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Press Releases
UNITED
STATES DISTANCE LEARNING ASSOCIATION
140 Gould Street, Needham, MA 02494 800-275-5162
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
April
19, 2001
USDLA
2001 Awards Presented for Excellence in Distance Learning
Individuals, Organizations and Companies
Honored for Outstanding Achievements
Washington, D.C., April 19 The
United States Distance Learning Association (USDLA) today presented
its 2001 Distance Learning Awards at a ceremony held in conjunction
with the 2001 e-Learning Conference & Expo, the premier
conference and exposition for the distance-learning industry.
13 awards were presented to distance learning professionals,
organizations and companies for excellence in teaching, excellence
in programming and outstanding individual achievements.
The
USDLA awards program was created to acknowledge major accomplishments
in distance learning and to highlight those instructors, programs,
and distance learning professionals who have achieved excellence
in the field. Categories include Higher Education, K-12 Education,
Government, Corporate/Business and Healthcare & Telemedicine.
This year's winners cover a broad spectrum of educational
expertise, from new approaches to collaborative learning to
the world's first online program for surgical training; from
NASA to the IRS.
2001
USDLA Distance Learning Awards were presented to the following:
Excellence in Distance Learning Teaching Higher
Education: to
Dr. Paul Resta from the The University of Texas at Austin
College of Education. Resta teaches in the Master of Education
program served via the University of Texas UT TeleCampus.
He has created online courses that engage students with current
research, innovative instructional design, strategic real
world partnerships, and cutting edge practices and developments
within the field of educational technology.
Excellence in Distance Learning Teaching Government:
to Melodee Mercer, Lead Instructor for the Department of Veterans
Affairs, for the Veterans Benefits Administrations Reader
Focus Writing Tools Satellite Course. Since 1996 she has trained
6500 students nationwide. Since being on the team that developed
the original course, she has added many of her own innovations
sometimes spontaneously on-the-air.
Excellence in Distance Learning Teaching
K-12 Education: to
Mary S. Ellsworth of the Model Secondary School for the Deaf,
Gallaudet University. She developed SOAR-High Earth System
Science with a different twist on distance learning. Teachers
from three schools for the Deaf share online curriculum and
their students collaborate on learning activities. The students
in Washington, D.C., Indiana, and California learn science
by creating web pages, using collaboration software and videoconferencing.
Excellence
in Distance Learning Programming Higher Education:
to MBA Online, UT TeleCampus.
The University of Texas System offers a collaborative MBA
Online degree from eight of its academic campuses via the
UT TeleCampus. The UT TeleCampus is a central service and
support unit for online education within The UT System. Students
apply to their choice from participating campuses, and this
campus becomes the "home" campus from which the
degree is conferred. All eight partner universities provide
courses toward a common degree plan.
Excellence in Distance Learning Programming
Government: to
The Defense Acquisition University, Fort Belvoir, Virginia,
which coordinates the education of over 145,000 acquisition
personnel worldwide. Nearly 18,000 students have completed
distance learning classes since 1998. The re-engineering of
program management courses alone resulted in a two-thirds
reduction of annual student training weeks for an annual savings
of 300 work years or $16,500,000.
Excellence
in Distance Learning Programming K-12: to
NASA Connect, produced by the Office of Education, NASA Langley
Research Center. NASA Connect is a series of 30 minute, standards-based,
instructional distance learning programs for students in grades
5 8. Each program is accompanied by an educators
guide describing a hands-on classroom activity, and a web-based
component that reinforces the instructional objectives, and
extends the lesson into a technology rich environment.
Excellence
in Distance Learning Programming Healthcare and Telemedicine:
to BeST (Basic electronic Surgical
Training), the worlds first online surgical training
program. Developed by IntuMed (a joint venture between Intuition,
the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and Harvard Medical
International), BeST breaks the physical boundaries of education
to enable trainee surgeons wherever they are, to benefit from
the top quality educational content. BeST provides students
with a complete interactive and fully integrated educational
program in basic surgery. BeST employs the latest e-learning
technology to deliver a user-focused, flexible learning experience,
24 hours a day, 365 days of the year. Trainees benefit from
fully moderated content, visual and interactive learning,
realistic case studies, challenging simulations, tests and
personalized feedback.
Excellence
in Distance Learning Programming Corporate / Business:
to Pensare, a leading e-Learning
company, for using the Internet to create corporate learning
communities where content from renowned business and academic
thought-leaders, practical tools and internal best-practices
can be shared to solve immediate, critical business problems.
Excellence
in Distance Learning Programming Corporate / Business:
to Aurum Technology, which provides
banking software solutions to financial institutions throughout
the United States. Aurums customers want live, interactive
product training without associated travel. Aurum Technologys
Education Team developed an interactive, multimedia videoconference
training program, outsourcing with Kinkos locations
nationwide.
Most Outstanding Achievement by an Individual in Higher Education:
to J. Stephen Lytle, one of
almost 200 University of Central Florida faculty members who
participated in UCFs award winning faculty development
program to prepare faculty to teach online courses. He has
been creative in the development of teaching and class management
strategies for large-scale online courses. He has also made
numerous presentations designed to share his work with other
faculty at the University of Central Florida and around the
country. Stephen uses innovative approaches, especially simulation,
that he has integrated into his courses and he is exceptionally
responsive to his distant students.
Most
Outstanding Achievement by an Individual in Government:
to Steve Larkin of the Internal
Revenue Service. The IRS has over 100,000 full-time and 60,000
part-time employees. They operate one of the largest satellite
downlink broadcast systems in the world, with two fully functional
studios in New Carrollton, Maryland and over 200 downlink
sites throughout the United States. Steve Larkin has been
a driving factor in this effort for many years.
Most
Outstanding Achievement by an Individual in Healthcare and
Telemedicine: to Dr. Julius
Edlavitch, who created International Pediatric Chat in 1996
as an IRC pediatric chat room. Upon realizing the power of
using Chat as a distance learning tool, Dr. Edlavitch proceeded
to bring pediatricians and lactation specialists together
from all over the world using distance live education. He
spent the last 4.5 years expanding his distance learning program
to include cutting edge software tools and multiple elite
education partners. He has produced over 200 Live Internet
pediatric education conferences with attendance from every
continent except Antarctica.
Most
Outstanding Achievement by an Individual Corporate
/ Business: to Bryan Polivka
for his leadership in weaving emerging technology with pedagogical
tools which has raised the bar for corporate e-Learning. As
a watchdog of technological shifts whose effects can be applied
to training, Bryan consistently remains at the forefront of
the evolution of eLearning models in the business world.
The
2001 Awards were presented by the USDLA Awards Committee members,
Dr. Deborah Harrison, VTEL Corporation; Dr. Darcy Hardy, UT
TeleCampus, University of Texas System; and Marshall Allen,
Oklahoma State University.
15
recognized leaders in the field of distance learning judged
the 89 nominations submitted to USDLA. Judges worked in teams
of three to review and evaluate submissions in each of the
5 categories: Higher Education, K-12 Education, Government,
Corporate/Business and Telemedicine/Healthcare. The judges
for 2001 were:
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Mr.
Grinell Smith, Instructor, University of Alabama |
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Dr.
Denzil Edge, Professor and Chairperson, Department of
Special Education, and |
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Director,
Distance Education Program, University of Louisville |
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Mr.
Donald S. Lake, Senior Project Director, Los Angeles
County Office of Education |
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Dr.
Jolly T. Holden, Training and Development, StarBand
Communications, Inc. |
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Dr.
Robert A. Wisher, Senior Research Psychologist, U.S.
Army Research Institute |
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Dr.
Connie Wardell, Education Advisor, U.S. Army Armor School |
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Ms.
Arlene Krebs, President, New Orbit Communications |
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Dr.
Lawrence Jones, Director of Telemedicine, UT MD Anderson
Cancer Center |
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Ms.
Toni Pickle, Director of Education, Pioneer Telephone
Cooperative, Inc. |
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Mr.
Stephen Kohn, Director of Strategic Alliance and Education
Initiatives, Verizon |
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Dr.
Janet McMahill, Assistant Dean and Director of Continuing
Education, Drake |
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University
School of Education |
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Ms.
Janet Major, Technical Coordinator, Arizona Telemedicine
Program |
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Dr.
Inabeth Miller, President, JASON Foundation for Education |
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Dr.
Pamela S. Pease, President, Jones International University |
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Mr.
Kirk Bosworth, Instructor, Distance Learning Network,
University of Vermont |
About USDLA
United
States Distance Learning Association is a non-profit organization
founded in 1987 to promote the development and application
of distance learning for education and training. USDLA represents
2000 members from pre-K-through-12 and higher education, continuing
education, corporate, military and government training and
telemedicine. USDLA is now the leading source of information
and distance learning policy recommendations for Congress,
government agencies and industry. In 1993 USDLA began the
process of establishing chapters in all fifty states. For
more information about USDLA visit the organization's website
at www.usdla.org
Contacts:
USDLA: Kathy Clemens 617-686-2843
or usdlakc@aol.com
Dr. Paul Resta, University of Texas at Austin, 512-471-4014
or resta@mail.utexas.edu
Jennifer Rees, UT TeleCampus, 512-499-4409 or jrees@utsystem.edu
Melodee Mercer, VAROIC Philadelphia, 215-842-2000 x 4267
or issmmerc@vba.va.gov
J. Stephen Lytle, University of Central Florida, 407-823-5668
or slytle@mail.ucf.edu
IntuMed: Aine McDonagh, Intuition Publishing LTD, +353-1-605-4300
or amcdonagh@intuitionweb.com
Julius Edlavitch, M.D., 952-926-9784 or edlav001@tc.umn.edu
Jennifer Pulley, NASA LaRC, 757-864-8048 or j.pulley@larc.nasa.gov
Mr. Richard Reed, Defense Acquisition University, 703-805-2155
or reed_rich@dau.mil
Steve Larkin, Internal Revenue Service, 202-283-9101 or
steve.larkin@irs.gov
Mary Ellsworth, Gallaudet University, 202-651-5883 or Mary.Ellsworth@Gallaudet.edu
Kathryn Hanson, Pensare, 408-542-8806 or
khanson@pensare.com
USDLA
also ...
George Collins 864-370-0955
or gcollins@learntek.com
Bill Wagner (301) 774-8214-or bwagner@bafsat.com
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