[Freeschool] Fwd: Re: [school-discuss]
Michael Shigorin
mike на osdn.org.ua
Чт Мар 10 17:22:06 MSK 2005
----- Forwarded message from Troy Banther <troy на banther-trx.homeunix.com> -----
Date: Sun, 6 Mar 2005 18:18:48 +0000
From: Troy Banther <troy на banther-trx.homeunix.com>
To: schoolforge-discuss на schoolforge.net
Subject: Re: [school-discuss]
Let me say I believe this list is fantastic. Seriously, I like the free
exchange that goes on. I believe it is extremely healthy.
For the last five years I have had the opportunity to see just how the process
of students, instructors, staff, and administrators interact with computer
technology and its software.
The Center for Student Success, a New Mexico state-funded Adult Basic
Education program, housed within Clovis Community College in Clovis works
with early academic, leveling, developmental, English as a Second Language,
tutoring services, and TABE testing.
The technology is distributed in one main lab (30 CPUs), an online writing
center (5 CPUs) in a mixed traditional classroom with a little technology
mixed in, a TABE testing area (6 CPUs), and three 'smart' classrooms (68
CPUs). Three servers: two Windows 2k3 and one Slackware Linux.
PLATO Pathways (server-based) edition is the primary educational platform.
There is also Rosetta Stone, Side-by-Side, Reading Horizons, and several
other canned-software in the mix distributed across the main lab and
classrooms.
There appears to be three categories of students. Self learners without an
instructor (mostly academic and some tutoring). Learners with an instructor
(ESL, GED, ABE, TABE, and Developmental). Learners who only need tutoring
services with no technology.
>From my observation, it appears that students who have one-on-one tutoring or
instruction rate the highest. Given the low number of qualified tutors per
subject matter, the number of tutors per hour in a day, the physical teaching
spaces, and fiscal limitations due to funding restraints - this 'ideal' is
not always possible.
People who use just technology rate the lowest, except for academic
self-learners, as measured by PLATOs crude internal reporting of student
mastery.
The learners who use both traditional and technology method are near the first
category of tutor-based learning. There are some both developmental and
academic who are diverse learners and progress at their own speed. We also
have deaf students who like the computer-based technology as well.
Staff and administrators appear only to have the technology available and
operational when they need to teach their students and subjects. Their
students are are diverse and come from a highly diverse demographic.
The primary demographics, the ones plugged into and reported by both PLATO and
AccuTrack software, indicate women of Hispanic and Caucasian backgrounds
outnumber the males by three times that of males. While it does cycle each
semester this statistic has remained constant. Women, it appears, are more
comfortable using computer technology in this type of mixed avenue learning
environment.
Our campus, until quite recently, has been a strongly Microsoft-based campus.
With the advent of a new campus-wide data collection and management program
planned for the near future - this has changed. There is a frustration with
the constant updates and patching cycle that I've noticed. My systems are
locked down in a more 'clean-and-pristine' state with the program called Deep
Freeze. This comes in extremely handy with the online CPUs.
Linux came into play in the CSS due to the need of a server for the TABE-PC
testing software. For the first several years it was a nightmare to manage
and maintain eight separate copies of a very difficult 'copy control'
software on 486s and early Pentium CPUs.
Around two years ago, very quietly but with the approval of the CSS director,
we placed into production a Slackware v.10 server. I was able to centralize a
single copy of the TABE-PC program onto this server. Then via SMB and an
older but smaller 16-port hub I was able share the program over the dedicated
network to six newer PIII CPUs. There was also an older HP Laser Jet
connected locally to the server and shared.
A "testing" version of the Windows-based PLATO onto the same Linux server. It
is still there and it runs without fail when tested. Proper SMB and client
configuration is the key on a Linux-based production server.
As a technician, I look at stability of the production system, the long
periods of operational uptime without maintenace, and its ease of data backup
and recoverability. I am only one individual technician maintaining four
networks, the equipment in all my areas. This is not the focus of the CSS
director.
It has, to the delight of the CSS director, been a low-cost deployment. She
has also been able to capture and report two accurate fiscal years of student
data. This is extremely important for state-level reporting and funding
agencies. Personal technical opinions are not important when funding is based
upon national reporting standards.
My personal opinion of PLATO Pathways, AccuTrack, TABE-PC aside, or any canned
software for-that-matter, is not high. It as software could always be more
and do more its high cost. It could be more flexible to the needs of each
school or educational organization. Such things are the realm of coders and
developers.
I am not a coder. I would love to see someone develop a Linux-based PLATO
"like" (used loosely) free alternative for schools. This could also apply to
an AccuTrack and TABE-PC testing program. Ones that could be crafted around
institutional needs but cover all the essentials (like PLATO) for adult
learners.
I would love to hear what others have done with Linux and educational
software. Photos would be great too. :)
--
Troy Banther, Owner, TRX Systems & Computer Consulting
908 E. Amazon St., Portales, New Mexico 88130-5526
1.505.356.8151 - http://banther-trx.homeunix.com
----- End forwarded message -----
--
---- WBR, Michael Shigorin <mike на altlinux.ru>
------ Linux.Kiev http://www.linux.kiev.ua/
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