two years ago. In the summer of 1992 I decided to offer a workshop on how to use this network, not in a classroom or at a conference, but on-line over the Internet itself. I expected 30 to 40 people to sign up and ended up with 864 participants. The class consisted of e-mail instructions for accessing Internet resources and what to do once access was achieved. In theory, a person would read the e-mail in the morning and follow the instructions for an hour to master the particular segment being taught. In reality, the three week course was a bit much for most participants so that instructions were saved for perusal at their convenience, a major advantage of this type of distance education. "Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop" was so popular that a second class was given within two months. The announcement for the second class allowed two weeks for registration. The registration had to be stopped when enrollment reached 15,000. The last workshop given from the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh "Navigating the Internet: Let's Go Gopherin'" (a popular Internet interface) attracted 19,994 from 54 countries. These informal basic e-mail courses demonstrate the potential of this communication medium for distant education. With the addition of graphics, hypertext, compress video, sound and multimedia, information distribution for educational courses in distance education will be revolutionary. Several universities are now initiating degree programs that can be taken over the Internet. Telecommunications technologies have provided a vast array of teaching opportunities for educators and librarians charged with providing information to students, staff, researchers and faculty. The technology permits expanded communication among teachers/student, and also provides a means of increasing teacher/teacher and student/student communications. Narrow casting for specific audiences and for specific subject areas, both for formal credit courses and informal workshops, is an option being considered by many educators and librarians. Unlike traditional distance education systems which relied heavily on print base materials supported by audiotape, telephone contact, videotape, color slides, study pictures, or kits containing samples, The Internet gives increased access to graphics, sound, and video files via software like Mosaic, as well as real time communications. Innovative computer and telecommunication technologies' expand and enhance traditional distance education by adding additional means of communication. To be productive, distance education must be able to communicate information between participants in an effective and efficient manner. Computer and telecommunication technologies are providing unique ways to communicate, and examples of the benefits and drawbacks of using these techniques are abundant in the literature. Hiltz used computer-mediated communication as both an adjunct function of supplementing traditional classroom instruction and as a primary mode of course delivery for postsecondary education. Electronic conferencing, where students answered questions and reacted to other student responses produced communications in the "virtual classroom" and was found to be a positive yet different type of communications from the traditional classroom. This change in communication was noted by others where the experience showed that communication within a paperless network tends to spread power horizontally across the writing community, with instructor's information equal to the student's, and every message, because of identical font and identical screen size, commanding the same respect when read by a student. In a distance education class at Houston Community College System, years of experience in giving credited courses by modem found that distance education had several benefits over traditional classroom instruction and older distance education courses. Some of the results showed these benefits: (1) Immediacy -- especially compared to print-based correspondence courses. (2) Sense of group identity -- the computer system became a meeting place for students. (3) Improved dialogue -- students correspond more than traditional classroom setting. (4) Improved instructor control -- the computer system can log activities. (5) Active learning -- student participation improved. Finally, the Internet, provides a convenient means of delivering information to thousand of people geographically dispersed and removes barriers such as distance and cultural diversity that are common in the traditional classroom educational setting. For example, this segment was written in my house and transferred to my local account in Louisiana via a 2,400 baud modem; I then ftpped the document, in seconds, to my account in Pittsburgh; finally, I e-mailed it to Patrick in Alabama who then distributed it to you. I co-authored a book, "Navigating the Internet" in three months without ever meeting Mark Gibbs, the co-author in California, or the Publisher, SAMS in Indianapolis. Distance education is a bonus for the Instructor also. "Let's Go Gopherin'" was distributed from numerous locations, Ohio, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, and other locations while I was on the road. Distance education via electronic delivery is not a new concept. Australia and the United Kingdom have made dramatic steps in providing electronic information to a multitude of people via telecommunications. In the United States, with the explosive growth of the Internet and the proposed National Research and Education Network (NREN), it is now possible for delivery of information in formal education in an economical and efficient manner. Of course, promises of new technologies that would impact education have been made before and never reached their potential. Public television is the prime example. Predicted to impact education from k-12 to higher education, public television has only served as a minor supplement to the traditional classroom setting. Yet today's technologies are entering not only the classroom, but are commonly found on professors' and teachers' desks in their office and even at home. This easy access to the technology is mainly responsible for its impact on education. Higher education will play a vital role in Al Gore's vision of the information superhighway. Major commercial telecommunication giants such as MCI and Bell are changing the current Internet into an information distribution system that is easy to use, providing access for the general population. Because of this widespread access, the way we teach and pass on information to learners around the world, with collaboration from educators from interdisciplinary backgrounds and from diverse institutions and cultures, education will change from the traditional teacher/classroom environment to a virtual classroom with no walls. NOTES (Sorry, pulled from several sources so not all in one style.) Blaschke, Charles L. "Distance Learning: A Rapidly Growing State Priority," Classroom Computer Learning October 1988 16. Blumen, Goldie. "Many Attempts at 'Distance Learning' are Impeded by Unforeseen Political and Financial Problems." The Chronicle of Higher Education. October 23, 1991 a23-a24. Boston, Roger L. (1992). "Remote Delivery of Instruction via the PC and Modem: What Have we learned." The American Journal of Distance Education, 6, 45-52. Brown, John Seely. "Idea Amplifiers-New Kinds of Electronic Learning Environments." Educational Horizons, 63 (Spring 1985): 108-112. Clyde, Laurel. "Distance Education and the Challenges of Continuing Professional Education," in Woolls, Blanche, ed., Continuing Professional Education and IFLA: Past, Present, and a Vision for the Future: papers from the IFLA CPERT Second World Conference on Continuing Professional Education for the Library and Information Science Professions. Munich: K.G. Saur, 1993, 24-33. Dykman, Charlene Ann. "Electronic Mail Systems: An Analysis of the Use/Satisfaction Relationship." (Ph.D. diss., University of Houston, 1986). Freshwater, M. R. (1985). "Development in the application of new technology to the delivery of open learning." Technological Horizons in Education, 12, 105-106. Goldberg, Fred S (1988). "Telecommunications and The Classroom: Where We've Been and Where We should Be Going." The Computing Teacher, May 26-30. Hammond, Morrison F. "The Use of Telecommunications in Australian Education." Technological Horizons in Education, 13 (April 1986): 74-76. Hiltz, Starr Roxanne. "The 'Virtual Classroom': Using Computer- Mediated Communication for University Teaching." Journal of Communication, 36 (Spring 1986): 99-104. Jones. Ann, Gill Kirkup, Adrian Kirkwood, and Robin Mason. (1992) "Providing Computing for Distance Learners: A Strategy for Home Use." Computers Education 18, 183-193. Lautsch, John C. "Computers and Education: The Genie is Out of the Bottle." Technological Horizons in Education, 8 (February 1981): 34-35. Manock, John J. (April 1986) "Assessing the Potential Use of Computer-Mediated Conferencing Systems as Educational Delivery Systems." T.H.E. Journal, 13 77-80. Miller, Dusty. "Trim Travel Budgets with Distance Learning," Training & Development September 1991 71-74. O'Shea, Mark R., Kimmel, Howard., Novemsky, Lisa F. "Computer Mediated Telecommunications and Pre-College Education: A Retrospect." Journal of Educational Computing Research, 6 (No. 1 1990): 65. Rogers, Gil. "Teaching a Psychology Course by Electronic Mail." Social Science Computer Review, 7 (Spring 1989): 60-64. Roper, Fred W. "Shaping Distance Education in Library and Information Science Education Through Technology: The South Carolina Model," in Woolls, Blanche, ed., Continuing Professional Education and IFLA: Past, Present, and a Vision for the Future: papers from the IFLA CPERT Second World Conference on Continuing Professional Education for the Library and Information Science Professions. Munich: K.G. Saur, 1993, 34-40. Schroeder, Raymond E. "Computer Conferencing: Exploding the Classroom Walls." Technological Horizons in Education, 8 (February 1981): 46. Smith, Richard J. "International Training on the Internet" in Continuing Professional Education and IFLA: Past, Present, and a vision for the Future. Papers from the IFLA CPERT Second World Conference on Continuing Professional Education for the Library and Information Science Professions. A Publication of the Continuing Professional Education Round Table (CPERT) of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions. Edited by Blanche Woolls. (London: K. G. Saur, 1993): 85-89. Smith, Richard J. "The Electronic Information Course as an Alternative Teaching Method," Research & Education Networking 2 (October 1991); 10-12. Upitis, Rena. (1990) "Real and Contrived Uses of Electronic Mail in Elementary Schools." Computers Educ. 15 233-243. Weingand, Darlene E. "Teleconferencing as a Continuing Education Delivery System," in Woolls, Blanche, ed., Continuing Professional Education and IFLA: Past, Present, and a Vision for the Future: papers from the IFLA CPERT Second World Conference on Continuing Professional Education for the Library and Information Science Professions. Munich: K.G. Saur, 1993, 48-58. White, Mary Alice. "Synthesis of Research on Electronic Learning." Educational Leadership, 40 (May 1983): 13-15. Richard J. Smith 600 Wooddale Blvd. #101 Baton Rouge, LA 70806 504-926-7069 rjs@lis.pitt.edu ----- My notes: (1) From "Navigating the Internet" by Mark Gibbs and Richard Smith PATRICK DOUGLAS CRISPEN THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS LETTER DO NOT PCRISPE1@UA1VM.UA.EDU NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA - TUSCALOOSA ROADMAP: COPYRIGHT PATRICK CRISPEN 1994. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.