By focusing on design principles grounded in deeper learning principles, in what makes successful teaching and learning, a campus can revolutionize the design process to create learning spaces that meet the needs of both faculty and students.
A strategic design process that identifies space needs and analyzes possible solutions, functionality, and costs allows campus planning groups and architectural designers to take a fresh look at utilization, collaboration, flexibility, and adaptability to cost-effectively create institutional learning spaces.
This discussion of the inadequacies of traditional classrooms, of ideas that break with these traditions, and of suggested areas for the design team to keep in mind can help campuses plan pioneering, rather than imitative, learning spaces for the future.
From Judith A. Pirani and Gail Salaway, with Richard N. Katz and John Voloudakis,Information Technology Networking in Higher Education: Campus Commodity and Competitive Differentiator
The shifts toward an integrated cyberinfrastructure and toward pervasive and personalized intelligence and communications have enormous and exciting implications for networking in higher education.
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