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Register for Our Final VIBE Event on the Future of Education and Learning

AV in Education

Today is the third of our three VIBE events on “The Future of Education: Empowering the Next Generation of Leaders.” During today’s event, you’ll learn about the ways video collaboration, advanced room control, and intelligent buildings improve the learning experience while reducing the health risks for students, faculty, and staff.

You’ll also discover the strategies, tactics, solutions, and resources you can use to streamline your learners’ transition from graduation to the workplace, including:

  • 5G, 8K, and IoT
  • Augmented and virtual reality
  • Active learning 
  • Virtual field trips
  • CARES Act funding

To facilitate this discussion, we’ve gathered prominent thought leaders for a panel on innovation and insights into the ways technology will empower the future of education. Our panelists include:

  • Marci Powell, noted expert in distance learning and chair emerita of the United States Distance Learning Association
  • Jay Bosch, AVI-SPL director of business development for state/local government and education
  • John Stenzel, Legrand national accounts director
  • George Borden, NEC solutions sales architect

Stenzel and Julian will share some specific technology solutions from Legrand and NEC that you can use right now to create a better learning experience.

Register for the next VIBE event, “The Future of Education: How Technology Will Empower the Next Generation of Leaders” >

To view our Partner blog, click here

Recap of AVI-SPL’s VIBE Event: The Future of Education

AV in Education

During the first of three VIBE events in July on the future of education, four experts in education technology got together to discuss the challenges and opportunities schools are facing in light of COVID-19.  Their talk touched on technology solutions that educators rely on to connect with and engage remote students, and that also address their health.

The panel included:

  • Marci Powell, chair emerita of the United States Distance Learning Association
  • Jay Bosch, AVI-SPL director of business development for state/local government and education
  • Cindy De Ianni, West U.S. regional GEM, sales, Poly
  • Adam Sowers, manager, consultant relations, Western region, NEC

They also looked at on-campus solutions that can connect a classroom-based educator with those in the same room as well as distance-learning students. Other topics included:

  • CARES Act funding
  • Steps schools can take to prepare for distance learning this coming semester
  • The role and capabilities of digital signage to deliver mass notification
  • Supporting immersive experiences like labs in a remote environment
  • Solutions from Poly and NEC for online and in-person learning and messaging

One of the key takeaways for me was the need for K-20 education to step up and meet the demands of next-generation learners so they can seamlessly transition into the workplace. Powell discussed the kind of technology and tactics that schools can use as part of this effort, including augmented and virtual reality, 5G networks, 8K resolution, and gamification.

You still have a couple of chances to be a part of this informative series, as AVI-SPL is hosting one on Tuesday, July 21, and on Thursday, July 23.

Register for the next VIBE event, “The Future of Education: How Technology Will Empower the Next Generation of Leaders” >

To view our Partner blog, click here

Five Ways Displays Help Students Join the Workforce

augmented reality

Read AVI-SPL’s eBook “From Sim Labs to Huddle Spaces” to find out how to attract more students to your school with interactive displays and stand out in a competitive market. Providing modern technology like simulation labs and huddle spaces can also encourage alumni to support your organization after graduation.

To give but one example, technologies like augmented and virtual reality are expanding the opportunity for immersive experiences. Interactive displays are helping deliver those experiences in spaces that benefit learners who are making discoveries on their own, and those who are collaborating and solving challenges as a group.

This eBook, made with insight from NEC, shares five ways your school can use technology to help students enter the workforce. It also explains how interactive displays support workforce readiness by helping students build communities, drive research and innovation, support collaborative learning, and more.

Fill out the form to download “From Sim Labs to Huddle Spaces: 5 Ways Interactive Displays Help Students Join the Workforce” >

To view our Partner blog, click here

Webinar Recording: Create New Experiences With the Epson LightScene Laser Projector

AV Everywhere

Watch this webinar to learn how you can use Epson LightScene projectors to create engaging experiences in your venue. For markets like retail, museums, hospitality, and more, you can create immersive experiences by projecting dynamic content.  Remi Del Mar, senior product manager for Epson, explores the benefits and features of LightScene and covers related topics, including:

  • The new experience economy (its value and why it’s growing)
  • The digital signage landscape
  • Projecting on different surfaces

Get the recording for “Create New Experiences With Epson LightScene Projectors” >

To view our Partner blog, click here

Benefits and Examples of Virtual Reality in Higher Education

advanced visualization

Virtual reality is about creating experiences. Within higher education, those experiences can have the goal of increasing student engagement with areas of study, improving their learning outcomes and attracting prospective students to your school.

Virtual reality solutions can do more than distinguish your college or university from those who don’t have the technology. They help you keep pace with those who do and with current teaching practices. Research firm Gartner predicts that by 2021, 60% of U.S. higher-education institutions will use virtual reality systems to create simulation and learning environments. The barriers to implementing the technology fall away as the experience improves (better visual acuity and responsiveness) and prices come down,

If your department or your school has been on the fence about adding virtual reality resources to its toolkit, consider the possible applications and how they’ve been successfully implemented:

  • Recruiting students — As I noted in this post on higher ed and workforce development, some schools are using virtual reality technology to immerse prospective students in environments where they can learn and train. They also enable them to take virtual campus tours from the comfort of their home or at college fairs.
  • Preparing students for their careers — Plenty of schools — including the University of Toledo and the University of Nebraska — are using virtual reality in inspiring ways. These institutions are using virtual reality and advanced visualization to help train their medical students in safe environments. AVI-SPL played a significant role in implementing the virtual reality and visualization technology for the University of Nebraska’s iEXCEL program for healthcare education. It’s also helping the school’s medical center track human simulator data so that medical trainers understand student performance during simulation-based instruction. The same team that worked with Nebraska implemented similar solutions for the University of Toledo Interprofessional Immersive Simulation Center.
  • Creating engaging education programs — There’s an application for virtual reality in many fields of study, including aerospace, architecture, biology, history, mathematics, and medicine. Learners move through and interact with environments like ancient ruins and cities, crime scenes, molecules, engineering structures, and scientific data. For the instructors, the benefits include another way to evaluate learners in competency-based simulations. At Rice University, users of the DaVinci virtual environment can walk amidst seismic data that influences drilling and acquisition decisions for the oil and gas industry.

Getting Comfortable With Virtual Reality

Understand how virtual reality is successfully being used in higher education, and you’ll have realistic expectations of what it can do to advance your program or department’s goals. I’ve included a handful of resources to help you build that confidence.

  • “Virtual Reality in Higher Education: Q&A” — Jim Angelillo, AVI-SPL VP of enterprise business development, explains the benefits of virtual reality, refers to use cases and explains AVI-SPL’s value as a partner that designs and implements these solutions.
  • “Preparing Professionals With Advanced Visualization: Q&A” — Bill Schmidt, AVI-SPL sales director, answers questions about a topic close to virtual reality: advanced visualization. He addresses the technology involved and the process of designing and building the systems.
  • “Visualization and Simulation for Research and Collaboration” — This AVI-SPL tech paper explains the value of virtual environments, and how to choose the right visualization or simulation system. It also looks at North Carolina State University and the visualization and simulation solutions that AVI-SPL implemented to improve the school’s ability to conduct research and collaborate with outside partners (including the U.S. Navy).

Work With an Expert in Virtual Reality Outcomes

AVI-SPL has teams who are dedicated to analyzing your goals when it comes to using virtual reality systems, and designing and implementing systems that will meet those goals. Share your questions and ambitions with our experts.

 

To view our Partner blog, click here

The Technology Systems Supporting Workforce Development

AV in Education

Manufacturing companies and community colleges share a problem. Schools want students to enter their career and technical programs (CTE). And companies want the students who graduate from those programs to work for them. But both must overcome the perception that these programs and jobs are meant for low-ambition people or those who are resigned to careers of low pay. A number of recent articles explore the ways companies and higher education schools are tackling this dilemma. One way is through marketing campaigns. Another is by working together so that students get hands-on experience and can learn directly from those who work for the types of businesses they want to join.

As University Business has reported, community colleges are investing in marketing campaigns that emphasize the earning potential of careers in skilled trades. Some of these efforts target demographics not traditionally associated with particular fields. Women are invited to careers like welding and manufacturing. Men are courted to become teachers and nurses. Hands-on and virtual demonstrations complement these campaigns. In one example, California Community Colleges are trying to attract students by letting them wear virtual reality goggles that simulate a lab or work environment.

A letter to the editor in the Free Press (Mankato, MN) describes the need for universities and businesses to work together on developing people ready for the workforce. The chancellor of Minnesota State, one of the country’s largest systems of two-year colleges and four-year universities, describes a challenge requiring a million jobs over the next 10 years, of which nearly 75 percent will require post-secondary education. He emphasizes the importance of public-private partnerships, some of which take the form of funded scholarships. Through government funding, Minnesota colleges can obtain equipment that students use for hands-on training.

An article in Industry Week looks at workforce development programs in Kentucky, where high schools, higher-ed institutions, and businesses combine apprenticeships, job shadowing and summer employment to prepare graduates for the workforce. GE Appliances is leading a number of these training programs, including one that will give high school students the opportunity to take a virtual tour of GE Appliances and talk with employees about their responsibilities, job opportunities, and the education and experience they’ll need. Students will also be given the chance to solve real-world problems facing the company.

As community colleges and other post-secondary schools build workforce centers to compete with for-profit trade schools, they will need to have the technology that will attract students because it takes them beyond the classroom. That technology can take the form of advanced visualization and simulation systems. It also includes video collaboration systems that bring together groups of students and mentors. AVI-SPL specializes in designing, building, integrating and supporting the technology systems that companies and schools are using to teach students so they will be ready to work in well-paying, high-demands jobs after high school or college. You can see examples of our work for North Carolina State University, Florida International University, and the University of Toledo. In each of these schools, the solutions we implemented are essential to their educational programs. Contact us at sales@avispl.com or 866-559-8197 to discuss your workforce initiatives and see which solutions AVI-SPL may provide to support them.

 

 

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