We've just started using a programme for desk-top video conferencing. I'll refrain right now from saying which one, so that this topic doesn't look like a commercial endorsement!
Basically you have the features available that the old CUSeeMe programme had: real-time audio and video, a shared whiteboard, shared chat and private chat + audio & video. You need the server software to be able to link up several people at once, and that seems to be priced at a level which requires it to be bought by an educational organisation, rather than a single department or school.
The main difference from the old CUSeeMe programme is that it works! We've got the bandwidth now to be able to link up computers in real-time. One of the features that I see as a main strength is that it's multi-platform: Windows, Linux + Mac.
We've only been using the system for about 2 months so far, but we've been very impressed. Here are some of the things our system has been used for so far:
1. Lessons at remote sites - involving both 'lectures' and group work, where students take over and make their own presentations.
2. Helping individual students who don't live anywhere near any of the Study Centres where we run ISDN-based video conferences
people who live in places like Abu Dhabi.
3. Tutorial help for students from Sweden, who're studying part of the term at the University of Aberystwyth - less work for us all to do when they come 'home'.
4. Students are using the system quite independently of us to prepare for lessons and group sessions. It saves them from having to drive 30 miles each way for a face-to-face session, and it's more functional than a telephone.
Here are a couple of the extra things we're planning to do with it in the autumn:
1. Linking up a primary school in Sweden with an equivalent school in Manchester so that pupils in each place can talk to each other, and show each other pictures and text documents they have on their hard disks. The plan is to include a link between UK ESL pupils and Swedish pupils learning English. One idea is to send the Swedish students out with a digital camera to make a 'day in my life' presentation.
2. Using it to help teacher trainees out on school-based training. It'll certainly facilitate contact with teaches here at the college, but we want to set up student self-help groups too where they can swap teaching ideas and plan lessons together. Another idea is to set up a webcam in a classroom, so that we can observe more lessons, since we don't have to travel to the school.
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I'm sure that other people are using similar systems. Do you have any stories to tell?
