December 1999 — Broadband
Print this article | Email this articleClick here to receive your FREE subscription to T.H.E. Journal
Stanford Learning: Worldwide Availability On-Demand at Stanford Online
The changing dynamics of todays workplace put employee time at
a premium and create pressure on educational institutions to respond to the educational demands of a rapidly evolving international business environment. The Stanford Center for Professional Development (SCPD), located at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., is responding to this demand with more than 250 continuing education courses in engineering and computer science. Stanford has one of the largest distance learning programs in the world, each year reaching more than 6,000 professionals who want to pursue an advanced degree, or need to enhance their technical knowledge, while maintaining career momentum.
In 1995, SCPD set out to advance its lead in continuing education by launching Stanford Online, a delivery program that provides graduate engineering and computer science courses on-demand over the Internet or corporate intranets. The nationally recognized program (Stanford Online was awarded "Most Significant Advancement in Distance Learning for 1997" by the U.S. Distance Learning Association) delivers courses via streaming video to students. In addition to delivering full-length university courses, Stanford online offers a video-on-demand sequence of non-credit courses and lectures made available to a worldwide audience in a pay-per-view model. While the students window into the system is an Internet browser, a technology infrastructure that includes products from well-known high-tech companies including Microsoft, Compaq and Quantum provide instruction to the student.
Making On-Demand Learning a Reality
Until now, the growth of online education has been hampered in part because video (and other types of content) consumes so much bandwidth. This problem has kept many educational institutions from expanding beyond the more traditional distance learning delivery methods such as videotapes and satellite broadcasts. However, Stanford Online has made live and on-demand distance learning a practical reality by using video compression technology running on Compaq hardware and Microsofts Media Server (formerly Microsoft NetShow) to stream video, audio, text and graphics over the Internet to a variety of computer platforms.
Stanford Online courses are streamed directly to the students computer at home, at work or while traveling and are viewed via an Internet browser. Lectures and seminars are broadcast live on the Internet, or are made available within one or two hours of each class. When students log on to the Internet to view courses, they see a video window on their computer screen, inside of a standard Internet browser. Adjacent to the video window, the Web page houses a larger window displaying complementary graphics and text. This includes course outlines, notes, slides, simulations and other presentation materials used in each lecture. When a student chooses a specific topic in the table of contents, the appropriate video segment and supporting graphics are presented. In addition to delivering courseware live or on-demand, Stanford Online offers a variety of services that allow, for example, students to receive tutoring by live interaction over the Internet with professors or teaching assistants.