Vancouver Sun

Harvard’s new ‘virtual classroom’

Interactiv­e business class seems like a giant video conference with polish of TV show

- COLLIN BINKLEY

BOSTON — The newest classroom at Harvard’s business school has no desks or chairs. Instead, the professor teaches facing a towering digital screen that stretches from wall to wall, filled with the live video feeds of up to 60 students tuned in from their computers.

In the futuristic classroom, housed in a television studio three kilometres from campus, class plays out like a giant video conference.

Students can jump in to ask questions or respond to their classmates. The professor can stop a lecture to quiz individual students, or send the group a quick online poll.

The project, called HBX Live, is a departure from the genre of online courses that are recorded in advance to be taken later.

Here, Harvard sought to create a live, online replica of its campus classrooms.

“With one difference of course, which is we collapse geography,” said Bharat Anand, a business professor and faculty chairman of HBX, a digital initiative at the school.

At a recent test of the technology, alumni connected to the room from Thailand, New Zealand and the Philippine­s.

“That’s something we’ve never, ever done before,” Anand said.

This school year, Harvard will use HBX Live to teach its business students when they disperse on global study trips in January, and to host virtual research presentati­ons.

Eventually, the school will consider creating new online programs taught primarily through the room, Anand said.

Although the technology isn’t widespread, experts said, some other schools have experiment­ed with the concept of a live webbased classroom.

At Yale University’s business school, students around the world can take online courses taught through video conference­s.

The University of California San Diego created a computer program that puts students in a virtual world, like a video game, where they can take seminars and interact.

“People have been trying to do video conferenci­ng in education for a long time, going back to the ’80s,” said Frank Vahid, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Riverside, and co-founder of the online-education company zy Books. Technology improvemen­ts have boosted that pursuit in recent years, Vahid said, both in the classroom and in the business world.

Although the idea isn’t entirely new, Harvard put a twist on it by approachin­g the project like a live television production.

To learn the trade, school officials visited NBC Sports studios in Connecticu­t and studied reality TV shows.

The school hired a production crew that sits in a control room above the studio, broadcasti­ng the class to students with the polish of a cable news show.

Crew members toggle between dozens of cameras trained at the professor, lingering only a few seconds on each angle. One worker roams around the professor with a camera, aiming to give a sense of movement.

“We’re trying to create a constant energy as well as feed off what the professor says,” said Peter Shaffery, who was hired as technical director of the project.

Leaders of the business school said HBX Live is a big step as the school dives into online education, but stressed that it’s just one of several offerings.

“It’s really cool in isolation, but really the way to think about it is in context with other initiative­s that we’re pushing,” said Young me Moon, a senior associate dean.

The school recently unveiled an online program on business basics, along with other courses geared toward executives.

Harvard plans to hold about 100 sessions in the TV studio over the next year, hoping that professors will find new uses for it, too, Anand said.

 ?? GRETCHEN ERTL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bharat Anand, Harvard Business School professor, demonstrat­es HBX Live, an online classroom that allows real-time interactio­n between professors and students from around the world, at the WGBH television studio in Boston.
GRETCHEN ERTL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bharat Anand, Harvard Business School professor, demonstrat­es HBX Live, an online classroom that allows real-time interactio­n between professors and students from around the world, at the WGBH television studio in Boston.

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