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NFI 2008 – Technology Design

NFI 2008 – Technology Design. November 5, 2008 Presented by Gary Elert and Wendy Chretien Elert & Associates. Introductions Classroom technologies Questions District-wide thinking Break (ah!) Impact on the “built environment” and the design process Questions. Agenda.

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NFI 2008 – Technology Design

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  1. NFI 2008 – Technology Design November 5, 2008 Presented by Gary Elert and Wendy Chretien Elert & Associates

  2. Introductions Classroom technologies Questions District-wide thinking Break (ah!) Impact on the “built environment” and the design process Questions Agenda

  3. Construction Documents Technologist Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design Certification Certified Technology Specialist – Design Certified Technology Specialist Certified Wireless Network Administrator Registered Communications Distribution Designer(certified in all major structured cabling systems) Outside Plant Specialist Professional Engineer (selected states) Electrical Engineer Project Management Professional General Class Radiotelephone License American Institute of Certified Planners Emergency Number Professional American Water Works Association Member & Sandia Lab Methodology Training Certified Business Continuity Planner Society of Cable Telecommunications Consultants Membership Society of Telecommunications Consultants Membership • CDT • CPTED • CTS-D • CTS • CWNA • RCDD • OSP • PE • EE • PMP • FCC • AICP • 911 ENP • AWWA • CBCP • SCTE • STC • U.S. Green Building Council Membership Elert & Associates Certifications

  4. Vancouver Colville Coeur d’ Alene Pullman Bismarck Moscow GrandRapids Salem Bessemer Fargo Burlington St. Cloud Stillwater Aberdeen Appleton Scottsbluff Baldwin Boston Minneapolis Riverton La Crosse Providence Hartford Rochester Milwaukee Sioux Falls * GrandRapids Kingston Scarsdale Casper Yankton Dunmore Vermillion Westland Bridgeport Carlisle Des Moines Battle Creek Winnebago Upper St. Clair * Chadron Cleveland Reno Gurnee Lincoln Reynoldsburg Dublin Pittsburgh Gibbsboro Chicago Cedar Rapids Michigan City Carpentersville Timnath Mansfield Kearney Champaign Kirksville Topeka Deerfield Lynchburg Delaware * Charleston Durango St. Louis Denver Las Vegas * Los Angeles Salina Lawrence San Luis Valley Rustburg Kansas City Lexington Jefferson City Quincy City of Industry Glendale Asheboro Raleigh Hornersville Memphis Gainesville FortSmith Charleston Atlanta Douglasville SanAngelo Allen Statesboro Vicksburg * Shreveport Dallas Florence Savannah Columbus Rockwall Marksville Brunswick * Coushatta Austin Biloxi Bryan • * E&A Office Locations New Orleans La Porte Houston SanAntonio • E&A Project Locations Tallahassee Galveston Ft. Lauderdale Office and Project Locations

  5. NFI Presentation – Part IClassroom Technologies

  6. 21st Century Learning Environment What should it look like?

  7. It’s About the Kids

  8. Technology Needs to Be • Intuitive • Integrated with curriculum • Reliable

  9. Technology Design Should • Be focused on classroom needs • Answer administration’s management needs • Be scalable -- to fit any budget • Be highly flexible and future ready • Address maintenance concerns and cost of ownership • Be intuitive for ease of end user operation • Offer remote support

  10. Educational Technology . . . In the winter of 1813 & ’14 . . . I attended a mathematical school kept in Boston . . . On entering [the] room, we were struck at the appearance of an ample Black Board suspended on the wall, with lumps of chalk on a ledge below, and cloths hanging at either side. I had never heard of such a thing before. -- Samuel J. May, 1855

  11. A Little History

  12. What Control Systems of Old Looked Like All kidding aside . . .

  13. What Control System of Old Looked Like – circa 1989 Infrastructure intensive, high cost, high maintenance…

  14. 1989 Broadcast video (incl. video announcements) TV in front of room Phones Security (cameras and door access) Public address, intercom Clocks & bells Building heating/cooling controls Opaque projector Standalone sound system 2008 Streaming and digital broadcast video (incl. video announcements) Projector IP phones ID and payment systems (smart cards) Emergency notification IP-based clock & bell Building controls on IP Document camera Sound reinforcement Interactive whiteboard Wireless tablets Student response systems Generational Designs

  15. Classroom Technology Design – Previous Generation

  16. Classroom Technology Design – Current Generation

  17. Current Generation of Control System • Two racks can be in separate locations • More reliable • Easier to maintain

  18. Reminder . . .

  19. Intuitive Controls

  20. What are the classroom tools? • Control system for teacher • Video projection • Classroom sound reinforcement • Document camera • Interactive whiteboard • Wireless tablets • Student response systems

  21. The single thing teachers are most excited about is the wireless tablets--Dr. Michael Burke, Edina Schools

  22. Current generation of in-classroom equipment and controls

  23. Plus . . .

  24. Classroom Benefits • Simple, easy-to-use control interface • Diverse tool bag • Consistent access to all resources, in all rooms • Emergency alerting • Distance learning tools • Better audio, which can also be used for classroom sound reinforcement (with addition of microphone) • Wall-mounted control button panel (no lost remotes or dead batteries) • Boundary-free learning environment

  25. Centralized management PA Clock Bell Security Projectors Projector security Fewer parts to fail Modular design Add as you need/are able to District Benefits • Less space for headend • Lower energy consumption • Dependable • Non-proprietary • Less staff time • Lower maintenance • Faster, easier management • Cost effective

  26. Cost Comparison • Example uses a 44-room middle school • Other classroom components are available for equal cost in both systems. Examples: wireless tablets, interactive whiteboards, document cameras, wireless microphones, wireless keyboards, etc.

  27. TraditionalSystem

  28. IP Based System

  29. Reminder: Technology Design Should • Be focused on classroom needs • Answer administration’s management needs • Be scalable -- to fit any budget • Be highly flexible and future ready • Address maintenance concerns and cost of ownership • Be intuitive for ease of end user operation • Offer remote support

  30. Questions and Discussion

  31. Big Picture & District-wide • Wide area networks: fiber optic is becoming the norm • Wired and wireless in buildings (not either/or) • Technology infrastructure is a no longer just a “nice to have” – treat it like a utility

  32. Emerging Technologies • Wireless 802.11n – 100 Mbps+, but be careful, not standard yet • MIMO • Wireless video from computers to projectors – watch out for interference

  33. Emerging Technologies (cont’d) • IP projectors – centrally managed via the network • Can turn off/on by time of day, day of week • Know when to replace lamps and do preventive maintenance – avoid classroom disruptions • BUT - changing models may be a problem • Interactive whiteboards with attached projectors • No centralized management yet, but coming • Some slide up and down - be careful of ADA clearance height

  34. Emerging Technologies (cont’d) • Global distance learning • Visitor identification & security systems • Emergency notification systems • Deliver via as many methods as possible • Classroom phone display (IP phones) • Classroom projectors • Parents’ cell phones • Important to keep databases updated/accurate

  35. Standards Establishing District-wide standards saves time, money and headaches • Consistency among rooms makes it easy for teachers and substitutes; saves $ on spare parts and maintenance • Get input from faculty, administrators and on-site tech support personnel • May vary by building type • Classroom layout – determine where the systems should be placed within the room • Quantities – spell out how many of each

  36. Questions and Discussion

  37. Break!

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