Title: The Wake Forest Plan and Its Results
1The Wake Forest Plan and Its Results
- David G. Brown, VP Dean (ICCEL)
Professor of Economics - Provost (1990-98)
- October 30, 2000
2- 3700 undergraduates
- 92 residential
- 500 each Med, Law, MBA, PhD
- 950M endowment
- Winston-Salem, NC
- Baptist Heritage
- 1300 average SAT
- 28th in US News World Report
- Top 35 Privates in Barrons Guide
- Rhodes Scholars
3THE WAKE FOREST PLANIBM A20m, 500 Mhz, 11GB,
15ActMatrix, CD-ROM, 90 modem
- IBM Laptops for all
- Printers for all
- New Every 2 Years
- Own _at_ Graduation
- 45.000 Connections
- Standard Software
- 99 E-Mail
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
4THE WAKE FOREST PLANF97 IBM 380D, 32 RAM,
130Mhz, 1.35GB, CD-ROM, 33.6 modemF98 IBM
380XD, 64 RAM, 233 Mhz, 4.1GB, CD-ROM, 56
modemF99 IBM 390, 128 RAM, 333 Mhz, 6GB,
CD-ROM, 56 modemF00 IBM A20m, 500 Mhz, 11GB,
15ActMatrix, CD-ROM, 90 modem
- Thinkpads for all
- New Every 2 Years
- Own _at_ Graduation
- Printers for all
- Wire Everything
- Standard Software
- Full Admin Systems
- IGN for Faculty
- Keep Old Computers
- 4030 New People
- ACS in Each Dept.
- 85 CEI Users
- 99 E-Mail
- 15 Tuition
- 1500/Yr/Student
- 4 Year Phase In
- Pilot Year
- Plan for 2000
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
52000 Software Load
Netscape 4.7 Dreamweaver 3 SPSS 10 Maple V
6 Windows 98 MS Office Prof 2000 RealPlayer
7 Acrobat Reader
6CONCEPTS BEHIND PLAN
- Students First
- 2 Layers Threshold
- Rapid Change
- Communicate/Access (Not Present/Analyze)
- Standardization
- Academic Freedom
- Nomadic Learners
7CONCEPTS BEHIND PLAN
- Dominant Use After College
- Empower Existing Units
- Eager Faculty
- Students Change Agent
- Exposure, Not Mandate
- Partnership
- Marketable Difference
8Consequences for Wake Forest
- SAT Scores Class Ranks
- Retention Grad Rates
- Satisfaction Learning
- Faculty Recruitment
9New options require rethinking all we do
Our profession has new gardening tools. We want
to learn which ones will be useful in stimulating
growth in our own gardens.
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
10Tomorrows Trio
- Customization
- goodbye mass production
- Community
- goodbye mass media
- Change
- goodbye yesterday
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
11Computers Enhance My Teaching and/or Learning
Via--
Presentations Better--20
More Opportunities to Practice Analyze--35
More Access to Source Materials via Internet--43
More Communication with Faculty Colleagues,
Classmates, and Between Faculty and Students--87
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
12Computers allow people----
- to belong to more communities
- to be more actively engaged in each community
- with more people
- over more miles
- for more months and years
- TO BE MORE COLLABORATIVE
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
13WHY COMPUTERS?the faculty answer
- Interactive Learning
- Learn by Doing
- Collaborative Learning
- Integration of Theory and Practice
- Visualization
- Communication
- Different Strokes for Different Folks
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
14Personal Use of Computers by Wake Forest
FacultySource 1998 HERI Survey
- 98 E-mail
- 91 Memos Letters
- 75 Scholarly Research
- 41 Presentations
- 36 Data Analysis
- 22 On Line Discussion Groups
15Key Elements of Approval Process(Voted by
Faculty, Students, and Trustees)
- Faculty Committee Leadership---met rigorous
requirements, joint trip to Crookston, elected
policy group - Many Implementation Centers---library,
departments, deans, residence halls, CIT,
bookstore, IS - Administrative Leadership---team
- Open Discussion Votes
16Key Elements of Approval Process(continued)
- Regular Planning Cycle---interim report
- 37 Item Package-- salary increase goals,
liberalized leave policy, first year seminar,
scholarships, etc - 40 New Positions---more time more intimacy
- Lucky Timing---sympathetic board chair, weak
computer environment, right national press
17Ways of Thinking About Presidential Campaigns and
Debates A First Year Seminar Introducing Students
to the Liberal Arts
15 Freshmen Meet twice per week All with open
laptops
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
18COURSE OBJECTIVES
- To understand a liberal arts education as an
opportunity to study with professors who think by
their own set of concepts - To learn how to apply economic concepts
- To learn how to work collaboratively
- To learn computer skills
- To improve writing and
19Learning is enhanced by-
- Collaboration among Learners
- Frequent student/faculty dialogue
- Prompt Feedback
- Application of Theory
- Student Self Initiatives
- Trustful relations
- Personal Individual Teaching
20Browns First Year Seminar
- Before Class
- Students Find URLs Identify Criteria
- Interactive exercises
- Lecture Notes
- E-mail dialogue
- Cybershows
- During Class
- One Minute Quiz
- Computer Tip Talk
- Class Polls
- Team Projects
- After Class
- Edit Drafts by Team
- Guest Editors
- Hyperlinks Pictures
- Access Previous Papers
- Other
- Daily Announcements
- Team Web Page
- Personal Web Pages
- Exams include Computer
- Materials Forever
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
21Results Compared to OtherFirst Year Courses
More Same Less How much did you
learn? 2/3 1/3 -- How much time
did you spend? -- 2/3 1/3 How did
you enjoy the course? 3/3 -- --
22Lessons Learned
23LESSONS LEARNED
- PCs are only 10 of the Challenge
(support/networks/policies/train/expose) - Most sunk costs can be ignored
- Expectations need management
- Develop a comprehensive plan first, and quickly
match it with a multiyear financial plan
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
24LESSONS LEARNED
- Consulting Help is the Most Important Gift
- Professional Project Mgt is Crucial
- Demand will increase Much Faster than Anticipated
- Pilot Year is Essential
- Hardware Software Decisions are separable
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
25LESSONS LEARNED
- Standardization pays rewards well beyond those
anticipated non-standard configurations require
3-4 times support - Students/Faculty want specific computer training
that is centered around a task-at-hand general
classes dont work well - Be prepared to outsource challenges
- Dont wire to every seat
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
26LESSONS LEARNED
- Reliability is critical, esp. the Help Desk
- Provide academic units staff of their own
plenty of equipment without hassle - Improve communications rumors fly fast
- Spread the gains from ownership of innovation
throughout all units - Use the internet for course materials
- Use a commercial Course Mgt System
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
27LESSONS LEARNED
- Choose a Partner for the Long Haul
- Budget Adequate Start Up Operating Funds
- Place in Context of an Overall Financial Plan
- Balance Centralized Services Local Control
- Place Some Funds Under Faculty Control
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
28Lessons Learned
- Contact becomes Continuous.
- Students expect messages between classes
- Team assignments increase
- Papers Talks often include visuals
- Departmental clubs thrive
- Student Portfolios Emerge
- Students teach faculty
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
29Lessons Learned
- Computer knowledge is a boon to student
recruitment, retention, self-confidence. - Computer knowledge is highly valued by students
prospective employers - Computer availability throughout the student body
attracts new faculty - Computer challenged students learn basic skills
quickly, without special classes - Disciplines use computers differently
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000
30Lessons Learned
- Greatest benefits are what happens between
classes, not during classes. - Greatest gains from computing come from the big
three. - Standardization speeds faculty adoption and eases
the pressure upon support staff - Standardization saves class time.
- Student groups are larger and more active
- Faculty migrate to the student standard very
quickly
ICCEL -- Wake Forest University, 2000