On February 17, 2021

New telepresence classroom extends Castleton’s reach

Castleton University can now virtually connect its campuses and provide an improved active learning environment with its new telepresence classroom.

Through telepresence, Castleton extends its in-person instruction to remote sites and off-campus students.

Telepresence uses high-definition cameras, installed in both the front and rear of the room, allowing distance learners to see both the instructor and their classmates. Students’ voices are transmitted through microphones in the ceiling, while speakers distributed throughout the classroom provide more authentic sound for those in the telepresence room. A large, interactive wall panel allows an instructor to present materials to students, while another panel shows the remote learners to the class.

The technology will help the main campus connect to the University’s Killington and Bennington campuses more easily, enhancing course offerings for students at these locations.

“The active-learning classroom will enable faculty to employ a variety of pedagogical techniques to improve learning,” said Dr. Chris Boettcher, director of the Castleton Center for Teaching and Learning. “The teleconference function will allow faculty to offer hy-flex courses, in which students can opt to attend in-person or at home, and it will enable us to offer courses concurrently on different campuses.”

For students attending in person, the classroom provides an improved active learning environment.

“We added all-new, very mobile, up-to-date furniture that can be configured in any number of ways. It also includes new ceramic whiteboards and personal whiteboards for students that can also be attached to the desks as partitions separating workspaces,” Boettcher said. “A nice addition will be towers distributed throughout the room where students can plug in laptop computers to keep charged during class.”

Boettcher said the new telepresence classroom’s proximity to Calvin Coolidge Library helps reinforce the library’s presence as a central hub of Castleton’s academic experience. The room will also serve as a model classroom where the university can test and experiment with technology to choose for planned upgrades of classrooms across campus.

The classroom is part of a larger project under the Pathway to Graduation Project to support student success and promote proven and effective teaching techniques. The project will involve upgrades to roughly 20 classrooms.

The telepresence classroom was created with generous support from Castleton’s Title III-funded Pathway to Graduation Project, the USDA Community Facilities Program, and the Davis Educational Foundation’s Presidential Grant Program.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Weather impacts Killington mid-week skiing

May 8, 2025
Killington Resort planned on keeping its lifts running during the week until May 11 (then weekends only), but rain and warm temps over the last several days have taken a serious toll on its snowpack. Therefore, Killington Resort will be closed Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9, to preserve what they have left and…

How Killington became The Beast: Part 9

May 7, 2025
Snow, summer, and snowshed: 1960 saw fast progress How Killington became The Beast: Part 9 By Karen D. Lorentz Editor’s Note: This is the ninth segment of an 11-part series on the factors that enabled Killington to become The Beast of the East. Quotations are from author interviews in the 1980s for the book “Killington,…

Woodstock Foundation honors the winners of new Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship

May 7, 2025
Three Woodstock Union High School students were honored on April 30 for their visionary ideas about shaping Vermont’s future as the first recipients of the Laurance and Mary Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship, a new annual essay competition created to honor the Rockefellers’ lasting impact on the community. The scholarship program was launched in 2025 by The…

Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship awarded to Brycen Gandin of Mendon

May 7, 2025
The first-ever Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship, a $2,500 award created to honor the life and legacy of wellness pioneer Jimmy LeSage, has been awarded to Brycen Gandin, a graduating senior at Rutland Senior High School. Brycen, a resident of Mendon, can use the scholarship toward the college of his choice this coming academic year. Brycen was…