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TechTalks Event

Mobile Networking Strategies

with guest expert Mark Resmer Director of the EDUCAUSE IMS Project initiative and Associate Vice President of Information Technology Sonoma State University

December 3, 1998

Audio
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Transcript

Those are just some of the questions our Technology Anchor Howard Strauss and Mark Resmer discussed in this CREN audiocast "TechTalk with the Experts."

Guest Expert

Mark Resmer Mark Resmer is currently Director of the EDUCAUSE IMS initiative and Associate Vice President of Information Technology at Sonoma State University. He has been active in developing strategies for instructional applications of information technology for nearly twenty years, and created some of the earliest tools for Internet navigation. He has also been responsible for developing universal access strategies in the CSU and nationally (Sonoma State was one of the first two public institutions of higher education in the US to require all incoming students to have assured 24-hour access to networked personal computers). Before coming to the CSU in 1988, he was Director of Academic Computing at Vassar College. He has also helped to organize a number of major conferences in the area of instructional technology, recently serving on the program committee of the CAUSE conference, co-chairing the annual Syllabus Conference, and being a board member for the Snowmass Seminars in Academic Computing.

Resources

You might enjoy the book, The Future Compatible Campus edited by D. G. Oblinger and S. C. Rush (Anker Press), to which Resmer contributed. His 1995 SHEEO paper with Diana Oblinger and James R. Mingle entitled Computers for All Students: A Strategy for Universal Access to Information Resources is a useful piece of background reading and can be purchased for $18 US by calling SHEEO at (303) 299 3686. It's interesting to read first the 1995 internal document outlining the proposal to implement Assured Access at Sonoma State and then read the three-years-out Executive Report from March 1998. Finally, although not available online, the article "Universal Student Access to Information Resources and Technology," by Mark Resmer in Syllabus Magazine, Vol. 10 No 6, Feb. 1997, is a good background resource.