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2016 Campus Technology Conference

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Dr. Donna Petherbridge, David Howard and vendor representative at the conference.

David Howard and Donna Petherbridge attended the Campus Technology Conference at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston August 1 – 4, 2016. Met there by Joshua Gira from NC State’s College of Natural Resources, they enjoyed having a chance to spend some time with a colleague.

Start planning for next year’s conference, which is in Chicago!

David & Donna would recommend this conference to those who would benefit from finding out more about both online and in-class educational technologies and their uses in a conference setting with fewer attendees than a large conference such as EDUCAUSE attracts, but with a broader attendee base than a localized conference such as UNC CAUSE. The vendor floor is very good with a variety of technologies to consider (including many classroom technologies), and the range of presentations includes options for those interested in the more infrastructure/technical aspects of educational technology as well as those who want the practical educational applications of technology.

A few highlights from Donna:

Learned about a few useful extensions for Chrome including Shorten Me!Fireshot lite, and Print My Cal in a preconference workshop with Mark Frydenberg from Bentley University. The focus was primarily on using and extending Google apps with other tips and tricks included.

Did some strategic thinking with Bryan Alexander in the Assessing Emerging Technology and Futures Capacity for Your Organization preconference workshop. Bryan works with the New Media Consortium and contributes to the Horizon report, and he also has a monthly report called Future Trends and Technology in Higher Education (read this each month if you are in the ed tech area!).

Learned about the Massachusetts Green High-Performance Computing Center as an incredible partnership that supports the data center needs of five private institutions.

The Wearable Technology Innovations session really made me think about all of the data that these devices “know” about us, and the implications for the privacy and ownership of that data. Really, who is entitled to know about my heart rate and physical activity via my FitBit or other wearable device.

Wearable Technology is well-integrated at this point into the consumer market, starting with babies (just take a look at the Connected Baby at Target — my first rubber ducky was not as cool as Edwin the Duck). Who needs emergency phones on campus — perhaps all of our students could simply be issued emergency jewelry. And beyond the Fitbit, Samsung’s S-Patch will let me (and who knows who else?) know all about my body fat index. This is all cool stuff — though being mindful of where and how the data is used is something to think about.

A few highlights from David:

Learned about Bartle’s taxonomy of gamer types from Scott Reinke in a preconference workshop. Players are rated on two scales: whether they want to interact with the world or with other players and whether they want to ‘act’ or ‘interact.’ We discussed how building a game or game mode that appeals to some types of gamers can be a disincentive to others. There was a strong recommendation for the book Gamify by Brian Burke.

Another preconference workshop on virtual reality highlighted the fact that NC State is doing great things in this area already! See recent articles in DELTA News about virtual reality

A session on using data to understand student behaviors made me think a lot about how we could use data from a classroom response system to gather information about what students are doing and how those behaviors are related to performance. The presenter uses Echo360 which gives information about student note-taking, review and performance on in-class quizzes.

Learned more about lightboards from folks who had built one for their department. They shared stories about troubleshooting the setup and the kinds of videos that instructors made.

In addition to some of our individual takeaways, there were additional items of note that we took away from shared general/keynote sessions and/or reoccurring themes. These include:

  • An admiration of the online master’s in computer science degree created by the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) for a fraction of the cost that it would take to come to campus. These students go through the same admissions process as on campus students, have the same assessment measures, the same instructors in a MOOC-like model. Georgia Tech is reaching students all over the country with this degree — many in California where there are a lot of techies looking for a master’s degree but who don’t want to uproot their families and move to one of the CA schools’ campus programs.
  • A reminder from keynote speaker Stephen Downes, from the National Research Council of Canada, that when we are working with technology, that we are first and foremost working with people — and that we shouldn’t do things to people, but that we should do things with people and help people do things.
  • A warning from keynote speaker Amy Collier from Middlebury College that analytics has the associated risk of reducing education to numbers. And that a narrow focus on learning objectives can lead to a mechanistic view of learning that ignores context. She enjoins us to stop thinking of students as consumers and learning as a commodity. Instead, she asks us slow down our rush to innovate and to ask ourselves “for whom,” “why” and “for what.”

Questions? Comments? Contact either of us and we’ll be glad to share our experiences and provide additional details for anything you might find interesting (pether@ncsu.edu or dlhoward@ncsu.edu)

PowerPoint slide from conferencebooth in vendor hallview from Boston hotel

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