2016 Conference Sessions
50-Minute Presentations
Lighting Rounds
Keynote
Special Presentations
- Discussion Panel: Electronic Accessibility: Issues, Opportunities, Challenges, and Solutions
- Spotlight Presentation: Engaging Students with Accessible Course Design
WEDNESDAY
One-to-One in Higher Ed: Is It Possible?
Sean Courtney, Instructional Technology Specialist
Carroll College
Tracking Academic Progress with One Login: PNWU’s Experience with Progress IQ
Tracy Nguyen, Ph.D., Director of Assessment
Mary Johnson, Ph.D., Associate Dean of Academic Affairs
College of Osteopathic Medicine/Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences (PNWU-COM)
Classroom Technology Services…Building Success at UNLV
Frank Aliamo, CTS, A/V Systems Specialist
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Making Technology Invisible: Active Pedagogy for the Modern World
Carroll College
Using Digital Storytelling for Public Health Advocacy: Collaborative Teaching and Learning Efforts to Enliven Nursing Education
Instructional Technologist
Butch de Castro, PhD, MSN/MPH, RN
Associate Professor – Nursing and Health Studies
University of Washington Bothell
Managing your Blackboard Knowledge from Analytic to Zoinks
Boise State University
Creating an Inclusive and Empowering Makerspace
Deana Brown, Librarian/Assistant Professor
Boise State University
Mobile Learning: Building Dynamic and Sustainable Programming
Boise State University
What is Remote Proctoring and Why do People Keep Talking About it?
David Ficks, Testing Center Business Manager
Boise State University
THURSDAY
AV Design in Non-Traditional Learning Spaces: ISU Treasure Valley Anatomy & Physiology Labs
Idaho State University, Meridian
This presentation will focus on the audio/visual technology design of the Treasure Valley Anatomy & Physiology Laboratories located on the Idaho State University – Meridian campus. Covering a 2-year period, the discussion will address the technology systems as well as the facilities-design process, with a focus on internal and external user collaboration. In addition, the installation process, technology usability, and future technology spaces will be presented.
A Vision for Your Team: Doing What People Said Could Not Be Done
Mark Fitzgerald
Boise State University
This session offers a discussion of crafting a vision for your IT team and of tools for identifying obstacles and how to overcome them. As an IT manager, do you encounter numerous barriers to running an effective team, including barriers arising from budget, time, space, competition for resources, manpower, and faculty expectations? These barriers need not stop you from accomplishing your vision of what could be. During the presentation we will carry on a conversation about available resources, tools for brainstorming solutions, initiative proposals (business plans) and how knowing the rules changes the game.
A New Approach to Mapping Technology Integration and Pedagogy
Devshikha Bose, PH.D., Instructional Design Consultant
Leslie Madsen-Brooks, PH.D., IDEA shop Director & Associate Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning
Susan Shadle, PH.D., Director of Center for Teaching and Learning
Boise State University
Lessons Learned in Developing the WWU Digital Media Center
Interim Manager, Digital Media Center
Western Washington University
Discussion Panel – Electronic Accessibility: Issues, Opportunities, Challenges, and Solutions
Associate Professor and Head of Web and Emerging Technologies, Albertsons Library
Boise State University
Wendy Turner
Director, Disability Resource Center
Boise State University
Betty Miller
Manager of Online Faculty and Technology
Nursing Department
Boise State University
Christine Bauer
Assistant Director, eCampus Center
Boise State University
Randy Stamm
eLearning Coordinator
Health Science Center
Idaho State University-Meridian
Instructional Designer & Accessibility Specialist
University of Montana
Aaron Page
Accessibility Specialist
University of Montana
Lighting Rounds
Using Digital Storytelling for Public Health Advocacy: Collaborative Teaching and Learning Efforts to Enliven Nursing Education
Instructional Technologist
Butch de Castro, PhD, MSN/MPH, RN
Associate Professor – Nursing and Health Studies
University of Washington Bothell
Urban Farming and Environmental Education
Instructional Technologist
Carroll College
APT: A Fitness App for the Mind
Director of Learning Technology Solutions
Boise State University
10 Apps in 10 Minutes
Assoc. Director of Academic Technology
Sean Courtney
Instructional Technology Specialist
Carroll College
Tracking Academic Progress with One Login: PNWU’s Experience with Progress IQ
Instructional Designer
Tracy Nguyen, Ph.D.
Director of Assessment
Mary Johnson, Ph.D.
Associate Dean of Academic Affairs
College of Osteopathic Medicine/Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences (PNWU-COM)
Spotlight Presentation – Engaging Students with Accessible Course Design
Instructional Designer & Accessibility Specialist
University of Montana
Aaron Page
Accessibility Specialist
University of Montana
3 Reasons You Should Be Investing In Middleware Now
Daniel Gold
Associate Director of Learning Technology Solutions
Boise State University
The landscape of learning technology across campuses today is increasingly dynamic and interconnected. In trying to meet the needs of faculty and instructional designers, IT teams find ourselves working longer and harder to keep pace. From integration to analytics, managing this ever-changing ecosystem of tools and orchestrating the symphony of processes that drive them can be an enormous challenge. In this presentation you will hear how the Office of Information Technology at Boise State has begun using a homegrown middleware application to shift to a proactive and distributed approach to managing our environment.
Tell Me What You Really Think: Building on Faculty Attitudes toward Technology
Leslie Madsen-Brooks, PH.D.
Director, Instructional Design & Educational Assessment
Boise State University
Surveys and research have long sought to capture faculty attitudes toward diverse technologies. From these studies and our own experiences, we learn some faculty are perennially skeptical, the majority will adopt well-supported enterprise technologies, and a few will be eager early adopters of emerging tech. However, what can instructional technologists and instructional designers do once we understand these faculty attitudes? This highly interactive session will consider how faculty attitudes “on the ground” at our institutions can and should influence how we approach the intersection of technology and faculty development.