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iCampus

Learn more about the iCampus alliance.

 


The iCampus alliance is a six-year educational-technology research alliance between Microsoft and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The alliance, established in October 1999, supports and disseminates faculty initiatives in educational technology, sponsoring innovations, incubating them through classroom use, and promoting their adoption, evaluation, and continued evolution both within MIT and through worldwide multi-institutional cooperation. The initiative is managed by Microsoft Research’s External Research & Programs group.

Projects

iCampus supports transformative projects whose scope transcends an individual course and whose impact extends beyond an individual campus. iCampus is concentrating on three broad areas:

The Internet and Web services for shared educational resources:

  • iLabs  Remote access to laboratory instruments and worldwide sharing that can decrease dramatically the cost of laboratory instruction in science and engineering. Students in Singapore, Sweden, and Uganda are performing a lab experiment using equipment located at MIT.
  • iMoat  Web-based infrastructure for administering essay examinations, which spreads the cost of providing high-quality writing assessment across multiple institutions and stimulates research collaboration in writing instruction.
  • DSpace and OpenCourseWare  Institutional repositories for global access to university educational and research materials.

Active learning alternatives to traditional lectures:

  • TEAL Studio-mode instruction that replaces lectures by small group activities. All lectures in MIT’s introductory physics subjects have been replaced by studio-mode classes that build on visualization and simulation technology.
  • XTutor Online lectures supported by computer-based exercises and intelligent tutoring software. Instructional applications of emerging technologies, including pen-based interfaces for collaborative design, embedded sensors, and biological computing.

Instructional applications of emerging technologies:

  • Pen-based interfaces
  • Speech recognition
  • Embedded sensors
  • Biological computing

The central theme of this work is twofold: stimulating faculty-led innovation in educational technology and demonstrating effective models for dissemination that amplify faculty efforts.

Collaboration

Disseminating technology and innovative teaching practices requires a focus on faculty-to-faculty interaction. iCampus emphasizes the collaboration necessary to translate innovations developed in one community to successful new practices in another. This high-touch approach to outreach engages faculty and seeks institutional commitment to ensure both scalability and sustainability of adoption.

iCampus projects cultivate an engaged community of faculty to implement, extend or be inspired to create their own analogs of iCampus software. For example, iLabs encourages faculty to implement their own experiments using a shared architecture, a process intended to promote a micro-barter economy of shareable experiments worldwide.

iCampus collaborations are organized through an international network of hub institutions that include more than 40 affiliate campuses.

Licensing

Based on the approach of the MIT license for free and open-source software, all iCampus software is distributed under terms that permit anyone to use, modify, distribute, and redistribute the software, thereby encouraging creative contributions from all those inspired to build on iCampus work.

 

This program is managed by Paul Oka.
 

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