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-- the Labyrinth Spring 1995 --

MCC

Who's Doing What At...

Mesa Community College


  o Can You Dig It? is a teaching model built upon a computer simulation of an archaeological "dig" at the Pueblo Grande museum in Phoenix. Students are required to use their math, reading, and English skills, together with critical thinking, to manage the "dig" and analyze the finds. The project is a team effort by Chas Moore, Rick Effland, Tim Florscheutz, Joan Massey, Nancy Hellner, Raquel Leyva, Philip Carrillo, Victor Cornell, Laurel Howard, Litsa St. Armand, and Gail Mee.

  o In the Business Department, Patricia Harris is piloting a network-related course where students can access class materials by modem rather than be required to work in the computer lab. For Service Learning projects, some of her students are volunteering at local schools and non-profit agencies by helping computer users, configuring and maintaining networks, and programming client-server applications. Harris is also working on distance learning by incorporating a classroom on the Internet at MCC's Diversity University where students electronically meet, work on projects together, and leave messages for other students or instructors.

  o Elizabeth Dorland is promoting the use of a new multimedia "cart" for classroom use of computer technology in biology. On the cart is a Macintosh Powerbook, a projection system, a video disc player, and a CD-ROM drive. The system also includes a serial interface to laboratory measurement devices, so that data (i.e. pH, temperature, pressure) may be collected and then analyzed on the computer. Software used for classroom demonstration (also available to students from the Information Commons server) includes animation programs for organic chemistry, IR Tutor for learning about organic reaction mechanisms, and Beaker for learning organic structures.

  o Biology instructors Brad Kincaid and Peggy Johnson are co-principal investigators along with ASU Professor A.E. Lawson on a National Science Foundation funded project called BioApps. The goals are to increase "biological literacy" and reasoning skills by integrating computer applications into biology lab exercises. Programmer Ali Bouhouch is developing object-oriented applications within NeXTSTEP, the UNIX-based operating system which runs on both NeXT and Intel 486 computers. NeXTSTEP offers enhanced display capabilities, networked management, and the programming tools provide blocks of re-usable code for common functions such as graphing and report writing. Kincaid and Johnson designed a detailed evaluation process for the BioApps project so that their results "will document the efficacy of technology for inquiry-oriented instruction and provide a model for the use of technology in science education."

  o We lack sufficient space to print all of the ways Rick Effland is using technology in anthropology courses! With more than 30 software programs in use, Effland is now leading his students into the world of researching and publishing on the World Wide Web (WWW). This spring his students will build a WWW information collection on Southwest prehistory, history, and contemporary Native Americana. Effland and his students have been developing their own series of multimedia software on both Macintosh and NeXT computers, augmented by a package of applications developed by the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB).

  o The Mesa Library/Information Commons is moving into the World Wide Web, by providing access to students via networked workstations and by posting campus-wide information through a Web server. Frank Gonzalez and Lance Francis have been instrumental in promoting the use of the Internet. Gonzalez also developed the Internet Tryptik on Social Issues.

  o Ken Costello supports numerous projects and services through the Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL). When not editing videos for seminars or preparing visuals for faculty to use in lectures, Costello also develops multimedia applications that integrate his knowledge of Macintosh, NeXT, and Amiga computers. Currently, Costello is developing a program for three-dimensional molecular modeling as well as an interactive application for learning the set-up of audio-visual and computer equipment.


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