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CIT Development Projects
Criteria for CIT development projects include meeting a campus need,
demonstrating research and application of an emerging technology, scalability
and expandability, and open source.
The
Center for Instructional Technologies in collaboration with the UT Austin
High Resolution X-ray CT facility developed a Java Slice Viewer applet
for the Digital Morphology Web site. This tool, featured on Digimorph
specimen pages, allows interactive use of high-resolution X-ray CT (computed
tomography) images. Users can browse through available slice planes, access
full screen and annotated image files, view text information, and measure
distances between features on the images. See more
details on how it works.
See a listing
of Digimorph specimens featuring the Java Slice Viewer.
The
CIT in collaboration with Connexus
developed an online resource that allows students or academics to consolidate
and showcase their accomplishments. It serves three basic needs for the
user and the learning community:
- For the user, it provides a means of publishing and showcasing work
and accomplishments.
- It encourages the user to build a conceptual framework, even if it
is diverse in kind (e.g. coursework, research and internships) or character
(topics, areas covered), allowing the individual to build a story of
learning experiences.
- For assessment and evaluation, evaluators have a single access point
to look at the individual's work as a whole.
The
CIT in collaboration with Connexus and the College of Natural Sciences
developed this multifeatured online clearinghouse of research information
and opportunities for undergraduates at UT Austin.
Connexus
is designed to enhance the undergraduate experience at UT Austin by providing
opportunities for students to make connections among disciplines, between
their education and life directions, and among themselves and the faculty.
CIT has supported the design and development of the Connexus website.
NMR Solitaire
The
CIT collaborated with Dr. Ben Shoulders in the College of Natural Sciences
to create the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Solitaire project. CIT
staff saw this opportunity to implement and assess the question test
interoperability specification (QTI) which asks questions with images
and records the response as an interaction with the image. In the case
of NMR Solitaire, the product assists UT Austin graduate students to
interpret the findings from NMR. For more information on NMR Solitaire,
see an interview
with Dr. Shoulders.
CIT
researches and benchmarks emerging classroom response systems to support
engaging and effective teaching throughout UT Austin. Using remote control-like
devices, students answer multiple-choice questions throughout lectures,
providing both an interactive learning environment and immediate feedback
to the professor regarding student lesson comprehension.
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