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Technology in Interpretation Results: Design and Oversee Computer Lab |
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Please choose a topic below for more information and images:
Layout of the Interpretation Computer Lab The construction of the Interpretation Computer Lab was well underway when the researcher started his graduate program. A former storage area in the basement of the Schmeeckle Reserve Visitor Center was being renovated into a modern computer lab. Figure 11 shows the layout of the basement storage areas before 1999. The original proposed layout of the computer lab is reproduced in Figure 12.
According to the original proposal, the northern-most storage area would
be divided into three separate rooms.
The small west room located at the end of the stairs would remain
a storage area. The middle space would become a meeting room appropriate for
smaller groups of people. Meetings
could then be scheduled in the large classroom upstairs and the smaller
meeting room downstairs. The
east room would become the interpretive computer lab, complete with
computers, scanners, and a large format printer and laminator.
In the early stages of this project, it became apparent that the
space proposed for the computer lab was inadequate.
The bulky large-format printer and laminator consumed nearly all
of the space in the original computer lab.
Regardless of the arrangement, only two or three computers would
fit in the east room, drastically limiting the teaching opportunities.
Ron Zimmerman, director of Schmeeckle Reserve, and the researcher
determined that both the middle and east rooms would need to be
dedicated as computer lab space. The second meeting room proposal was dropped, and the final
layout for the renovated storage areas can be seen in Figure 13.
Since the wall between the east and middle rooms had already been constructed, the computer lab would be divided into two separate spaces. The primary teaching area would be in the middle room, where a number of student computer stations would be installed. The east room, on the other hand, would house equipment devoted to the actual fabrication of interpretive products, including the large-format printer, the laminator, and a computer station for high-resolution scanning and publication layout. The west room would serve both as a finished storage area and as a resource library for the interpretation students. Renovation
of Basement Storage Areas
Between May of 2000 and January of 2002, the basement storage
areas we sk
was purchased for the layout station in the east room.
Two wooden folding tables were also cut to a proper size and
placed in the east room to aid in the lamination process.
Installation of Computer Technology Equipment
When the computer stations were completed, the actual computers were installed in the downstairs lab. Each computer was networked to the University system through a network box in the east room, which allowed access to the Internet, e-mail, and other campus software. Because the Schmeeckle Reserve Visitor Center is on a wireless network system (a tower on the roof sends and receives signals from the library on campus), computers in the lab needed to be specially configured to work on the network. Some equipment, such as the two flatbed scanners, the slide scanner, and a sound recording device, were hooked up to individual computers. Other equipment needed to be installed to all computers, including the color laser printer, color inkjet printer, large-format printer, and digital camera card reader. Software for the technology training modules was also installed on every computer. Some programs, like the Microsoft products, were already installed on the computers by the University Information Technology office. Other more unique programs, however, needed to be installed directly, including QuarkXpress, Adobe Potoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Acrobat, Paint Shop Pro, sound editing and conversion programs, and graphic viewing programs. The “start menu” and “desktop” of each computer were standardized so a student would have an identical computing experience regardless of which computer he or she chooses. When the desktop publishing module was taught the second semester of the 2001-02 school year, five high-speed desktop computers were available for student use, although one of those computers was located in the east room and thus inaccessible for group teaching. Two slower touch-screen computers, which had been previously purchased for an exhibit in the Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame, were also available for student use. In March of 2002, two more high-speed computers and another color laser printer were acquired for the lab. The current equipment that has been installed in the Interpretation Computer Lab is listed in Figure 14.
Sign-in sheets were located outside the entrance of the middle computer lab, requesting the student’s name, purpose for using the lab, and time spent in the lab. On April 7, 2002, after the desktop publishing training module had been completed, this data was collected and analyzed to reveal current use patterns. Students did not sign the sheets during the training module sessions, but the instructor kept an attendance sheet for further use information. Overall, 22 different students used the lab between the end of January and the beginning of April. A total of all the time values on the sign-in sheets indicates that 115 hours were logged in the lab outside of class. Without incorporating any class time, each student spent an average of 5.23 hours in the computer lab. Fourteen out of the 22 students also participated in the desktop publishing training module that was taught in the computer lab. Each of these students spent an extra hour-and-a-half in the lab each week for 5 weeks. For these students, the average time spent in the lab was an additional 7.5 hours, making the total about 12.73 hours per person. Through class and non-class use, nearly 220 student hours were spent in the interpretation computer lab. Figure 15 illustrates the various reasons that students were using the lab. The majority of students used the lab to complete assignments for the Signs, Trails, and Waysides course. The second largest category was the completion of assignments for the desktop publishing training module. As would be suspected, students are primarily using the lab to complete assignments for their interpretation courses. However, very few students are using the lab to work on other projects. During those periods when no assignment was due in the interpretive courses, the computer lab remained virtually empty.
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| Introduction | ||||||||
| Related Readings | ||||||||
| Results | ||||||||
| Thesis | ||||||||
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For More Information, contact: Jim Buchholz Schmeeckle Reserve University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point (715) 346-4992 jbuchhol@uwsp.edu
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All pictures and text are copyrighted by Jim Buchholz, 2002. No part of this website may be duplicated without written permission of the author. | ||||||