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Smart Classrooms Available on Campus This summer, twenty-two classrooms were made over into “smart classrooms.” “Smart classrooms” are lecture rooms and lecture halls equipped with computers, DVD and VCR players, a sound system, Internet connections, and document cameras. Dr. Eric Pani, Associate Provost, says the classrooms will be very appealing to today’s technology-savvy students and will help the faculty reach more students because of the additional resources available to them. “Faculty may want to show their students information and research from their office computers or Internet sources,” he said. “The classroom, in effect, can be an extension of the professor’s office or laboratory. Smart classrooms allow faculty to enhance their lectures, include music, data, and images, and provide graphic displays that help clarify the principles being considered in the class. This will allow students to be more engaged in the learning process.” The project is being funded from the technology fee that students pay each semester. The decision to use those funds for this purpose was reached by the student-led Student Technology Assessment Plan Committee. Dr. Gordon Harvey, history and government, is already using technology in his classroom. “We are realizing that today’s students are learning in different ways than most of us educated in the 1980s and before did,” he said. “They are very visual in the way they process information. Much of this can be traced to the influential role of television, which has come to dominate American culture. Smart classrooms allow professors to bring to the classroom charts, data, images, sounds, music, and web sites of their own or from other sources.” Since the mid-1990s smart
classrooms have grown to be an expectation for college campuses rather
than an extra feature. “In my experience, smart classrooms have been
indispensable in the teaching of U.S. History,” “Every one of my Using technology has also
an added long-term benefit. “We are modeling it for our students,”
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