Labyrinth-Forum | index | back | next |

-- the Labyrinth Spring 1995 --

SCC

Who's Doing What At...

Scottsdale Community College


  o A new computer kiosk for the Counseling Center has been set up in the Student Services building. Using Filemaker Pro, Emma Walters designed a multimedia database system that includes QuickTime movies to introduce the counselors, show a calendar of upcoming workshops, and provide a sign-in system for students. This system tracks important data for the center.

  o After a year of experimenting with graphing calculators, the mathematics department in the Fall of 1993 began requiring students to use these devices for College Algebra (MAT 154/155) and higher level courses. According to John Losse, the goal is "a seamless integration of technology without sacrificing traditional skills and methods." Texas Instruments has donated projection devices for the calculators and other equipment for faculty use. Keith Worth reports that many textbooks now include exercises tailored to solution by graphing calculator. Worth believes that while the newer approach may be harder to teach, it encourages students to experiment and to take risks in solving problems. Alan Jacobs looks forward to the new collaborative learning classroom that will feature graphing calculators that can link to Macintosh computers. Students will use software such as Maple to analyze and visualize mathematical concepts as well as using spreadsheet, graphing, and word processing programs to generate reports.

  o Bernie Combs received a District Instructional Technology grant to create Research Methods in Social and Natural Sciences. Developed in Hypercard 2.2, this computer program is an interactive environment in which students practice the basic knowledge and conceptual aspects of scientific research while discussing methods common to the sciences. Along with examples from his field of psychology, Combs includes examples from actual research studies supplied by content experts in sociology (Pat Bradley, SCC), biology (Donna Rebadow, PVCC and Michael Farabee, EMCCC), and geology (Alan Levine, MCLI).

  o In Chemistry, Douglas Sawyer is pursuing the use of the Texas Instruments Calculator Based Labs (CBL). In these labs, students collect data (temperature, velocity, light absorbance), record and analyze them with a graphing calculator, and then upload the results to a personal computer to prepare reports and presentations. Sawyer has submitted a proposal to the National Science Foundation to outfit a lab with CBL equipment.

  o The Writing Center has a networked lab of new Macintosh computers with word processing tools, collaborative writing applications, and software to navigate the Internet. The Writing Center will be an open lab, but may also be scheduled by faculty for hands-on labs or lectures using a new projection system.

  o Sharon Blanton will use World Wide Web tools such as NetScape to quickly teach a new course, Internet I (CIS 133AA), a one-credit introductory class. The two Spring sections filled and a three-credit course is planned for the fall.

  o Emma Walters is building a Hypercard-based Jeopardy game for Charles Pflanz to use as a test review in his economics classes. The stack is being designed so instructors in any discipline can customize the questions and answers.


Maricopa Center for Learning & Instruction (MCLI)
The Internet Connection at MCLI is Alan Levine --}
Comments to alan.levine@domail.maricopa.edu