In this issue:
Join us
for the

FCPS Technology Fair at PLD on April 13th! See STLP
News for details
PET
Projects! Apply for our June session! See Tips
from the Pros for details
Pen
Pals talk via video conferencing! See Into
the Classroom.
Meet
TRT Kim Overstreet and STI trainer Wayne Erminger
Ambrose offerings for May .
. .
Thanks to this issue's contributors: Barbara
Barr, Cathy Brandt, Joy Buckingham, Mark DiMascio, Donna
Eustace, Dick Forston, Janyl Humlong, Jenni Keith, Carol Moffett,
Kim Overstreet, Jan Ross, Paula Whitmer,
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The
Virtual Classroom in a Real World.
Webster's defines virtual as " . . . Existing or resulting in
essence or effect though not in actual fact, form, or name: the virtual
extinction
of the buffalo." Webopedia
starts its definition this way: "Not real." Whatis.com gets a little
closer to the current usage: "In general,
virtual means the quality of effecting something without actually being
that something. In information technology, there seems to be a virtual version of (virtually)
everything." That little nudge at the end
refers to the fact that, in the current world of technology, the
word "virtual" is expanding rapidly.
TechWeb's TechEncyclopedia
takes this further: "[Virtual is] . . . an adjective that expresses a condition without
boundaries or constraints. . . "This emerging new definition of
"virtual" is the result of how much computers, the Internet, and technology
in general have become, in many contexts, almost as real as the "real" world they were
originally designed to
emulate and supplement. The sources for my definitions above are fine
examples, since Webster's Web presence - technically a "virtual
dictionary" since it lacks the binding and ink of a real dictionary - is more usable and up-to-date than the
edition sitting on the library shelf.
This is even true of that venerable example of traditional reference, the
Oxford English Dictionary. (OED's on line presence requires paid
subscription, the only
reason it is not quoted here.) At least in the area of information and reference,
"virtual" has arrived. But what about the "virtual
classroom?" Webopoedia would say it's "Not real." As a classroom
teacher, I would argue, and most people would agree, that I can, with a
simple piece of chalk, accomplish more than any "virtual" version of a
classroom. However, just as with on-line reference tools, "virtual classrooms" are not
the answer to all questions, but one
answer to some questions. The "virtual classroom" can fill a gap, can
offer an alternative -especially when the only apparent alternative is no classroom
at all. It was
university graduate programs that first began to offer the
"virtual classroom" (dubbed Distance Learning) to students who had great distances and/or
personal barriers to further university studies. This model has proved popular, spawning, in Kentucky, the
Kentucky Virtual University, and then, a few years ago, the
Kentucky Virtual High School.
These misunderstood resources have been viewed by some (especially K-12
schools) as a threat to the traditional classroom. Although a few students
prefer its text-intensive and flexible environment, the promoters of KVHS and its ilk
did not assume that their purpose was to replace the classroom, but
to supplement, and to provide capability where none existed before.
Fayette County has
attempted to extend the concept of teaching over a distance by including a
real-time teacher classroom presence through video conferencing. This program - the
Fayette County Video-Linked Classroom Initiative, is currently being
used by Bryan Station and Henry Clay high schools, and is due to expand to
the other high schools in 2002-03. The Video-Linked Classroom is
still in pilot, and hence there are still questions and details to be
addressed. However, in the coming years, its presence in Fayette County is
destined to expand. Schools, principals, and teachers are understandably
wary of this new kid on the block, but they also face an increasing demand
for electives and advanced classes that their staffing and budget
constraints cannot meet. Hence, for hundreds of students each year who
want and need those classes, it may be that the Video-Linked Classroom
will be the difference between pursuing their studies, and taking a study
hall. There will be nothing "not real" about their needs - those
needs can and should be "virtually" met through the appropriate
application of emerging technologies.
Our language changes as the
availability and character of the tools it describes change. Although the "virtual
classroom" is not appropriate "virtually everywhere,"
it is destined to become an important real tool in support of our charges
- the students of Fayette County.
-
Jeffrey L. Jones
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