Apple USA is now running
a free hosting service for universities and colleges allowing them to
make educational content available for download 24/7.
The new
iTunes
U service has been trialled for a while but is now
live and being used by, among others, Stanford University and the place
where it all all looks to have started - the University of Michigan
School of Dentistry.
According to Apple,
In 2004, student
Jared Van Ittersum sought a way to reinforce what he'd heard in the
University of Michigan lecture halls. Through a collaboration with a
member of the School's Office of Dental Informatics, Van Ittersum
completed three pilot studies with 60 dental students, comparing their
preferences for web-based content and content that could be played on
an iPod. Overwhelmingly, the students favored the flexibility and
mobility of iPod, and the ease of use of downloading the content
through iTunes U.
Thus, in September of 2005, University of Michigan introduced iTunes U
to the entire dental school making it simple for students to access
classroom lectures. Now, students use recording equipment in the
lecture halls and capture the content. In minutes, the material is
available for download to an iPod, Mac, PC, or any other desired device
or computer. While Associate Professor of Dentistry Lynn Johnson says
it is up to students to get the faculty member's permission to record a
lecture, she adds that "no faculty member has ever said 'no' to a
student."
Stanford currently has available over 400 tracks and these can be
downloaded by anyone, not just students or academic staff - which
doesn't seem to be the case with UMSD or most other institutions.
Stanford's tracks are catalogued
over six main areas - Faculty Lectures (39); Global Issues - Stanford
Initiatives (76); Heard on Campus (112); Books & Authors (24);
Sports (50); and Music (114). Click on
Stanford
on iTunes to access these tracks directly in iTunes.
As with other iTunes tracks, the academic files will play on Mac
and Windows computers as well as being transferable to iPods.
Disappointingly searches from within iTunes itself and
from Google don't seem to bring up URLs for any iTunes U
services, not even Stanford's or UMSD's.
If you have any such links, let us know and we'll add them to this
piece as updates.
We've contacted Apple UK asking when similar hosting will be available
to universities and colleges over here and will also do
an update if and when we hear back.
Postscript
Of course, even if this does become the norm in all colleges and
universities here and around the world, it still doesn't solve the
age-old student dilemma - "How am I going to find time for ANY serious
stuff when I'm so busy getting pissed, stoned or laid; playing pool,
table-football or poker; watching telly, DVDs or downloaded videos;
going to gigs, the movies or just out to have a good time; or sleeping?".
Bummer, eh?
HEXUS.links
Apple
iTunes U service
Stanford
on iTunes
Forbes
news story - 'Stanford On ITunes' Is For Everybody
Thomson
Peterson's - More Schools Pursuing Private iTunes Store
Podcast? -