The Wireless Student & the Library: the Morrisville Experience
Was in “The Wireless Student &the Library.” School Library Journal,Summer 2002 Net Connect,Vol. 48 Issue 8,p16. Library Journal,Summer 2002 Net Connect,Vol. 127 Issue 12,p16.
This version varies in small part from the original print publication.
Bill Drew tells how wireless laptop users have changed one college library
The evolution of ThinkPad University at the State University of New York (SUNY) Morrisville has had a tremendous impact on how we plan and design our library. At its most basic, the program has made it possible for us to take instruction and services to our students, as opposed to requiring them to come to the library.
Begun in the fall of 1998, the ThinkPad University program is a partnership with IBM that integrates computers into the teaching and learning environment. In 1998, 130 IBM ThinkPad laptops were issued to students, faculty, and staff in the pilot program. Today, over 75 percent of the students participate in the program; along with faculty and staff.
The goal of the IBM ThinkPad University is to increase communication and collaborations between and among students and faculty; incorporate customizable applications, such as the school’s intranet and internet; and to utilize business partners—education consultants—with first-had experience integrating technology into the academic program.” In partnership with Raytheon, SUNY Morrisville is providing its laptop users with wireless mobile technology in residence halls, all academic buildings, including the library, as well as the quad, and the dining halls.
Who we are
The SUNY College of Agriculture and Technology at Morrisville is a residential college offering two- and four-year degrees in more than 70 academic programs. The college is located in a rural area in the geographic center of the state. Founded in 1908, the residential college has around 3000 full time students and more than 100 full-time faculty. Two years ago the college undertook a mission review and as a result our new shared vision is “to be an academically challenging, business-oriented, technology-focused entrepreneurial learning community.” For the past two years, the college has been named “America’s #1 most-wired two-year college” by Yahoo! Internet Life magazine.
The laptop program
For any of the college’s academic program to become a “laptop program” the faculty members must clearly demonstrate how the laptop would improve the curriculum and improve the learning of the students involved. Currently over 27 different curriculums are part of the program. All participants in the laptop program receive an IBM laptop and Raytheon wireless card. The cost of the laptop can be funded by financial aid funds.
The student laptop for Fall 2001 was a ThinkPad A22m with a 800 MHz Pentium III Processor, 192 MB of Memory, 20 GB Hard Drive, 56K Internal Modem, 4MB ATI Rage Video Card, 24X CD-ROM, 12.1″ LCD Display and a 3 1/2″ Floppy Drive. This laptop is much more powerful than the first, a ThinkPad 390e with a 300 MHz processor and 64 MB of memory. Students and faculty use the laptops along side traditional technologies. ##WHAT DO YOU mean by traditional technologies???### Students in architecture and horticulture do CAD on their laptops. Students use folders on the network to access course documents and to show their work. They also access various study aids using electronic images and multimedia files.
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Ross, John. The Book of Wireless: A Painless Guide to Wi-fi and Broadband Wireless, 2e. No Starch. 2008. 326p. ISBN