http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/20/ipod.university.ap/index.html
Rural college pushes iPod use for lectures
Monday, March 20, 2006; Posted: 11:10 a.m. EST (16:10 GMT)
MILLEDGEVILLE, Georgia (AP) -- The
campus of Georgia College & State University boasts traditional
college fare: spacious greens, historic architecture and a steady
stream of students with the familiar white headphones of iPods dangling
from their ears.
But here in the antebellum capital of
Georgia, students listening to iPods might just as well be studying for
calculus class as rocking out to Coldplay -- after the school's
educators worked to find more strategic uses for the popular digital
music and video players.
At least 100 of the rural school's
employees are turning iPods into education or research tools --
impressive for a college with only about 300 faculty. But it's more
than simply making class lectures available -- a practice now routine
at many colleges and even a few high schools.
History professor
Deborah Vess asks students to download 39 films to their video-capable
iPods so she doesn't have to spend class time screening the movies.
Psychology professor Noland White has found a new-age answer to office
hours: a podcast of the week's most asked questions.
And the
5,500-student campus has organized a group of staff and faculty to
conjure up other uses for the technology. Called the iDreamers, the
team bats around ideas that could turn iPods into portable yearbooks
and replace campus brochures with podcasts.
"The more you free up your classroom for discussion, the more efficient you are," said Dorothy Leland, the school's president.
Campuses
throughout the nation have transformed the gadgets into education
tools, a trend iPod maker Apple Computer Inc. hopes to capitalize on
with "iTunes U," a nationwide service that makes lectures and other
materials available online. And GCSU isn't the only school that wants
the music players to be more than just a tool for catching up on missed
lectures.
At North Carolina's Duke University, where incoming
freshmen have been handed the devices as welcoming gifts, foreign
language students use iPods to immerse themselves in coursework.
Administrators
at Pennsylvania's Mansfield University want to use podcasts --
broadcast messages that can be downloaded to iPods and other players --
to recruit high schoolers to the 3,000-student campus. The school also
used a podcast to address student and faculty concerns after a New York
man who had contracted anthrax visited campus with a dance troupe.
Yet
few campuses have embraced the new technology as doggedly as GCSU,
which was rewarded for its iPod ingenuity when it was chosen to host
Apple's Digital Campus Leadership Institute in November.
The
school has been a leader in "integrating the iPod into the curriculum
to enhance teaching and learning in creative ways going all the way
back to the original iPod," said Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president
of iPod product marketing.
After Leland and Jim Wolfgang, the
school's chief information officer, began seeing iPods around campus in
2002, they decided to explore educational applications for the devices.
They started by farming out 50 donated iPods to faculty who offered the
best proposals.
Soon Wolfgang's office was flooded with
applications from educators suggesting new uses. Now some 400
college-owned iPods are floating around campus -- some loaned to
students in certain classes, others available for checkout at libraries.
The iPods run the technology gamut, from the bulky first-generation devices to the latest video-capable models.
Hank
Edmondson, a government professor known around campus as "The
Podfather," was among the first to use iPods to supplement his course
lectures. Edmondson now makes lectures, language study programs,
indigenous music and thumbnail art sketches available for download to
the iPods of students in a three-week study-abroad program he leads.
During
a recent visit to the Prado in Madrid, he recorded a 20-minute lecture
on the museum's artwork. Downloading it in advance will let students
spend their time at the museum exploring, not listening to Edmondson
talk.
"You want to pack everything in, but you've got a lot of travel time," he said.
Vess
said having her history students screen films on their iPods allows her
to dedicate class time to discussion and analysis. Ditto for the weekly
graduate course on historical methods that she teaches.
"Now I can devote my whole three hours to Socratic dialogue," she said with a grin.
While
iPods can be useful tools for reviewing coursework, some critics argue
donning a pair of earphones is not the same as actively engaging with
material in a classroom.
"Learning is through interaction,
discussion, critical questioning and challenging of assumptions," said
Donna Qualters, director of the Center for Effective Teaching at
Northeastern University in Boston. "Those cannot be duplicated on an
iPod -- you have to be there to experience that learning."
GCSU officials say the school makes sure its iPod lessons supplement classroom work.
"We don't have any project that repeats what's going on in the classroom," Wolfgang said. "All this is value-added."
He
said the school's iPod ingenuity is helping promote GCSU's decade-old
effort to remake itself as Georgia's only public liberal arts college.
Long a school that attracted a regional crowd of students who often
left for other schools after a year, Wolfgang believes the focus on
iPods is helping retain more students.
This school year, it
started iVillage, a virtual community that encouraged incoming students
to start communicating before the start of classes. The first dozen
freshmen recruited for the effort were asked to think up innovative
uses for the iPods.
The team is creating an iPod-based freshmen
survival guide that includes advice on classes, dorms and nightlife in
this sleepy community 100 miles south of Atlanta.
Bobby Jones, a freshman from Rome, said he's found life in a "virtual community" surprisingly satisfying.
"(You)
think it will never get the same sense of community living together,
but we definitely found that sense of belonging," he said.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.