Edu/Instr Tech Programs (long summ)

Subject: Edu/Instr Tech Programs (long summ)
From: Aldo J Caputo <ACAPUTO -at- ACS -dot- SAULTC -dot- ON -dot- CA>
Date: Fri, 29 Apr 1994 10:29:20 -0500

On Sunday, April 17,1994, I posted the following message to various lists and
individuals:

> I'm looking for colleges or universities which offer degree programs in
> computers, multimedia design and development, and their uses in education
> and training
> close to Michigan/Ontario
> graduate program would be ideal
> distance ed. a bonus

Here is a compilation of some of the responses I thought would
interest people with the same question. Thank you to all those who responded.
Your replies were very encouraging and much appreciated!

_______________________

SUMMARY OF RESPONSES
Re: Degrees in Computers, Multimedia, and Educational Technology
April 19, 1994
Aldo Caputo
_______________________

#1 18-APR-1994 09:18:44.72
From: IN%"cookjr -at- sncac -dot- snc -dot- edu"

Look for programs like "Educational Technology" or "Instructional Design".
Indiana, Penn State, The
University of Iowa, Iowa State, Florida State, Arizona, Minnesota and others
have programs. I
graduated from the U of Iowa. --

Jay R. Cook Software Support Specialist Phone: (414) 337-3973 St.
Norbert College
Fax: (414) 337-4098 100 Grant Street E-Mail:
cookjr -at- sncac -dot- snc -dot- edu De Pere, WI
54115-2099
_______________________

#2 18-APR-1994 10:06:02.54
From: IN%"JKIRKLEY -at- ucs -dot- indiana -dot- edu" "Jamie Kirkley, Honors Div., 855-5296"

Have you heard of the Instructional Systems Technology program at Indiana
University (Bloomington)? This program offers both masters and doctoral degrees
and is ranked as one
of the best programs (or may be THE best). It has an excellent production track,
and the School of
Education serves as a national demonstration site for the application of
technology in education.
If you would like more information, send me your mailing address--I'll send a
brochure. I'm entering the
masters program this summer, so I can give you more info if you want. I've
already taken classes in
the department and know quite a bit about it.
Hope this helps!!
Jamie Kirkley
_______________________

#3 18-APR-1994 11:43:54.74
From: IN%"miles -at- brooktree -dot- com" "Laurie Miles temp"

There is a program at San Diego State University in the Masters of Education
program, called
Educational Technology, which has a multimedia focus. You can contact Dr.
Alisson Rossett. She is
one of the Ed Tech gurus. Perhaps Dr. Rossett can give you a contact that is
more within your
geographic preference. The number is 619-594-6088 for Dr. Rossett and
619-594-6718 for the
department. Good luck!
_______________________

#4 18-APR-1994 11:56:06.13
From: IN%"rosman-j -at- ouray -dot- Denver -dot- Colorado -dot- EDU" "RIONDA OSMAN-JOUCHOUX"

You might investigate Instructional Technology or Educational Communications
programs. I believe
that Penn State University has a distance ed program. You might also find good
information from Ohio
State and Indiana University. Both have active programs. good luck!
_______________________

#5 18-APR-1994 12:24:20.96
From: IN%"roseread -at- aol -dot- com"

Please write to:
joerugg -at- aol -dot- com
for information on programs in New York and Boston. He also may have more
information on other
programs at this point in time.

Tell him Kim sent ya. :-)
Kim (roseread)
_______________________

#6 18-APR-1994 12:39:11.34
From: IN%"ad767 -at- freenet -dot- carleton -dot- ca"

You might check out what Waterloo has to offer. I'm not exactly sure what they
offer but I know they
have several courses in technical communication and possibly multimedia. I
believe they're offered
through continuing ed but may also be available through distance ed as well. I
recently came across a
list of courses they were offering this past winter. You could perhaps try to
access this information
through the net (I believe I was using the Gopher library service when I came
across it).

Gerry Bourguignon ad767 -at- freenet -dot- carleton -dot- ca
Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA
_______________________

#7 18-APR-1994 12:52:06.22
From: IN%"@cunyvm.cuny.edu:NEWEDU-L -at- UHCCVM -dot- BITNET" "Newer Patterns in
Educati on List"

I would suggest you obtain a copy of *The Electronic University: A Guide to
Distance Learning
Programs* Published in cooperation with National University Continuing Education
Association
(NUCEA). Their ISBN number is: 1-56079-139-X. Your local bookstore may have
it. In the US it goes
for $15.95. Published by Peterson's: Princeton, New Jersey.
Good luck and best regards,
Dave dellis -at- maine -dot- maine -dot- edu
_______________________

#8 18-APR-1994 13:10:05.75
From: IN%"jhcarpen -at- mtu -dot- edu" "John Carpenter"

You may want to investigate interdisciplinary humanities programs, too. Here at
Michigan Tech, for
example, our MS and PhD programs in Rhetoric and Technical Communication feature
broad areas of
concentration. Our students' interests run from foreign languages and
literature, to gender studies, to
environmental philosophy, and (I'd say) anything in between. We currently have
several scholars at
work in multimedia studies, including computer-based training, technical
documentation, artificial
intelligence, visual design, and hypertext.

I'm not trying to sound like a salesman, so if I am, please excuse me. Did I
mention that MTU would
be only a 5-hour commute from Sault Ontario?

John Carpenter Michigan Technological University Department of Humanities
Houghton, MI 49931 email: jhcarpen -at- mtu -dot- edu
"That boy's got a mind like a steel trap. Fulla mice."--Foghorn Leghorn

_______________________

#9 18-APR-1994 13:26:22.19
From: IN%"mkrupp -at- Cayman -dot- COM"

Here are some ideas:

1) Contact the Society for Technical Communication (901 N. Stuart St., Suite
904, Arlington, VA
22203-1854, Phone: 703-522-4114) for info on programs in technical communication
that might meet
your needs.

2) Contact the American Society for Training and Development (sorry, I don't
have the address handy,
but you can get it at your local library in the Encyclopedia of Associations)
for similar info.

3) Try Michigan Tech. They had some good courses and may be able to set up an
interdisciplinary
program for you.

4) Avoid Boston University! I have a M.Ed. from there in Educational
Technology. Sounds like just the
ticket, eh? Well, it probably would be except for the President of the
University and the director of the
program. It's been 20 years, and some of the shenanigans they pulled still make
me spit nails. More to
the point, a friend of mine recently graduated from the program with a Ph. D.,
and she's even angrier
than I am/was. You don't need that kind of aggravation!

5) If possible, plan on attending the STC conference in Minneapolis May 15-18.
You'll get a chance to
talk to several people who are involved in the field of training and several
multimedia communication
professionals, too. And it's fairly close to Sault Ste. Marie, too.

6) Years ago, some of the folks at Simon Fraser University in B.C. were doing
some innovative work in
the fields you describe. I've been out of the loop for while, but you might
check with them. Also, U. of
Alaska folks were addressing the problem of distance education. A bit far,
though, from Ontario!
Good luck!

Marguerite Krupp
_______________________

#10 18-APR-1994 15:39:27.80

From: "Robert W. Hill" <hillr -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu>

Nova Southeastern Univesity, an independent, nonsectarian, nonprofit university
that is regionally
accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools
(SACS) offers two Ed.D. programs in computers with an application to education.
Nova's main campus
is in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida and utilizes field-based clusters to working
professionals.Two programs are:

1) an Ed.D. in Computing and Information Technology through the Programs in
Higher Education office.
For info. call 1 (800) 986-3223, Ext. 7380.
2) The doctoral program in Computing Technology in Education has 3 areas of
specialization, each with
the opportunity to earn the Ph.D., Ed.D., or Sc.D. degree. The program
specializations are: Computer
Education, Computing Systems in Education, or Training and Learning. For info
call 1 (800)986-2247 or
e-mail: ccisinfo -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu
Hope this helps....
Robert W. Hill
hillr -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu
_______________________

#11 18-APR-1994 16:27:46.45

The George Washington University offers a distance ed Master of Arts in
Educational Technology
Leadership. Courses include introduction to multimedia and multimedia design,,
classes that cover
hardware and software stuff, as well
as public policy. Classes are offered through the "Mind Extension University"
which many cable
companies in the US carry. I don't know about Canada. The way
it works is you watch classes on television (via your cable company, or you buy
a satellite dish, or you buy videocassettes of the classes from Mind Extension
University), and
communicate assignments and thoughts to the teachers and other
students via modem to a bulletin board.
For a catalog from Mind Extension University, call (in the US) 1-800-777-MIND.

Julie Kramer Davis
jkd -at- srs -dot- gov
_______________________

#12 18-APR-1994 17:25:56.16
From: IN%"rosman-j -at- OURAY -dot- DENVER -dot- COLORADO -dot- EDU" "RIONDA OSMAN-JOUCHOUX"

You might investigate Instructional Technology or Educational Communications
programs. I believe that
Penn State University has a distance ed program. You might also find good
information from Ohio
State and Indiana University. Both have active programs.
good luck,
Rionda Osman
rosman-j -at- ouray -dot- denver -dot- colorado -dot- edu
_______________________

#13 18-APR-1994 19:12:35.72
From: IN%"jimw -at- TENNESSEE -dot- SC -dot- TI -dot- COM" "Jim Walsh"

If you want to stay in the Michigan area, then I suggest either Michigan
Technological University in
Houghton (has the largest scientific/technical communications program in U.S. --
over 120 students) or
Bowling Green State University just south of Detroit and Toledo in Bowling
Green, OH. Both have
excellent programs in CS and in technical communication, proved by the students
we have recruited
from them.
Good luck,

Jim Walsh jimw -at- tennessee -dot- sc -dot- ti -dot- com
_______________________

#14 18-APR-1994 22:00:29.26
From: IN%"jljensen -at- carina -dot- unm -dot- edu"

Hi; Like you, I am extremely interested in a multimedia career. I will receive a
BA in Professional Writing
this May and would like to learn more about the numerous applications of
mutlimedia in education and
entertainment.
The February or March issue of -New Media- listed a number of schools that
offer various degrees or
at least courses in multimedia. I'm sure I still have the magazine. If you can't
find a copy, I'd be happy
to snail mail a copy to you. It may not list everything you want, but it's
interesting.
Please let me know what everybody else adivises you to do.Thanks,
Julie Jensen
CIRT Publications
_______________________

#15 18-APR-1994 22:12:40.27
From: IN%"kolosick -at- CCIT -dot- ARIZONA -dot- EDU"

I received your message regarding degree programs in computers, and multimedia
design and
development, and their uses in education and training.

I don't know if our program is exactly what you wanted. We plan to implement it
in fall, 1995, assuming
that we get approval. I am sending you a draft of our materials that we are
proposing to our
administration. All items are, of course, subject to change.
If I can be of further assistance please contact me.

Master of Fine Arts in New Media

General Description

Students in the program will complete a common core curriculum and will work
together as
interdisciplinary production teams. The MFA degree gives students a solid
foundation in new
technologies while permitting them to develop their own areas of specialization
and creativity. The
thesis will consist of the design, implementation as team leader, and
documentation of a project in
interactive media technologies. Research in New Media will be supported by the
Peter Treistman Fine
Arts Center for New Media in the Fine Arts Complex.

Initially, entry to the MFA degree program will be limited to five students each
year. Students' previous
education and experience will be varied. Although students' background may not
necessarily be
technological in focus, a strong level of computer user skills must be
demonstrable. Students are
expected to have sufficient technological experience in order to gain
proficiency in New Media software
applications quickly and independently. Course work concentrates on New Media
concepts and artistic
production rather than basic training in software products.
Each student must have his/her complete degree plan and graduate committee
approved by the faculty
before completing two semesters or 18 units of study, which ever comes first. A
total of 60 units will be
required to complete the MFA in New Media. These units are completed in the
following
categories:

Core Curriculum - 18 units (required of all students in the program)
3 units New Media Technology and Communications
An overview of New Media hardware and software, Human Interface Design,
and Instructional
Design. The communications component of the course includes the study of file
formats,
telecomunications, networking, and their relationship to present and future
media.
3 units Graphic Representation and Processing
A study and practical application of visual art techniques as applied to
New Media. Projects will
develop technical and artistic skill in image creation, capture, and processing.
3 units Digital Signal Processing
A study and practical application of video acquisition, production
techniques, music composition
and music selection techniques as applied to New Media. Projects will develop
skills in video
acquisition, processing, and editing. MIDI, digital sampling, recording
techniques, and surround sound
editing.

3 units Research Methods in New Media
Incorporates research techniques into screen and interface design with
special with special focus
on statistics and experimental design as it applies to various age groups,
disabilities and educational
levels. Readings in research literature will be followed by research projects.
6 units Topics Seminars
(instructors selected from participating faculty) Studies in specific
areas of arts and New Media
technology. Seminars require independent and group research and may be team
taught by faculty
specialists from a variety of disciplines. Topics may include: Overview of
Tele/Datacommunications;
Development of Exploratory Learning Environments; Animation Techniques for
Virtual Reality
Applications; Use of Scientific Data for Virtual Space Travel; 3D Anatomical
Illustration. Similar topics
may be offered as intensive weekend seminars in order that members of the
professional media
community can take part.

Team research - 6 units (Students work on research grants of existing faculty)
Students will sign up for research teams that will design and implement
specific research projects
or New Media products. Students provide services within their area of expertise
and learn from the
research activities of others on the team. Generally associated with research
grants or prototype
development for future funding, these projects prepare the student for
independent research and team
leadership associated with producing a Master's Thesis. Such research projects
generally last one
semester and receive 2 or 3 units of credit.

Area of Specialty - 12 Units (From courses outside the New Media Program)
Each student will declare and develop an area of specialty within the
field of New Media. This
area can be developed with any combination of course work from any department or
combination of
departments, but must be directly related to creative applications of New Media.
No more than 6 units
can be accomplished through independent studies unless special permission is
granted by the faculty.

Electives - 6 units (From courses outside the New Media Program)
These graduate level classes may be taken outside the student's area of
emphasis and core
curriculum courses. Students are encouraged to take courses that broaden their
background and
enhance their understanding of issues relating to technology, society, and human
responsibility.

Thesis - 18 units (Load shared among faculty associated with the program)
Students engage in independent research guided by a single faculty
member or faculty committee
of experts. Research for the MFA includes the design, development, and full
implementation of New
Media systems. Each thesis topic must be approved by the faculty. The thesis
topic will be directly
related to the area of expertise developed by the student.

Timetable for Development of the MFA in New Media

Year 1 1994-95 Planning Year, establish committees, faculty, and syllabi.
Further develop specific
degree requirements.
Year 2 1995-96 Admission of first class of five students.
Year 3 1996-97 Admission of second class of five students.
Year 4 1997-98 Admission of third class of five students.

----
J. Timothy Kolosick kolosick -at- ccit -dot- arizona -dot- edu
School of Music
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
(602) 621-7018
_______________________


#16 18-APR-1994 23:57:55.38
From: IN%"JKIRKLEY -at- ucs -dot- indiana -dot- edu" "Jamie Kirkley, Honors Div., 855-5296"

I sent your name to the department, and the secretary will forward some info to
you. We have a fellow Canadian here in the program, so you won't be alone!!
Actually, the program
has a lot of international students and is very diverse.
If you have any more questions, please feel free to e-mail me. Regarding gopher
information, I know
that Indiana University has a gopher, but I think the School of Ed is still in
the process of building theirs.
They are also building a World Web Site, but I'm not sure if it's finished. If
it is, I'll forward more info
when I get it.
If you have specific questions, e-mail me.
Jamie
_______________________


#17 19-APR-1994 09:53:41.65
From: IN%"JKIRKLEY -at- ucs -dot- indiana -dot- edu" "Jamie Kirkley, Honors Div., 855-5296"
RE: Getting info on Indiana University's IST program:

Anyone on internet can access IST's WWW server and get our program information.
To do this:

Get mosaic off the internet
Run the program
Select "file" menu on menubars
"open VRL"
type
"http://education.indiana.edu/";

Hope this works for you!
Jamie Kirkley

_______________________

#18 19-APR-1994 12:47:43.30
From: IN%"KLR0105 -at- ACFcluster -dot- NYU -dot- EDU"
Subj: Distance Ed

You may want to check with New York University with their Administration,
Leadership and Technology
Dept. in their School of Education ( I am finishing my master's there in
Business Ed and will be in the
doctoral program this fall; my focus in distance learning using interactive
telecommunications). NYU
also has a dept. in their Tish School of the Arts called the Interactive
Telecommunications Program
which specializes in the areas you described.
Hope this info helps.

[][][][][][][]



SUMMARY OF RESPONSES: PART 2
Aldo Caputo
April 25, 1994

#19 19-APR-1994 20:10:06.00
From: IN%"jimw -at- TENNESSEE -dot- SC -dot- TI -dot- COM" "Jim Walsh"

In a very small way, I can agree with Stephen Bernhardt. My doubts come from
trying to find a
university that offers a degree plan "in computers, and multi- media design and
development, and their
uses in education and training." This is
so esoteric that I question such a plan can be found because it would not be
economically feasible to
the university. To go around this, I feel that you have to go to a school with a
technical communication
curriculum degree plan as well as having working agreements with the CS
(computer science)
department like the two schools I mentioned. Then you can design a degree plan
using their already
existing curriculum (and enjoy a good selection).Does this make sense, or have I
gone out on another
(weak and impulsive) intuitive flight of fancy again.

Jim Walsh

___________________________

#20 20-APR-1994 01:40:41.40
From: IN%"johndan -at- CRAMER -dot- NMT -dot- EDU" "Johndan Johnson-Eilola"

I had some email problems and missed the start of the discussion, but you might
want to look at the
February 94 Issue of New Media. There's a section on Careers in Multimeda, which
has both an
overview and a resource list including schools with some sort of involvement in
training multimedia
designers. The blurbs on the schools are short, but at least a starting point.

In addition, you might contact Stuart Selber (sselber -at- mtu -dot- edu), who has an essay
and survey of the
ways in which computer use is taught in graduate programs in technical
communication. The article
itself might not have what you need, but he may have gotten information from his
survey that would be
useful to you.

Finally, although Steve's right in saying that MTU's program was designed
primarily as a MS & PhD in
Rhetoric and Tech Comm, the program is open enough to allow heavy concentrations
in multimedia and
instructional computing (and they have a really nice computer lab--486s, Mac
IIci's and Quadras, lots of
fun periperhals and software and an, um, "interesting" decor and atmosphere, but
that's another story).
The program may be more rhetorically/socially based than you want, but it's
something to consider. I
have both MS and PhD's from the program, and almost every class or research
project I did involved
hypertext, hypermedia, or some other version of online text. (Just a plug for my
alma mater.)

Johndan Johnson-Eilola johndan -at- prism -dot- nmt -dot- edu
Humanities Department
johndan -at- cramer -dot- nmt -dot- edu New Mexico Tech
505/835-5200

___________________________

#21 20-APR-1994 01:43:51.33
From: IN%"@cunyvm.cuny.edu:MSTSACX -at- GSUVM1 -dot- BITNET" "MSTSACX"

To whomever is interested in instructional technology programs:
Note that nearly every state in the United States has an instructional
technology program in the
education college of one of its larger universities. A few private
universities also offer programs.
Some focus on K-12, others on adult ed. Some are more technology oriented,
some are more design
oriented. Some of the many schools with programs include Syracuse, Columbia, U
of Texas, U of
Washington, U of Minnesota, U of Georgia, Indiana University, San Diego State
University, University
of Utah, San Jose State University, San Francisco State University, Florida
State University, Southern
Illinois University, and my school, Georgia State. (The original requester was
from Canada; I don't
know the academic situation there but do know there's an active instructional
technology community in
Montreal, with a chapter of the National Society for Performance and
Instruction.)

Saul Carliner Ph.D. Student
Instructional Technology Geo. State Univ.
Note new userid----> mstsacx -at- gsuvm1 -dot- gsu -dot- edu 404/892-3945

___________________________

#21 20-APR-1994 01:51:40.21
From: IN%"sbernhar -at- NMSU -dot- EDU" "Stephen Bernhardt"

But I wonder if this is good advice below. I think instructional technology
programs are more on the
mark than those at MTU or BGSU, which are essentially tech comm programs. It
seems Caputo has
interests defined which don't exactly fit tech comm programs .That's why I
didn't recommend our own
programs at NMSU.

On Mon, 18 Apr 1994, Jim Walsh wrote:

> On Sun, 17 Apr 1994, Aldo J Caputo wrote:

> > I'm looking for colleges or universities which offer
> > degree programs in computers, and multimedia design and development, and > >
their uses in
education and training.
> > I'd like to keep fairly close to this region of N. America
(Michigan/Ontario).
> > Distance Ed options would also be a bonus.
> If you want to stay in the Michigan area, then I suggest either Michigan >
Technological University in
Houghton (has the largest scientific/technical > communications program in U.S.
-- over 120 students)
or Bowling Green State > University just south of Detroit and Toledo in Bowling
Green, OH. Both have
> excellent programs in CS and in technical communication, proved by the
students
> we have recruited from them.

> Good luck,

> Jim Walsh jimw -at- tennessee -dot- sc -dot- ti -dot- com

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> Stephen A. Bernhardt >
> Department of English, Box 3E >
> New Mexico State University >
> Las Cruces, NM 88003 >
> 505-646-2027 FAX 505-646-7725 >
> e-mail sbernhar -at- nmsu -dot- edu >
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

___________________________

#22 20-APR-1994 14:06:10.32
From: IN%"sfouts -at- ellison -dot- sc -dot- ti -dot- com"

Jim Walsh suggested that he try Bowling Green and Michigan Tech., to which
Stephen A. Bernhardt
replied:

But I wonder if this is good advice below. I think instructional |} technology
programs are more on the
mark than those at MTU or BGSU, which |} are essentially tech comm programs. It
seems Caputo has
interests defined |} which don't exactly fit tech comm programs .That's why I
didn't recommend |} our
own programs at NMSU.

I don't know whether MTU or BGSU have classes in the media that he's looking for
or not, but either
way, it can't hurt for him to contact the college to find out. Many colleges
these days will "special order"
a degree program for you if they don't have what you are looking for.
For example, when I graduated Eastern Washington University with a BA in
Technical Communication,
the head of the Tech Comm department told me that due to the small size of her
program, I couldn't get
a Master's degree in technical communication from Eastern because of a limit on
the number of credits
in my major program that I could take from a single professor. The head of the
CS department,
however, said that should I want to come back for a Master's, that he and the
head of the English
department would design a graduate program that would give me an MS in Technical
Communication
and Computer Science. So it positively can't hurt to contact the school to find
out what they can do.

Steve Fouts
sfouts -at- ellison -dot- sc -dot- ti -dot- com

___________________________

#23 20-APR-1994 20:25:28.06
From: IN%"rmcgreal -at- jupiter -dot- sun -dot- csd -dot- unb -dot- ca" "Rory Mc Greal Com College"

I am taking the NOVA Southeastern University PhD Program in Computer Technology
in Education by
distance education using computer conferencing. They have MA programs also. I
started it when
I was working for Contact North in Sudbury. You have to go to Florida for at
least 4 week long
sessions. I found that Florida was cheaper to get to from Northern ONtario
than almost anywhere.
I find it to be a good solid program, very relevant and very up to date, which
is a problem in many
programs in Canada.

You might also ask Karen Ronald who is a librarian in Espanola, she is taking a
similar program. Her
email address is :
ronaldk -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu

I am continuing the program here in New Brunswick, which is another advantage
of a distance
education program. If you want more info, just let me know.

Rory McGreal, Executive Director/Directeur general TeleEducation NB
Box 6000 470 York Street, Fredericton, New Brunswick E3B 5H1 CANADA
Tel. (506) 444-4230 Fax: (506) 444-4232
Email: rmcgreal -at- unb -dot- ca OR mcgrealr -at- nbnet -dot- nb -dot- ca

___________________________

#24 IN%"goforth -at- ramsey -dot- cs -dot- laurentian -dot- ca"

You might want to check out the Educational Technology program at Concordia in
Montreal. I'm a Ph.D
student there now. From your post, it sounds like the proximity, the cheap
rents in Montreal and the
low tuition might be important factors. They were for me.
Contact me if you want more information.

Dave Goforth
Math and Comp Sci
Laurentian University
goforth -at- ramsey -dot- cs -dot- laurentian -dot- ca

___________________________

#25
I don't have detailed addresses handy, but Connected Education is affiliated
with the New School for
Social Research in New York City. Paul Levinson is director of Distance (sorry,
delete
"Distance"...mental synapse problem!); Paul is director of Connected Education
He published an article
in the 1988 book, Mindweave, edited by Robin Mason and Tony Kaye. There may be
an address in
there.
Nova University in Florida has several Master's and Ph.D.'s in various types of
computer and
information science, but I don't know if there's a multimedia emphasis.

Rosalie Wells, Ph.D. Centre for Distance Education Athabasca University
Box 10,000 Athabasca, Alberta T0G 2R0 CANADA
INTERNET: rosaliew -at- cs -dot- athabascau -dot- ca FAX: (403)675-6431 TELEPHONE:
(403)675-6180

________________________

#26 25-APR-1994 21:48:10.02

From: IN%"ccisinfo -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu"

tommac as ccisinfo -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu

CCIS Marketing Department is available at:

Interactive e-mail ......... ccisinfo -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu
Automated catalogs ......... cciscat -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu
finger cciscat -at- alpha -dot- acast -dot- nova -dot- edu Toll Free in
the U.S. ...... 1-800-986-2247
Option 1
Direct Telephone ........... 305-475-7352
FAX ........................ 305-476-1982


________________________

#27 26-APR-1994 12:26:00.15
From: IN%"jackson -at- ee -dot- tamu -dot- edu"

Try the University of Washington, HIT (human interface technology) Lab. The do a
lot of
multimedia/visualization/virtual reality research.
Plus they aren't THAT far from Ontario.
Paul

________________________

#28
From: IN%"jhcarpen -at- mtu -dot- edu" "John Carpenter"

The person you'd want to contact is:

Dieter W. Adolphs, Director of Graduate Studies
Michigan Technological University
Department of Humanities
1400 Townsend Drive
Houghton, MI 49931-1295
PH: (906) 487-2540

Alas, I can't find Dieter's e-mail address, if he has one.

And thank you, an "abridged" version of your responses would be quite nice. I
know of more than a
few colleagues who would be interested in that info as well.

John Carpenter
Michigan Tech University
Department of Humanities

_________________________

#29 26-APR-1994 12:26:00.15

Try the University of Washington, HIT (human interface technology) Lab. The do a
lot of
multimedia/visualization/virtual reality research.
Plus they aren't THAT far from Ontario.
Paul

_________________________

#30 28-APR-1994 11:12:20.68
From: IN%"klopfens -at- andy -dot- bgsu -dot- edu" "Bruce Klopfenstein"
Subject: RE: New Media Course

Hello:
I teach a new electronic media course at BGSU. Our television station is also
heavily involved in
distance learning. There are great opportunities at BGSU.
Our graduate director is Srinivas Melkote (melkote -at- andy -dot- bgsu -dot- edu). Feel free to
send him email.

Thanks for yor inquiry!
Bruce Klopfenstein

[][][][]

____________________________________________________________
Aldo J Caputo Faculty, Language & Communication
Sault College of Applied Arts & Technology
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario CANADA
acaputo -at- acs -dot- saultc -dot- on -dot- ca
------------------------------------------------------------


Previous by Author: <Q> Degree in Computers, MM & Edu
Next by Author: Re: Whale Removal Incident
Previous by Thread: Re: Editing tools
Next by Thread: Ventura -> WORD


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads