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| Albright
Awarded $277,00 Grant for Handheld Wireless Technology Education Program |
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Albright College has been awarded a $277,000 Pennsylvania Link-to-Learn grant for an innovative educational program in handheld wireless technology. The handheld wireless technology program will certify students to develop applications and design rich media for handheld mobile computing and personal digital assistants (PDAs) such as Palm Pilots. The $353,000 total project was developed jointly by Albright professors Daniel J. Falabella, Ph.D., chair of the Computer Science Department, and Anthony Crisafulli, MFA, director of the Johnson Center for Digital Media. Governor Ridge announced the award on March 29. Albright was one of only 21 colleges and universities awarded Link-to-Learn grants from a field of 115 applicants in a highly competitive process. The Link-to-Learn educational technology initiative is designed to ensure that college students in all areas of study receive technology training and to make sure that Pennsylvania businesses have tech-savvy workers. With the prediction that one billion people worldwide will be using wireless mobile devices by 2003, the new handheld wireless technology program will prepare both undergraduates and working professionals for one of the fastest growing fields in information technology. The interdisciplinary program will be offered as a skill-specific certification track within the computer science, digital media and information systems degree programs. The program will also be offered as a certificate program for working professionals.
Albright will begin the new program in fall 2001. The Link-to-Learn grant will provide funding for three specialized labs to be housed in a new wireless technology development center. Albright will develop educational CDs and video programs about wireless handheld technology that will be distributed free to Pennsylvania educational institutions. The handheld wireless technology program also has a unique partnership aspect focused on the technology needs of community, business and local government. Some of the partnerships include Numoda Corporation, a leader in wireless mobile computing solutions, Ben Franklin Technology Partners Northeastern Pennsylvania, Berks Countys Muhlenberg Township and Muhlenberg School District, and the Reading Police Department. Students will design real-world solutions for real needs of users of handheld mobile computing. "The program will serve as a model for new curricular integration that functions as an education pipeline to bridge the gap between traditional IT disciplines and the new mobile IT requirements of Pennsylvania employers," said Crisafulli and Falabella. "It creates a formal program that will enable developers and designers to learn the newest applications and expectations of the mobile platforms and engage in the development of the new discipline of ephemeral architecture. "Students need to be educated in the latest technologies that reflect current business trends. Programs like Albrights will help counteract Pennsylvanias brain drain, as it loses students to high-tech opportunities in other states." |
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