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The Advanced Media in Education Project
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ROBBIE MCLINTOCK, Director
K. A. T AIPALE, Associate Director
Published Spring 1995. Update inserted Fall 1996.
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Emerging communications forces are making a deep, lasting transformation
of education both feasible and necessary. The Institute for Learning
Technologies, on behalf of Teachers College and Columbia University,
is asserting leadership in fulfilling these possibilities through
the Advanced Media in Education Project. To accomplish this mission,
the Institute is integrating technological innovations into a practical
process of education, creating fresh models of educational excellence
and professional development, and demonstrating to students, parents,
and the public how the new educational process will meet their needs
and interests more effectively than does the status quo.
As an enabling strategy, the Institute is undertaking a program
of specific initiatives to improve dramatically the educational
experience of disadvantaged children by connecting an increasing
number of urban schools -- public, parochial and private -- to the
information superhighway as a national testbed for educational innovation.
Through these initiatives, the Institute is demonstrating how the
new network technologies can lead to better education by:
- overcoming the traditional isolation of students, teachers,
and schools;
- expanding the opportunity to develop skills for work and civic
life in the 21st century;
- helping children build a fuller sense of efficacy and personal
empowerment;
- strengthening schools as centers of communication, helping coordinate
initiatives in education, health, housing, employment, and community
development; and
- mobilizing the resources of private industry, foundations, and
government to improve the educational opportunities of those most
in need.
Through a six-part program, listed here and described on following
pages, the Institute is empowering children, teachers, and schools
with advanced multimedia information networks.
- Connectivity provides school gateways linking to the
Internet via broadband networks and creates a testbed for transforming
education practice.
- Technical assistance insures that schools linked to this
growing testbed can take full advantage of its innovative resources.
- Curriculum integration engages children with the questions,
ideas, and principles that inform advanced scholarship and professional
practice.
- Teacher development -- on-site distantly through video
conferencing and at Columbia University through a unified program
of coursework, fieldwork, and internships -- enables teachers
to make full use of new educational resources.
- Assessment evaluates how well young people study with
advanced media and guides efforts to implement the basic strategy
of change.
- Community involvement supports participating children
while they are out of school and draws parents and other adults
into the program.
Implementation of this program has begun. Through the Living Textbook
Project (with funding from New York State) the Institute is linking
six schools (three in New York City and three upstate) via very
high-speed connections to both the Internet and to a New York State-wide
prototype of the national information infrastructure being developed
by NYNEX. Through the Harlem Environmental Access Project (with
federal funding from the Department of Commerce) the Institute is
connecting six other schools serving the New York City Empowerment
Zone into Columbia University's information networks (and, through
such, to the world) and to on-line environmental resources being
developed jointly by Columbia and the Environmental Defense Fund.
Other Institute proposals to both public and private sector funding
sources seek to expand these beginnings significantly, concentrating
particularly on two groups of schools, those serving disadvantaged,
inner-city populations, and those schools, newly organized, or re-organized,
that seek to be relatively small, self-directing institutions.
- In inner-city schools, wide-area networking can particularly
help redress the burden of inequitable access to economic and
cultural resources that children there suffer. Advanced media
introduce new causal forces in education. New technologies are
not merely a good to distribute, but a force to employ. In concept,
networked multimedia can make the richest, most powerful resources
of our culture available to anyone, anywhere, at any time, and
in principle this change should have greatest relative value to
those who presently have least access to the fullness of our culture.
All children will benefit, but the least advantaged children can
benefit the most.
- Reform efforts nurturing small, effective schools, committed
to equity and engagement, are fast becoming the norm of good pedagogical
practice. A networking infrastructure for education, designed
to enable teachers and students in these schools to employ, at
low cost and large effect, the full range of powerful educational
tools, cultural resources, and social services available electronically,
will enable such schools to provide comprehensive yet compelling
opportunities for their students more surely and efficiently.
[Update 10/03/96 by KAT: During Summer 1996, a consortium
-- led by the Center for Collaborative Education (CCE) and the Institute
for Learning Technologies (ILT) at Columbia University -- joined
together to initiate the Eiffel
Project in order to demonstrate how children contending with
poverty, discrimination, and urban crowding can achieve world-class
education standards when liberated by fundamental efforts at school
reform, empowered by the full use of advanced digital information.
The consortium intends to improve the educational experience of
disadvantaged children dramatically by connecting an increasing
number of New York's urban K-12 schools to the information superhighway,
developing and implementing innovative curricular strategies, and
providing effective teacher professional development, all in support
of the small schools reform movement. As currently envisioned, by
the end of its fifth year, the Eiffel Profect will directly benefit
over 30,000 students, most from African-American, Latino, immigrant,
and economically disadvantaged families in Harlem and Upper Manhattan,
the South Bronx, Queens, downtown Brooklyn, as well as Newburgh,
NY, and will serve as a national model for new educational processes
suited for use in all educational settings.
Participants are aggregating funding for the project from four
sources: first, the project has received a grant of $7 million over
five years from the U. S. Department of Education through its Challenge
Grants for Technology in Education (announced 10/02/96); second,
the sponsoring coalition will provide substantial matching resources
through contributed effort, equipment, services, and talent; third,
the coalition is raising funds for component activities within the
project from other diverse granting agencies -- federal, state,
local, and private; and, fourth, the project seeks to raise funds
systematically to support the project from a wide cross-section
of New York City businesses and philanthropies.
The total projected budget over the initial five years of the
project is expected to exceed $20 million.]
Designing the School of the 21st Century
Educators have a rare, historic opportunity to extend the limits
of educational possibility. Through the Advanced Media in Education
Project, the Institute will provide decisive leadership in the effort
to seize that opportunity.
Technologies, particularly multimedia and digital networks, can
enable people to change education profoundly. These technologies
alter the methods and economics governing how people produce, disseminate,
and use knowledge. These changes in turn affect the curriculum:
what is taught, how students gain access to it, and what human achievements
result. Reshaping the curriculum through digital communications
has enormous potential for advancing both intellectual excellence
and democratic equity. These are the goals of this project.
High-speed networks can deliver, to any person at any place at
any time, digital curricular materials that integrate multiple forms
of knowledge (i.e. audio, video, imagery, simulations and sophisticated
tools of analysis and synthesis) in addition to traditional text.
Networks provide not only access to curricular materials, but also
the means to enable students and teachers at the classroom level
to communicate with the world at large, thereby breaking out of
their traditional isolation. In short, the world of culture becomes
a significant part of each class; and creative contribution to that
culture by students and teachers themselves becomes a possibility
in every educational encounter. High-speed networks can unite the
library and the classroom, and open the tools and the data of advanced
research to curious inquiry by all, creating a rich, high-quality
environment of educational resources that empowers teachers and
students to take on new and liberating roles.
Advanced media have great educational significance because they
enable students to master a fuller, more powerful curriculum. The
Advanced Media in Education Project is advancing these possibilities
by drawing creatively on the talents and intellectual property base
of both Columbia University and collaborating groups from both the
public and the private sector.
Digital networks and distributed computing create opportunities
for major efficiencies in educational development. The Institute
is making use of the extensive investments in technology for education
made by many state governments and by major federal agencies such
as the National Science Foundation, NASA, and the Department of
Education. It is mobilizing tools to allow schools, classes, and
groups of students to assemble and control their own contributions
to the structures of networked information and knowledge. Such tools,
based on designs such as Mosaic and the World Wide Web and their
successors, will enhance the ability of teachers, parents, and students
to find and selectively filter information; to control, assess,
and present their findings and ideas; and to communicate with peers
and experts about their interests and concerns.
A Six-Part Program
To pursue its goals, the Institute is executing a six-part program
of practice to provide extensive direct service to children in urban
centers around the nation.
Connectivity. Goals of school change and curriculum innovation
will become feasible as children, teachers, and schools gain easy,
affordable access to the digital infrastructure. Over the next three
years the Institute will undertake to connect on the order of 200
schools in major cities to the information highway through high-speed
connections to the Internet. These connections will direct educational
innovation to where the need is poignant and to where results will
be prominent. Associated efforts to build the technical infrastructure
within participating schools will provide an unmatched base for
showing how advanced multimedia information networks can provide
the means to effect educational change. Over 100,000 disadvantaged
children will immediately benefit and become a beacon for further
reform.
Technical Assistance. To insure that schools affiliated
with the Institute can adapt to the new technologies and take advantage
of access to innovative curricular materials, the Institute provides
direct technical assistance during the period of initial connectivity.
In the longer term, the Institute is pioneering the use of wide-area
network communication capabilities to develop and deliver technical
support directly to the schools over the network. Expertise gained
in this process will be invaluable in extending network services
to schools far beyond the direct reach of the testbed.
Curriculum Integration. Many groups are creating powerful
curricular innovations. The Institute is working to bring many of
these new materials from diverse sources creatively into working
classrooms, combining resources developed at Columbia University,
along with materials available from others, whether on disk or over
the Internet, to integrate everything into the daily work of schools.
The Institute intends to combine the best resources it can find,
the better to educate the developing child and will implement, test,
and perfect that configuration of means, providing proven new models
for dissemination to the world.
These efforts at curriculum integration will concentrate, substantially,
but not exclusively, on the middle school and high school. Traditional
compensatory education in disadvantaged areas has centered attention
on the early grades. This is good, but not sufficient. To capitalize
on the power of advanced media in education, the Institute is addressing
the needs of children as they approach adolescence and grow into
adults. These are the years in which students appropriate high levels
of working skill and substantive knowledge, given the chance. Too
often, these are the years when schools fail because they lack sufficient
resources to satisfy growing curiosities, losing the attention of
all-too-many students. These are the years in which networked multimedia
can make a sharp, significant difference for young people who are
at the emotional border between alienation and engagement. These
are the years when digital educational tools can give students a
perception that the agencies of action, so powerful in the world
about them, are indeed within their personal reach. These are the
years when the current system fails and when a better system must
succeed.
Teacher Development. Successful educational reforms, especially
ones combining a new pedagogy with mastery of new technological
tools, requires a concurrent program of teacher training, professional
development, and in-school teacher support. Prevailing modes of
teacher preparation are poorly adapted to technologically dynamic
practices. The Institute and Teachers College are developing and
implementing a scaleable model of teacher training and in-school
professional development support, building on the pioneering initiatives
such as the Living Textbook Project and the Harlem Environmental
Access Project, described above.
As a first step, Teachers College will create a fellowship program
for master teachers from schools connected to the network testbed.
These Fellows will come together to study how students and teachers
can best make use of network resources and tools. Upon completion
of their studies, they will return to their local schools able to
teach others how to take full advantage of these materials and technologies.
At the same time they will continue to participate in the overall
networking strategy and will be able to call on experts at the Institute
and elsewhere at Columbia University through the innovative use
of electronic mail, discussion groups and network video conferencing.
Returning Fellows will themselves become part of an expanding pool
of resources available not just within their own school but to all
the other affiliated schools through the network. The whole effort
of teacher development will provide a model for general practice,
amplifying the results of the Institute through adoption into general
practice.
Assessment. Fundamental to successful innovation and the
continued commitment of resources is the assessment of curriculum
performance and student achievement. When deep educational changes
occur, traditional assessment strategies cease to work. These strategies
have assumed that what students should know is predictable and assessment
of students turns on measuring how well they conform to those predicted
expectations. Meanwhile, the evaluation of curricula turns on measuring
the relative efficiency with which students reach base-lines of
canonical knowledge. With the new emerging curricula, the key matter
will no longer be what students know, but what they can do with
intellectual material.
The Institute is developing new assessment procedures to reflect
these changes and will use them to demonstrate what arrangements
ensure good practice with advanced media in education. To achieve
systemic change in education, however, specific efforts at improving
practice need to produce measurable, positive effects under traditional
criteria as well. Thus, the Institute seeks to ensure validation
of its efforts under existing methods, both pedagogically and politically,
at the same time that it undertakes to transform assessment methods.
In this way, the Institute can become the locus of sustained innovation,
reshaping the process of education and creating a national, even
global market for those providing innovative resources and services
within it.
Community involvement. In efforts to develop the educational
uses of wide-area networking, public attention is turning to improving
the connections between home and school. This effort presents a
particular problem in social settings where families are poor, fragmented,
weakened by unemployment, inadequate housing, and dangerous surroundings.
In these areas community-based organizations (CBOs) are particularly
important in giving children out-of-school access to networked educational
resources. The Institute's strategy includes helping CBOs in the
vicinity of participating schools to establish electronic links
to the school and network resources and for the Institute to provide
those CBOs with technical and program assistance in helping participating
students and their families make good use of these resources. These
efforts will also serve to strengthen community, and thus political,
support for the strategy of educational reform through wide-area
networking.
Columbia University and Educational Innovation.
A sound strategy makes it feasible to overcome impediments to educational
innovation, provided one has the capacity to act in a sustained
effort on a large scale. Through the Advanced Media in Education
Project, the Institute is bringing together substantial, enduring
enterprises -- ones capable of long-term, compelling action.
Teachers College is the oldest, most comprehensive graduate school
of education in the world. It has a long tradition of innovation
in education and service to disadvantaged communities. Columbia
University is distinguished among leading research universities
as a leader in education through its influence in developing the
core curriculum. The Institute for Learning Technologies has advanced
a full vision of how to reshape the process of education through
innovative uses of information technology, particularly, multimedia
and network technologies and is a national leader in applying these
technologies in working schools.
Institutions seeking to influence change incur historical responsibility
for the consequences of their actions. Working together through
the Institute, Teachers College, Columbia University, and their
partners have the potential to effect significant educational change;
the potential to make innovations that will stand the test of time
as a model for an effective information-based society, one that
people will experience as both empowering and equitable.
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