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Faculty of Architecture, Building
& Real Estate
Using Games as a Supplementary Teaching Tool
The Teaching Development Committee of the School of Building and Real
Estate recently organised a Teaching Seminar entitled, ‘Using Games
as a Supplementary Teaching Tool’ on 24 January 1999. Dr Ong Seow
Eng and Mr Cheng Fook Jam conducted the session, explaining how they had
successfully used this method in teaching The Effect of Experimental
Economics. Real-world conditions were simulated in which students
role-played as developers and investors in a Development and Investment
Game, thereby testing various theories the students had been introduced
to earlier in their module. Students’ performance was graded and
counted towards their final examination mark as part of continual assessment;
students appreciated the exercise and found the experience valuable. The
seminar presenters then shared some points on how this ‘game’
method could be utilised for maximum benefit. For example, students must
first be briefed adequately, provided with ‘pre-game’ material
and taught fundamental principles related to the topic. Staff were encouraged
to adapt such a ‘game’ for teaching use to make their subjects
more interesting and create varied learning experiences for students.
Faculty of Arts & Social
Sciences
Video Conferencing: EN 4205 Postmodernism
& Postcoloniality
The Department of English Language and Literature organised
a series of eight video conferences in collaboration with the Department
of English Literature at the University of Western Australia (Perth) from
23 July to 15 October 1998. Twenty-six NUS Honours students and over a
dozen students from Perth participated in these sessions that were initiated
when NUS’ A/Prof Ban Kah Choon met A/Prof Dennis Haskell from UWA
who was visiting Singapore. Along with A/Prof Rajeev S. Patke, also from
NUS, they worked out a syllabus comprising shared texts dealing with postcolonial
and postmodern cultural issues in the Asia-Pacific region. Each session
lasted for one hour. Six sessions were devoted to student presentations
on a variety of topics and regional texts, followed by energetic discussion
from both sides. Two sessions were reserved for live interviews with local
authors. In the first, poet Edwin Thumboo fielded questions about his
poetry, Singaporean literary culture, and the prospects for new writing
in the region. In another, novelist Philip Jeyaretnam talked about the
genesis of his recent novel, Abraham’s Promise. The Australian
side thus gained a better idea of literary culture in Singapore, while
also giving local authors and students a detailed sense of how Australians
look at Singaporean literary issues. Local students became clearer about
the Australian literary scene. The video format enabled hands-on discussions
about and across cultures that our students found invaluable. As one of
the participating students, Eddie Tay, reported, “The video conferences
are for me a learning experience that extends beyond the scope of the
syllabus. I now realise that academia is not only about research, essays
and presentations, but also about being able to convey and discuss ideas
via verbal discourse.”
Faculty of Engineering
Web-based Virtual Laboratories with Real-Time
Video Capture Go Online for 1000 Engineering Students
Users of virtual laboratories
are able to conduct actual experiments from remote computers anywhere
in the world 24 hours a day, as if they were working in actual laboratories.
A virtual laboratory consists of a cluster of programmable instruments
interfaced with a set of Internet-linked personal computer systems and
servers. With the ability to configure instruments and data analysis remotely
through a web browser, virtual laboratories facilitate the sharing of
expensive instruments and equipment, thereby making laboratory education
more flexible as well as promoting distance learning.
A group of researchers, led by A/Prof C.C. Ko and Dr Ben M. Chen from
the Department of Electrical Engineering, has developed a set of web-based
virtual laboratories (http://vlab.ee.nus.edu.sg/vlab/)
on a first year oscilloscope experiment. When students log onto the web
site, they can control both the computer and the equipment, and also observe
the whole experimental process through real-time image sequence captured
by a video camera set up in the physical laboratory located in the Electrical
Engineering Department. These virtual laboratories provide: a) distance
learning for part-time and remote students; b) pre-experiment ‘hands-on’
experience for students before they go to the actual laboratory; and c)
easily captured data and images for students to write laboratory reports
online.
Faculty of Business Administration
Students Publish Their Project Work on the
Web
Over the past year, students in Asia-Pacific Business, a third-year FBA
module, have been required to publish their term project work on the Web
to create a repository for their work. Besides increasing the transparency
of assessment, the web sites allowed students to access each other’s
work. From the experiment, we (Drs Douglas Sikorski, Cho Kang Rae, Rachel
Davis and Chandru Rajam) learnt a few lessons. First, with the explosion
of information of varying quality on the Internet, instructors using such
projects must ensure that students develop the capability to judge the
quality and credibility of their sources of information. This may include
cross checking facts and figures against reputable sources, conducting
background checks on the authors (based on publicly available information)
etc. This process of validating what they find is an excellent vehicle
for teaching critical inquiry skills. Second, all bibliographic references
must appear close to where they are cited for easy verification so that
the instructor can check if students have synthesised the material garnered
from various sources. Otherwise, such term-projects (web-based or submitted
on paper) may become massive cut-and-paste exercises. On the whole, the
experiment produced some good work that demonstrated comprehensiveness
of search, synthesis, critical thinking, clarity and creativity of presentation
and project-management skills.
Faculty of Science
Innovative IT-based Education Programs for
Undergraduate & JC Students
The Centre for Information
Technology and Applications (CITA) was established recently to meet the
challenge of putting IT to effective use in teaching, learning, research
and administration. It has three divisions: Education, Science Online
and Service Support. The Centre currently offers a Computer Programming
and Applications (CPA) program in the Science Faculty. Since its
inception, the CPA program has been continually refined to prepare the
students for the diverse areas of IT applications, and to underpin the
ability of lifelong pursuit of rapid-changing technology. The program
has received overwhelming response from cross-faculty students and exchange
students with over 2000 students in an academic year. A new minor in Scientific
Computation and Communication will be offered in July to better prepare
students for the information age and cultivate in them the ability to
adapt to the ever-changing trends in technology.
As a continual effort to enhance IT awareness in Science Faculty, CITA
also offers workshops for both students and staff members. To date, two
short courses on multimedia and web development have been conducted. These
courses will be re-packaged for school teachers and students during the
June and December school holidays. To help our staff and students use
IT more effectively in their teaching, learning and administration, CITA
will conduct other workshops and short courses on a more regular basis.
In collaboration with Stanford University, CITA will also introduce a
pilot distance learning program, Education Program for Gifted Youth
(NUS-EPGY) for JC students. In the initial phase, the NUS-EPGY programme
will offer four Mathematics courses and four Physics courses. With minimal
disruption to their school activities, these participants can study at
their own pace through our computer-based learning programs. They can
also discuss problems with the tutors by email. For some advanced courses,
the students can earn credits, which can be used for advanced placement
at NUS and Stanford.
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