Advanced networks are making it possible for libraries to expand access and outreach opportunities in never-before imagined ways.

The Chester County World Tour

The Chester County World Tour is a project of the Chester County Intermediate Unit to use IP-based video conferencing to develop language and cultural exchange for students in Chester County. As part of this initiative students and teachers in Chester County, PA have connected with Chile, France, Northern Ireland, Israel, and elsewhere to share language and cultural exchanges and professional development opportunities.

Asian Studies Collaborative (ASC)

About the Asian Studies Collaborative

The Asian Studies Collaborative is designed to establish a comprehensive framework to support Asian language and cultural education for K-12 and beyond educators. An advisory board has been created to support this work. The Advisory Board provides expertise and resources in Mandarin Chinese language and culture for the following: program design, professional development, standards-based curriculum, instruction, and assessment. The Advisory Board also provides guidance in the development of regional and global collaboration.

The Asian Studies Collaborative is designed to establish a comprehensive framework to support Asian language and cultural education for K-12 and beyond educators. An advisory board has been created to support this work. The Advisory Board provides expertise and resources in Mandarin Chinese language and culture for the following: program design, professional development, standards-based curriculum, instruction, and assessment. The Advisory Board also provides guidance in the development of regional and global collaboration.

The Asian Studies Collaborative will host its Spring Conference on May 6, 2011 from 8:00 am - 3:30pm. The keynote speaker is Dr. Yong Zhao, internationally renowned speaker, author, and distinguished professor of education from Michigan State University and most recently University of Oregon. Additional conference strands will include Sister Schools through the Chinese Exchange Initiative, Asian culture in curriculum, ACTFL Teacher of the Year, MAGPI global resources and the ZON virtual world.

The registration cost is $75 for Berks County Schools and $100 for out of county schools. To receive a reduced fee of $25 for university students call for assistance to Beth Kozloski at 610-987-8489 or email betkoz@berksiu.org or Sue Calvin at 610-987-8639 suecal@berksiu.org. For more information and to register please visit the Asian Studies Collaborative website.

Computer-Assisted Communications Program (CACP)

The Computer-Assisted Communications Program is a means to dynamically link the human resources from the Clinical Epidemiology Centers at the Universities of Pennsylvania and North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the USA and the Pontificia Universidad Javeriana (Javeriana's R-CERTC) at Santafe de Bogota, Columbia. This initiative is aimed at providing support for the production and dissemination of knowledge in Clinical Epidemiology and related disciplines. In particular, the CACP is in place to facilitate easy, inexpensive and timely contact and interaction among scholars, faculty, researchers, and students from the participant institutions. In addition, CACP offers a variety of Internet-based tools for the dissemination of the principles and methods of rational thinking in health sciences and Evidence-Based Medicine, ranging from descriptive documents and scientific papers made available through the World Wide Web, to distance learning computer-assisted tutorials and courses, to Internet-based bi-directional communication channels including Chat, IP-based telephone, videotelephone, and videoconferencing. For more information, see the CCAP website.

Digital Corinth

Expanding access to antiquity

The ancient city of Corinth, Greece has been excavated since 1895, creating a vast accumulation of information that is being digitized. The Digital Corinth Project teams at the University of Pennsylvania and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens are designing a unique system for tagging of digital components and the creation of tools and lesson plans that draw on the data to present learning opportunities on the architecture, city planning, social and religious life of the city of Corinth during the Roman occupation in 44 BC. Students and teachers from around the world will be able to utilize these learning resources and opportunities without ever leaving their classrooms.

NJVid – A Higher Education Video Collaboration

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Building a Statewide Academic Video-on-Demand Repository

The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) has awarded a 3-year grant for nearly a million dollars to a partnership between William Paterson University, Rutgers University Libraries and NJEDge.Net to develop and deploy a statewide academic video-on-demand repository, NJVid.  The digital video repository (Fedora Commons-based) will be housed in the core of the NJEDge network and will provide "lectures-on-demand", licensed commercial videos, and locally owned videos. A Video Commons collection will be publicly available including history, lectures from notables, and video documenting research and scientific advances. NJVid is notable for providing a statewide video strategy to accommodate any type of organization- - higher education, K12, public libraries, museums and archives.