University of Virginia:
Prestigious History With A Focus On The Future
“The task
of a university is the creation of the future.” - ALFRED NORTH WHITEHEAD
Charlottesville’s
University of Virginia (U.Va.) certainly has
a past. It was founded by Thomas Jefferson in 1819, and boasts an
impressive list of alumni, including Woodrow Wilson, Robert and Ted
Kennedy, Edgar Allen Poe, Georgia O’Keefe, Walter Reed, Richard Byrd,
three US Supreme Court Justices and NATO Secretary General Javier
Solana. But last year, the current crop of students started looking
ahead to the future.
Anyone who has
ever been to a college campus knows that a huge amount of paper is used
for flyers and advertisements. The U.Va.
student council approached the administration with an idea to replace
printed student materials with digital signs. “We have a very active
student body, “ says Bill
Ashby, Associate Dean of Students and Director of Newcomb Hall and
Student Activities. “They are usually a few steps ahead of us on
technology issues.”
The
council had three main issues they wanted to address. The first was
creating a more efficient means of helping student groups get their
messages out to the more than 20,000 students on campus. The second was
fueled by green concerns. “We have a generation of environmentally
conscious students, who wanted a sustainable way to deliver
information,” says Ashby. The third was preserving the look of their
historic campus, called "the proudest
achievement of American architecture in the past 200 years" by the
American Institute of Architects and the only
American university designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
“The
system needed to be user-friendly and simple, yet robust and Web-based.
We asked, ‘should we build it ourselves or should we hire an outside
programmer?’ We finally went with something in the middle,” Ashby
explained. Some students already had experience with AxisTV and
suggested it as the perfect solution.
The
administrators supported their choice and began doing their homework.
Along with students, they contacted facilities that had already
implemented AxisTV, including their own Zehmer Hall and Conference
Center, as well as other universities that use the system such as the
University of Maryland, the George Mason Law School in Arlington, and
higher education campuses in Louisiana. The students liked what they saw
and decided to go with the Visix software. Ashby explains, "It was a
student project all the way, but we agreed.”
AxisTV’s
Enterprise edition seemed best suited to U.Va.’s
needs. A funding coalition was formed from the student council, the
Division of Student Affairs and the Parents’ Committee, who are very
active in the life of the school. “It’s safe to say that without the
parents’ contributions, we could never have afforded it,” says Ashby.
The Enterprise edition offers the largest feature set and maximum
scalability for up to 500 endpoints. ”Our campus is pretty spread out
and AxisTV is a technological tool that can connect those decentralized
parts.”
U.Va.
launched AxisTV in the fall semester of 2007. They started in Newcomb
Hall Student Center with three channel players running 46” Samsung LCDs
on all five levels – in line-of-sight near the main entrance, in the
large dining area on the second floor, at points of entry on the third
floor where there are meeting rooms, and in the basement movie theater
where AxisTV is channeled through a high-end digital projector and runs
current content on the screen as a pre-show display. The displays use a
three-window layout – one window taking up half the left side with
student organization notices and advertisements, another window with
building events and schedules, and a third with a video feed – usually
CNN. They also include a weather ticker at the bottom of the screen.
Ashby was
excited by the adaptability of the system. “One great thing is that you
can use AxisTV with any display at the front end – we aren’t stuck with
only one kind of display so different departments can use what they
already have.”
They next
included three of their libraries and four recreation centers with one
channel player in each location feeding content to LCDs. They also added
two players each in the Commerce School and the Engineering School – all
running to 50” Sony displays strategically located in the lobbies of
their buildings. “One of our best indications of success is that five or
six other departments have seen AxisTV working and are clamoring for it
as well,” Ashby says.
Like many
educational facilities, U.Va.
was shocked by the shootings in April last year in Virginia. “After
4/16, it became very necessary to have a far-reaching emergency response
plan in place. It’s a real benefit to have something like this that can
be used as a part of such a plan,” continues Ashby. AxisTV has already
become a key component in their updated emergency response system and
looks to become even more integrated in the near future. “We are in the
midst of installing Enterprise broadly and will be implementing the
screensaver and desktop messenger options in the near future.”
Students
create content as a JPEG, TIFF or other graphic file format. Student
organizations submit and post this content after staff approval using
the Wire – a university-built web-based module that sits in front of
AxisTV. “It’s a front door for student organizations. Students are keen
on it being so easy to use and so much more efficient than the old paper
flyers, not to mention ecological as well,” explains Ashby.
“If you
want to use more environmentally sustainable methods to reach students,
you basically have two options. The first is punitive – you know, ‘No
Posting!’ and then going after violators. The second is to use modern
technology to try and change the culture. That’s what we decided to do.”
To further this ‘less paper, more bytes’
approach, Ashby is building an online archive on the Wire. “Sort of an
electronic version of those flyers with little tabs at the bottom that
you can tear off. Students can review older content and print out a
flyer on their computer. That way they don’t have to stand there and
wait for something they saw to cycle back through the playlist.”
“Our
main measure of success is that the total number of submissions each
semester keeps going up, plus the change in the behavior and the
culture. Digital signage hasn’t totally replaced old communications
methods yet – that stuff will die hard, but I estimate it has reduced
our paper usage by 10 to 15%. We hope we are changing the culture.”
Ashby concludes, “Our
goal is that, in three to five years, we can take down the last of the
bulletin boards and use only the Visix system.“