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CONNECTING |
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The Computing Center |
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Home
base for Trinity integration of technology
into the life of the College and the community |
Over
the past several months, members of the systems and networking group of
Trinity’s Computing Center have been installing wireless access points
around campus. These installations, explains Computing Center Director
Angela Wolf, are like the cellular telephone towers that transmit and
receive signals over a broad area. Students within range who have the proper
hardware in their laptop computers will no longer need to plug in to
participate in the campus network. They can sit on the grass in the middle
of the science quadrangle—or even move around a variety of indoor
locations on campus—and have full Internet capabilities to conduct online
research or do other kinds of work.
This wireless system, called TrinAir, is a sort of
metaphor for how technology is being integrated into the educational and
administrative operations of the College. Though such technology is
ubiquitous, it is also largely invisible. It isn’t there for sake of
novelty but for its very real capacity to efficiently enable the College to
do better what it already does—provide a first-rate liberal arts
education.
Also largely invisible and acting behind the scenes is
the Computing Center. Though it is currently based in MCEC, it is also
everywhere that the technology is. The center’s 40 staff members oversee
the use of several computer labs around campus, maintain and service the
desktop computers in Trinity’s offices and labs, and work individually
with faculty members to mesh the capabilities of software applications to
their specific teaching needs. They are also just a phone call or e-mail
away, should students, faculty, or staff need help with “technical
difficulties.” In short, the Computing Center supports the technology that
supports the activity of the College.
Academic
computing
Increasingly,
the Computing Center is playing a more important, though still supporting,
role in the way academic learning occurs at Trinity. Faculty members have
long relied upon A/V specialists from the Computing Center to assist with
slides, films, and other supplemental material. Today, faculty members also
rely on the Computing Center’s software experts. For example, Blackboard
software is used in more than 200 courses at Trinity for the posting of
syllabi, class notes, and related articles. Students use the technology to
submit papers and hold online discussions that are not time-limited as
classes are. Other applications supported by the Computing Center are
specialized and exclusive to one or a few departments or purposes. For
example, the Chemistry Department enhances learning with sophisticated
molecular modeling software.
Randolph M. Lee, director of the Counseling Center and
chair of the Information Technology in Education Committee (ITEC), notes
that, “Technology is not an end in itself,” but rather the means of
enhancing pedagogy. The committee’s original report from two years ago (it
is preparing to release an update this year) notes that new technology and
strategies should complement and build upon Trinity’s unique strengths,
including Trinity’s high rate of student-faculty interaction. The report
states that many faculty use online conversations to assess individual
students’ understanding of course material and then follow up with
targeted e-mails.
“Many faculty have found e-mail to be an important
tool for faculty-student communication and for clarifying concepts for
individual students.” According to the report, “Online learning permits
the extension of the classroom, it allows for the integration of the
study-abroad experience into learning at Trinity, it permits the inclusion
of students in ways previously not possible, and it allows for the
exploration of new teaching models.”
Nonacademic
technology
The
technology that is being harnessed and tailored to suit Trinity’s
educational needs is serving the administrative needs of the College as
well. The administrative computing subdivision of the Computing Center makes
sure that technology efficiently supports all of the nonacademic business of
the College, from payroll to maintenance of transcripts and information on
faculty, staff, and students. The main administrative software is called
PeopleSoft. In a recent coup for the Computing Center, PeopleSoft has
revolutionized the business of registering for classes at Trinity. Students
used to have to shuffle paper. Now they register through a Web interface.
The Computing Center also has a hand in making
individual business transactions on campus more convenient. It is currently
expanding the use of the Optim 9000 system, which will enable students to
pay for goods (e.g., food in the dining hall) and services (e.g., use of
laundry machines) using their ID cards. There are stations in Mather and at
Public Safety where students can deposit money into the system. According to
Angela Wolf, the Computing Center plans to make the system available
everywhere from the bookstore to vending machines. Further, students can
also transfer money to their ID accounts and money by credit card via the
Internet.
Integrating
technology and community service
Trinity
being Trinity, community outreach is an integral part of Computing
Center’s work. Through the Kellogg Foundation-funded Smart Neighborhoods
Initiative, the Computing Center offers free computer training workshops and
classes to people and nonprofit community organizations in the neighborhood,
as well as Internet access and Web-hosting services. At 1300 Broad Street,
the Computing Center maintains a 16-station computer lab, plus five machines
in a cyber café environment called the Trinfo Café. The basement,
meanwhile, houses a computer recycling center. When the Computing Center
upgrades campus desktop computers, the underpowered old equipment is brought
to Broad Street. Through the Technician Apprenticeship, eight local high
school students are trained each year to break down computers and refurbish
them for use by area residents.
An
enormous resource
As
the use of technology becomes ever more central to the work of the College,
the Computing Center’s involvement will continue to grow in size and
scope. When the new Library and Information Technology Center is completed
in spring of 2003, the Computing Center will make its new home there. The
new building will extend the types of services already given, says Wolf, but
there will also be new facilities, such as digital video editing suites.
Wolf notes that it makes sense to align the Computing Center with what has
always been a resource for students and faculty members. “Our work is all
about providing information,” she says. “It’s
a natural fit.”
- Leslie Virostek
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