The Tools in Classroom: Technology Success Stories series is written by the Academic Technology Department of the library at City University of Seattle. Our goal is to share how our faculty are using technology in the classroom so that others can gain insight into ways they can help their own practice.
1. Tools in the Classroom: Technology Success Stories
Practice Vignette #3
Julie Wiebell & Blackboard Collaborate
Julie Wiebell and her students use Blackboard Collaborate web
conferencing to communicate and share content online in real time. This is a
useful tool as Julie is located in Tennessee and her students are spread out across
North America, and sometimes, the globe. In their careers, students will need
to use web conferencing systems to talk with clients in different time zones, so
using Collaborate acquaints them with this type of communication.
In the Classroom
Students in Julie’s online PM501 (Introduction to Project Management)
and mixed mode EC400 (Fundamentals of Ecommerce) classes will see
Collaborate several times throughout the quarter. In the first week, Julie holds
a session to introduce herself, go over the syllabus, and help everyone become
familiar with the way Collaborate looks. Her students can see her talking and
hear her voice. The session is recorded so students can attend synchronously or
watch at their convenience.
Around week 3, Julie asks students to attend one of several Collaborate
sessions to get set up and play around with the tool. In the discussion board,
she posts the First-Time User Checklist and the instructions for getting started.
The purpose of this activity is to get students up and running in Collaborate,
make sure they have the right version of Java, and that they have a microphone
and webcam that work. If a student does not have a web camera or a USB
headset with microphone, Julie encourages them to buy each. These items are
not expensive and are tools they will use throughout the quarter, and after.
In week 9, students use Collaborate for their final presentations. Julie
encourages students to prepare by practicing their presentation in Collaborate.
Given a few days’ notice, Julie will set up a session for each group on the
date/time they request or they can use the 24/7 drop-in session listed in their
course. Julie finds that students who attend the week 3 session and practice
their presentations are pros in Collaborate by week 9. Their presentations run
smoothly and do not have technical issues. The early sessions are important for
students to learn how Collaborate works and to resolve any glitches they are
experiencing (usually due to an outdated version of Java).
Julie asks the student presenters’ permission to record their final
presentations to show future classes an example of a final presentation. This
helps students feel less intimidated about doing a big project with new tools.
Getting Started
CityU faculty can get their program’s Collaborate account information
from their program manager, and training from the Learning Resource Center
(LRC@cityu.edu). Julie learned herself through trial and error. She didn’t find
it difficult, as she was already familiar with other web conferencing systems
such as WebEx and GoToMeeting. Julie uses Collaborate with her classes since
it is free to her students, and it doesn’t have a high learning curve. She finds it
to be mostly user-friendly, but sometimes, the first time setup can be finicky.
The most frequent sticking point is that students need to learn how to use the
Talk button, which doesn’t exist in other web conferencing tools. Problems can
also occur if too many have the Talk button on at the same time, so Julie
encourages students to turn it on only if they are speaking. The second largest
issue comes from having an older version of Java, which can cause problems
using Collaborate.
Tips
Julie noticed a few practices that lead to successful presentations:
First-time users in Collaborate do better when they pay attention to
the directions they are given for setting up their equipment and are
patient.
Presenters who practiced beforehand were able to work out any
configuration issues in the practice sessions.
Teams picked one person to upload the slides and made sure that
person was given Moderator status so they could also advance the
slides.
They uploaded their PowerPoint slides using the Load button (instead
of trying to screen share which demands extra bandwidth demand).
They loaded their content ahead of time.
All presenters were given Moderator status.
Presenters shared their webcam video when it was their turn to talk.
For answers to any questions about Blackboard Collaborate, please check the
library’s webpage or email LRC@cityu.edu
Julie Wiebell
Summary
Julie and students use
Collaborate:
to meet online
for presentations
Equipment needed:
computer
web camera
USB headset with
microphone
To minimize
issues interrupting
presentations,
Julie has students:
learn how to use
Collaborate before
their presentation
catch and fix
technical issues
before their
presentation
practice their
presentations in
Collaborate