Lisa Dieker Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Wed, 16 Nov 2022 00:03:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Lisa Dieker Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 Student Juggles Young Family to Earn Ph.D. /news/student-juggles-young-family-earn-phd/ Tue, 01 Aug 2017 13:28:01 +0000 /news/?p=78258 It鈥檚 expected that more than 3,700 students will pass through cap and gown pickup at the 麻豆原创聽FAIRWINDS聽Alumni Center this week in anticipation of Summer Commencement.

Some dance in excitement. Some are jittery from too much coffee and not enough sleep. Some are snapping photos for social media love. Some simply are there to cross off another to-do on the list.

When Taylor Bousfield 鈥13MEd strolled up to claim her doctoral regalia as she breastfed her 5-month-old and cared for her nearly 3-year-old while maintaining a Zen-like calmness, the regalia distribution staff took in the scene before them and wondered: is Wonder Woman real?

鈥淢ost of the time I鈥檓 a mess,鈥 Bousfield said with a laugh.

Bousfield was born and raised in Orlando and attended The First Academy through middle and high school. After earning her bachelor鈥檚 degree from the University of Mississippi, she taught for three years in Louisiana before moving back to Central Florida to teach at Lake Howell High School.

She had an itch to further her education, and when a grant opportunity arose to do so at 麻豆原创, she took the chance to earn her master鈥檚 degree in exceptional student education with a certificate in autism spectrum disorder.

While she was in graduate school, Bousfield learned of a doctoral grant from Lisa Dieker, a 麻豆原创 professor and Lockheed Martin eminent scholar chair.

鈥淚 figured, why not try?鈥 Bousfield said. 鈥淲e have an incredible education program that has faculty members who are so innovative. Not to mention the opportunity to work with聽TeachLivE. That is something I wouldn鈥檛 have been able to do anywhere else.鈥

A month after starting the doctoral program, she learned she was pregnant with her almost 3-year-old, Luke.

鈥淗e literally went to every single class, one way or another 鈥 whether it was in person, in utero or on Skype,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way I could have been able to accomplish everything without the support of our special-ed faculty and my chair, Lisa Dieker.鈥

Bousfield鈥檚 interest in special education and teaching was instilled at a young age. Her aunt, Charlotte Day, is the county coordinator for Special Olympics in Orange County. Bousfield said from the time she could walk she was volunteering at events.

She will graduate on Aug. 5 with her doctorate in education, and her children and husband will be in attendance. She hopes that her family鈥檚 immersion in her university experience will instill a drive and a passion for education in her sons.

She plans to stay at 麻豆原创 as a聽Teach Live liaison as she works with associate professor Rebecca Hines, PhD.

鈥淭aylor will be an amazing addition to our program. Her doctoral work included research methods in TeachLivE that we will use to help prepare future teachers,鈥 Hines said.

Bousfield said her biggest challenge over the years has been balancing her roles as a mother, a wife and a student, but she wouldn鈥檛 have traded the experience for the moment when she learned she had accomplished her goal.

鈥淗earing 鈥楧r. Bousfield鈥 after passing my dissertation defense 鈥 with my husband and both of our boys there in the room 鈥 was amazing. It鈥檚 probably the best moment I鈥檝e had in a while,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y advice to anyone is find a support system and don鈥檛 wait. Don鈥檛 put it off. Now is the time. Somehow it will always work out. Don鈥檛 put off life for school, and don鈥檛 put off school for life.鈥

]]>
Cheryl Hines: Borrow Skills from Improv, Take Them to the Classroom /news/cheryl-hines-borrow-skills-improv-take-classroom/ Fri, 23 May 2014 20:49:43 +0000 /news/?p=59590 Nearly 100 educators from across the country gathered at the 麻豆原创 this week to learn some big lessons from five middle schoolers who have a lot to say but who aren鈥檛 actually human.

The teachers were part of the College of Education and Human Performance鈥檚 second national TLE TeachLivE鈩 conference, and the students are named Maria, Ed, CJ, Sean and Kevin. They鈥檙e all students in the virtual classroom simulator known as TeachLivE, which was developed at 麻豆原创 to better prepare teachers to handle the rigors of leading a classroom.

Teachers-in-training and existing teachers can step into the simulator to practice targeted skills, such as classroom management and content pedagogy, in what鈥檚 called 鈥渧irtual rehearsal.鈥 An 鈥渋nteractor鈥 from 麻豆原创 controls all five avatars, which each have distinctive personalities that mirror what teachers might see in the average classroom.

Actress Cheryl Hines, a 麻豆原创 alumna, kicked off the conference with a presentation about improvisation and how those skills can be applied to the classroom.

鈥淚t would be very difficult as a teacher to communicate anything with a student without connecting with them. The only way you can improvise is if you鈥檙e a good listener, so you have to listen to what someone else says, because there鈥檚 no script,鈥 said Hines, a graduate of the Groundlings, the revered improv comedy troupe based in Los Angeles.

Hines, the star of television shows including 鈥淐urb Your Enthusiasm鈥 and 鈥淪uburgatory,鈥 spoke about the importance of playing along, assuming a relationship and making bold choices to both actors and teachers.

鈥淲ith teaching, if a student has an idea or a thought or a question, you can鈥檛 shut them down and say 鈥楾hat鈥檚 a bad question,鈥 鈥榊ou don鈥檛 know what you鈥檙e talking about鈥 or 鈥榃hy weren鈥檛 you listening,鈥 any of those things. It has to keep moving in a positive direction,鈥 said Hines. 鈥淚n improv, you have to stay in the moment. You can鈥檛 plan what鈥檚 going to happen next because you don鈥檛 know. I think it鈥檚 that way with teaching.鈥

Throughout the two-day conference, educators attended workshops and discussions about how TeachLivE can be used as a stimulating way to prepare all different kinds of teachers.

Breakout sessions targeted math, science, preschool, counselor and other educators. New developments in TeachLivE, including a parent-teacher conference scenario and the creation of an avatar with Autism Spectrum Disorder, were also introduced.

Just 10 minutes in the simulator forces teachers to think more about their practice, said Karla Auzenne, a science instructional specialist for the Houston Independent School District, which has used TeachLivE as a preparation tool for rookie and veteran teachers.

鈥淓ven when I first met the TeachLivE students through Skype, I forgot I was talking to avatars,鈥 said Auzenne. 鈥淭hey become kids to you. They come off the screen into real life. It鈥檚 a game-changer, right then and there.鈥

TeachLivE was created eight years ago by education professors Mike Hynes and Lisa Dieker, College of Engineering & Computer Science professor Charles Hughes, and an interdisciplinary team that included members of the Synthetic Reality Lab at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation & Training.

Today, TeachLivE is delivered to more than 10,000 teachers at 37 partner universities and at other sites including the school districts in Orange, Seminole, Lake and Volusia counties. A team of more than 25 at 麻豆原创 supports the technology, development and partnerships.

The theme for this year鈥檚 TeachLivE conference was ludic convergence, or playful collaboration, a celebration of what the TeachLivE team calls 鈥渟andbox technology.鈥 One group of children could come into a sandbox and create distinct castles or shapes. When they鈥檙e done, another group of kids could come in, tear down what was there and build something completely different.

That鈥檚 the nature of TeachLivE, which can be completely customized depending on the user鈥檚 objectives. What stays the same, however, is the realistic nature of the classroom.

鈥淚鈥檓 not great at technology, but what I saw today was fascinating,鈥 said Hines. 鈥淭his is so great. You鈥檙e actually talking to a real person鈥攄ifferent characters, but a real person.鈥

]]>
Conference to Focus on 麻豆原创’s Award-Winning Classroom Simulator /news/conference-focus-ucfs-award-winning-classroom-simulator/ Mon, 19 May 2014 15:05:15 +0000 /news/?p=59417 Imagine stepping in front of a classroom full of high schoolers for the first time to teach a math lesson.

You鈥檙e trying to calm your nerves and deliver content clearly and compellingly when you catch C.J. in the back row texting on her cell phone. Sean, another student, interrupts your pre-calculus lesson to tell you about a TV show he watched the night before.

Suddenly, you鈥檝e lost your place entirely.

It is a scenario that鈥檚 typical for teachers, but thanks to an innovative teacher preparation tool developed at the 麻豆原创, it is something that practicing teachers and teachers-in-training can work through without impacting any actual students.

That鈥檚 because C.J., Sean and their classmates are avatars in a virtual classroom. The program, called TLE TeachLivE鈩 is a mixed-reality simulation environment that provides users the opportunity to practice a targeted skill, whether classroom management or content pedagogy.

Similar simulation technologies are common in medicine and aviation, but TeachLivE is the only one of its kind in education, providing a personalized learning environment customized to the unique needs of teachers-in-training or practicing teachers looking to brush up on their skills or try out new techniques.

鈥淪uspension of disbelief is a key aspect of simulation and training. When a subject steps into the simulator that cognitively they know is not a 鈥榬eal鈥 situation, they begin to accept the simulation as real in a short period of time. The subject is experiencing suspension of disbelief,鈥 said Mike Hynes, a member of the TeachLivE team and professor in 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Education and Human Performance. 鈥淚t never ceases to amaze me when I see subject after subject experience suspension of disbelief in TeachLivE.鈥

Hynes created TeachLivEwith education professor Lisa Dieker, College of Engineering & Computer Science professor Charles Hughes, and an interdisciplinary team that included members of the Synthetic Reality Lab at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation & Training.

Last month, TeachLivE took the top prize at the NewSchools Venture Fund鈥檚 annual summit. The Learning to Teach Impact Award is given annually to a teacher-preparation program that connects teachers with opportunities for practice in real-world settings.

In 2013, TeachLivE earned the 2013 Governor鈥檚 Award for Excellence in Modeling and Simulation from the National Training and Simulation Association, an honor that鈥檚 typically awarded to military applications of modeling and simulation.

鈥淭he various awards, and especially this most recent, recognizing our impact on learning, are such a celebration of the over 25 people who are part of our team,鈥 said Dieker. 鈥溌槎乖, too, should be celebrated in each award the TeachLivE team has received in that the university has a culture and climate of true partnerships, not within, but across disciplines.鈥

Hughes said: 鈥淭his latest recognition of our collaborative work as members of the TeachLivE鈩 team is wonderful in itself, but even more so as it motivates us to continue ignoring disciplinary walls to help make a positive difference for all aspects of society.鈥

The TeachLivE concept began more than eight years ago. Today, TeachLivE is delivered to more than 10,000 teachers at 37 partner universities and at other sites including the school districts in Orange, Seminole, Lake and Volusia counties. A team of more than 25 at 麻豆原创 supports the technology, development and partnerships.

The current version of TeachLivE requires only a typical computer, a large display and a Microsoft Kinect to allow users to move about the environment and have 鈥渘atural鈥 interactions with the avatars.

The TLE TeachLivE team says the 鈥渟andbox鈥 nature of the program鈥攊ts ability to be used in different ways and for different purposes鈥攃ould also have uses in areas outside of education.

Up next for the TeachLivE team is the program鈥檚 second annual conference, which will be held at 麻豆原创 May 22-23.

The conference will include presentations by institutions that use TeachLivE with opportunities to share teaching and research ideas. Actress Cheryl Hines, a 麻豆原创 alumna, will kick off the conference Thursday at 3:45 p.m. in the Morgridge International Reading Center with a keynote presentation about improvisation.

Other conference sessions will focus on how 鈥渧irtual rehearsal鈥 can be used to curb teacher anxieties, train counselors and prepare early childhood educators.

]]>
麻豆原创 to Offer New Nanotechnology Degree /news/ucf-offer-masters-degree-nanotechnology/ Thu, 27 Mar 2014 22:56:33 +0000 /news/?p=58219 The 麻豆原创 Board of Trustees Thursday approved a new interdisciplinary professional science master鈥檚 degree program that will expand 麻豆原创鈥檚 offerings in the rapidly growing field of nanotechnology.

Nanoscience and nanotechnology are the study of extremely small things — detectable only with very strong microscopes — and how they can be used in a variety of fields from biology to engineering.

Examples include micro cameras used in surgery, liquids used to repair scratches on cars, stain-resistant clothes and stealth technology that cloaks planes from radar.

Thursday鈥檚 approval comes nearly 10 years after 麻豆原创 opened the , which will run the new program. Students will develop the scientific knowledge necessary to make discoveries, along with the business and entrepreneurial skills they need to take those discoveries to the market.

Government agencies and academic researchers have been working hard to unravel how the nano world works. It鈥檚 one of the hottest growth industries with a worldwide market estimated at $1.2 trillion by 2020, according to Global Industry Analysts.

Students will work closely with industry partners, and the NanoScience Technology Center is interested in recruiting additional partners. The center鈥檚 faculty members already work with 21 companies. Interested companies can contact center director Sudipta Seal at sudipta.seal@ucf.edu.

The new program is expected to begin this fall with 10 students.

In other action Thursday, the Board of Trustees:

Approved a new bachelor鈥檚 degree in Writing and Rhetoric housed in the , which 麻豆原创 established in 2010. The program, the only one of its kind in Florida, will address employers鈥 needs by producing graduates who are proficient in analyzing, creating, editing and adapting text. Students will have opportunities to work with community and business partners. The program is expected to begin this fall.

Participated in a demonstration of , which improves teacher practice and student learning by giving educators the opportunity to instruct a virtual classroom full of avatar students. The experience allows teachers-in-training to perfect their skills without impacting any real students and helps veteran teachers hone their expertise or try out new techniques. Mike Hynes, a professor in 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Education and Human Performance, created the program with education professor Lisa Dieker, College of Engineering & Computer Science professor Charles Hughes, and an interdisciplinary team that included members of the Synthetic Reality Lab at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation & Training. About 40 universities around the country now use TLE TeachLivE to train future educators, and the program has been nationally recognized by both education and simulation and training associations.

Thanked student body president Melissa Westbrook for her service as a trustee during the past year. Westbrook鈥檚 term as president ends in early May. She will be replaced on the board by newly elected student body president Weston Bayes.

Approved changes to four student fees beginning in the fall. Following the recommendations of a committee made up of a majority of students, trustees voted to increase the activity and service fee and athletic fee each by 88 cents per credit hour, to reduce the Health fee by 5 cents per credit hour, and to increase the Capital Improvement Trust Fund fee by $2 per credit hour to help pay for Library renovations. The proposed CITF fee increase will take effect only with the approval of the Florida Board of Governors.

Agreed to host the the 10th annual MEAC/SWAC Challenge Presented by Disney at Bright House Networks Stadium on Sunday, Aug. 31. 麻豆原创 was asked to host the game to keep it in Orlando while the Citrus Bowl is being renovated.

]]>
麻豆原创鈥檚 Virtual Classroom Software Earns Modeling and Simulation Honor /news/ucfs-virtual-classroom-software-earns-modeling-and-simulation-honor/ Wed, 04 Dec 2013 19:26:13 +0000 /news/?p=55897 The 麻豆原创鈥檚 innovative virtual classroom software this week received the top award from the nation鈥檚 leading training and simulation association.

TLE TeachLivE鈩 earned the 2013 NTSA Governor鈥檚 Award for Excellence in Modeling and Simulation from the National Training and Simulation Association.

The 麻豆原创 software first was chosen as the winner in the NTSA鈥檚 training category and then was picked for the top prize from among other competing categories because of its noteworthy, significant and innovative contributions.

The award ceremony was held during the Interservice/Industry Training, Simulation and Education Conference– or I/ITSEC– the modeling, simulation and training industry鈥檚 largest international trade show held each year in Orlando.

鈥淭he focus of I/ITSEC in the past has been the military applications of modeling and simulation. Awarding TLE TeachLivE鈩 with the Governor鈥檚 Award is an indication that the industry is recognizing that there are other applications, such as education. It鈥檚 an honor to be awarded for being on the cutting edge,鈥 said Mike Hynes, a member of the TLE TeachLivE鈩 team and professor in 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Education and Human Performance.

Hynes created TLE TeachLivE鈩 with education professor Lisa Dieker, College of Engineering & Computer Science professor Charles Hughes, and an interdisciplinary team that included members of the Synthetic Reality Lab at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation & Training.

TLE TeachLivE鈩 improves teacher practice and student learning by giving educators the opportunity to instruct a virtual classroom full of avatar students.

The experience allows teachers-in-training to perfect their skills without impacting any real students. For veteran teachers, practice in a virtual classroom allows them to hone and refine their expertise or try out new techniques.

Since its creation in 2005, TLE TeachLivE鈩 has expanded to more than 20 partner sites, including the school districts in Lake and Volusia counties. A $1.5 million grant received in 2012 from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is helping the program expand its reach to universities across the country.

This summer, the computer-generated classroom added three new avatars that represent middle schoolers learning English as a second language.

The TLE TeachLivE鈩 team says that the 鈥渟andbox鈥 nature of the program鈥 its ability to be used in different ways and for different purposes鈥 could also have uses in areas outside of education.

]]>
College of Education Professor to Attend ‘Education Nation’ Summit /news/college-of-education-professor-to-attend-education-nation-summit/ Thu, 20 Sep 2012 15:09:55 +0000 /news/?p=41093 麻豆原创 Professor Lisa Dieker will join more than 300 national leaders at NBC News’ Education Nation Summit to address issues facing education in America.

The summit, in its third year, brings together leaders in education, government, business, philanthropy and media to discuss challenges, solutions and innovations in education. Presenters at last year鈥檚 summit included President Bill Clinton, former First Lady Laura Bush and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.

Dieker, a professor and Lockheed Martin Eminent Scholar in the College of Education, is one of the creators of TLE TeachLivE鈩, an innovative teacher simulator developed at 麻豆原创 that uses avatars in virtual classrooms to train future educators. The program, developed in collaboration with 麻豆原创 Professors Michael Hynes and Charles Hughes, is currently being used by more than 15 universities across the country. In addition, a three-year research study is being conducted with teachers in mathematics and literacy across 10 universities annually to look at the impact of the simulator on teacher practice and student learning.

The “Education Nation” Summit will take place in New York City on Sept. 23-25. Portions of the education conversation will be showcased through NBC News platforms, including MSNBC, CNBC, Telemundo, social media, and local affiliates.

]]>
麻豆原创’s Mixed-Reality Lab Gets National Award /news/ucfs-mixed-reality-lab-gets-national-award/ Tue, 07 Feb 2012 16:27:59 +0000 /news/?p=32669 A national organization honored the 麻豆原创 for going beyond state and national standards in using technology effectively to improve teacher training and student learning.

The American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education selected the College of Education鈥檚 TLE TechLivE鈩 Lab聽 for its 2012 Best Practices Award, which recognizes the innovative use of technology. The project鈥檚 creators will be honored at the association鈥檚 64th annual meeting in Chicago this month.

The lab is unique because student teachers can use it to learn a range of skills or veteran teachers can try out innovative techniques with a group of avatar students in a mixed-reality classroom. Teachers can perfect their skills without working with any real students.

A trained 鈥渋nteractive actor鈥 at 麻豆原创 controls the avatars whose personalities include shy, defiant and attention seeking. The actor watches the teachers in action. If a teacher fails to use best practices the avatars act up and create a very realistic classroom environment.

The Lab started as a pilot study at 麻豆原创 in 2003 and has blossomed into a network of universities using labs to give education majors the opportunity to practice what they are learning on virtual students before they face real kids in a classroom.

Partner universities include Florida State University, University of Kansas, West Virginia University, Old Dominion University, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Miami University of Ohio, Pace University in New York City, Western Michigan University and University Center of Greenville鈥檚 SimHub (which serves all South Carolina schools). Educational institutions in Africa and the United Arab Emirates are considering setting up labs this year.

The innovative 鈥渕ixed reality鈥 experience augments — not replaces — the classwork and intense internships that are required before student teachers can earn their degrees, so all teachers still have prolonged experiences with actual students as part of their preparation program, said Professor Lisa Dieker, one of the creators of the program.

鈥淲e鈥檙e often told that, once in the environment, it feels real and then the teachers at all levels want to go back in to practice, to work on something until they get it right,鈥 Dieker added.

Dieker and College of Education Professor Michael Hynes developed TeachLivE鈩 with an interdisciplinary team that included 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation and Training, Synthetic Reality Lab and Computer Science. Professor Charles Hughes of Computer Science works with student actors from IST鈥檚 Interactive Realities Lab.

The AACTE selection committee reviewed the Lab鈥檚 integration of technology, and also recognized that the lab supports the development of transition skills for students with disabilities and the preparation of teachers in the use of instructional technologies in the STEM fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

鈥淚 am pleased to acknowledge this special recognition of the outstanding work of Drs. Dieker and Hynes of the College of Education, Dr. Hughes of the College of Engineering and Computer Science, and the entire 麻豆原创 team that helped champion the TLE TeachLivE鈩 project,” said 麻豆原创 President John C. Hitt, President. “Their innovative and collaborative application of research and technology to the profession of education will reverberate with students and educators for generations to come.鈥

The equipment necessary to create a virtual classroom in which the student-teacher interacts with virtual students costs about $6,000 and makes use of some innovative, inexpensive technology, including Skype. Regardless of where the student-teachers are based, the avatars are always controlled at 麻豆原创.

Each of the 10 partner universities has signed on to establish a lab on its campus and to track its effectiveness.

]]>
Dieker is First Special Education Star Alum /news/dieker-is-first-special-education-star-alum/ Sun, 02 May 2010 21:28:34 +0000 /news/?p=12473 麻豆原创’s聽Dr. Lisa Dieker was awarded the 2010 Outstanding Graduate Alumni Award at Eastern Illinois University this April. She was one of 10 alumni given this award this year and the first in special education to receive this recognition at Eastern Illinois University.

Dr. Dieker was nominated by Dr. Kathlene Shank her graduate advisor and she attended the award ceremony in Charleston, Illinois along with her parents Barbara and Scottie DeWitt.

Dr. Dieker received her bachelors and masters degrees from Eastern Illinois University and her Ph.D. from University of Illinois. She is currently a professor in the College of Education at 麻豆原创 and the Lockheed Martin Eminent Scholar.

]]>
lisadiekersmall2