Leading the class into the 21st century.The door in Maryland Hall reads room 200, but students might think they've walked into Multimedia Computer Techniques rather than Introductory Accounting I or II. From the moment you step into Professor Barry Rice's classroom at Loyola College in Baltimore you know something is different. There is a blackboard, but this CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. educator hasn't written on it in five years. Students have handheld keypad A small keyboard or supplementary keyboard keys; for example, the keys on a calculator or the number/cursor cluster on a computer keyboard. See programmable keypad. polling devices at each desk to answer questions during inpromptu quizzes. The overhead projector has been replaced with a permanent multimedia console that features a computer with an Internet connection, a VCR VCR: see videocassette recorder. VCR in full videocassette recorder Electromechanical device that records, stores on a videotape cassette, and plays back on a TV set recorded images and sound. and a Easer disc player. A large projection system hangs from the ceiling and stereo speakers are mounted on the front wall. Welcome to the accounting classroom of the 21st century. The bell rings, and the freshmen and sophomores settle into an hour of learning they describe as a "new-wave tool for education" and downright "cool." In the middle of the lecture and without warning, Rice calls up his CompuPic 32 program on the network and flashes a young woman's picture on the screen--the student he's chosen to answer his last question. Whether she knows the answer or not, she has to think, and the exchange is guaranteed to get other students in the class thinking as well. Surprises always await students in Rice's classroom as he uses technology to teach accounting basics. In fact, his style often raises eyebrows from peers who question whether students actually learn in this environment. It's a criticism Rice has fought since the first day he decided to think out of the box that is the traditional college classroom. "I do not give quizzes--I get feedback," Rice says, referring to the instantaneous way of checking whether students are learning. "I do not show movies; I use multimedia. I do not entertain students; I engage them in the learning process. The traditional classroom is a dinosaur and ought to die!" TECHNOLOGY TO THE HEAD OF THE CLASS Because of this innovative use of technology and his creativity in adapting it to the classroom, as well as the leadership role he has taken with other technology-related educational projects, the AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). has chosen Rice as a pathfinder pathfinder /path·find·er/ (path´find?er) 1. an instrument for locating urethral strictures. 2. a dental instrument for tracing the course of root canals. path·find·er n. in its Vision Process. Rice, 55, believes in turning out accounting graduates who are prepared for the world beyond college. And the best way to do this, he says, is to stimulate students by using the computer technology the rest of the world--especially business--has embraced. Rice says educational publishers have been slow to develop high-tech material for colleges, and most educators won't take the time needed to produce material in this fashion. Creating lectures entirely on a computer is "just too much work for anyone who doesn't have the drive, tools or inclination to address this in their teaching," he says. Over the past six years, as technology has become progressively more user-friendly, Rice has changed his accounting lectures. Today, he creates his material at home and uses the Internet to upload it onto Loyola's server. Mixing Asynmetrix Toolbook, a multimedia authoring package that lets him move through topics in a nonlinear A system in which the output is not a uniform relationship to the input. nonlinear - (Scientific computation) A property of a system whose output is not proportional to its input. fashion, with the presentation software, Power Point, he infuses his lectures with dynamics aimed at keeping the attention of students who have grown up with the test pace of MTV MTV in full Music Television U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business. and the World Wide Web. For example, he can click on hypertext hypertext, technique for organizing computer databases or documents to facilitate the nonsequential retrieval of information. Related pieces of information are connected by preestablished or user-created links that allow a user to follow associative trails across the arid go to any page in the virtual textbook or to any location on a page, while bringing up boxes and incorporating audio, animation and graphics that further illustrate his point. Rice continues to give tests the way they've always been given, because there aren't enough computers for all the students in the class, but he hopes eventually; to move to online tests proctored to prevent cheating. He also plans to take these techniques further this fall when he will teach two sections of Accounting I over Loyola's Intranet. Fifty-five students already have registered for the class. Students will access it by using their ID numbers and a password. With money from a grant he was awarded, Rice will be putting in 50 hours a week for about 8 weeks this summer to prepare for the class. "I will cease to be a sage on the stage and become a guide on the side," he says. "I hope to prove that students will learn more because they can spend as much or as little time as they need on lecture presentations." DISCOVERING COMPUTERS Rice hasn't always taken the progressive stance he does today. He graduated from college in the early 1960s, and after positions with Price Water house, Arthur Andersen For the U.S. Supreme Court case commonly known as Arthur Andersen, see . Arthur Andersen LLP, based in Chicago, was once one of the "Big Five" accounting firms (the other four are PricewaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Ernst & Young and KPMG), performing and a local firm in Roanoke, Virginia Roanoke is an independent city located in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The city of Roanoke is adjacent to the city of Salem and the town of Vinton and is otherwise surrounded by, but politically separate from, Roanoke County. , left public accounting in 1970 to pursue graduate study at the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
Joining Loyola in 1975, Rice taught students the rudimentary aspects of accounting in much the same fashion as every other accounting professor before him. He didn't know much about technology before the mid-1980s, when he discovered CompuServe and Loyola's VAX (Virtual Address eXtension) A venerable family of 32-bit computers from HP (via Digital and Compaq) introduced in 1977 with the VAX-11/780. VAX models ranged from desktop units to mainframes all running the same VMS operating system, and VAXes could emulate PDP models mainframe. He began advocating technology as early as 1984 by requiring his students to go into Loyola's computer labs to submit their homework via electronic spreadsheets and term papers, but he was frustrated frus·trate tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates 1. a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart: that students weren't responding in class to questions he would ask about the material being covered. In 1986, when he began to see that graduates were entering the workforce without a real grounding in the technology skills required for business, Rice wrote a computer literacy Understanding computers and related systems. It includes a working vocabulary of computer and information system components, the fundamental principles of computer processing and a perspective for how non-technical people interact with technical people. policy for Loyola's students. The policy still exists at the college and is always being amended; in 1994, Rice added Internet proficiency to the statement and he expects to update it as needed as needed prn. See prn order. to keep in step with changing technology. In 1988, he invited other educators to his first Trends in Computerized Accounting Education Conference. This meeting, which he organized to exchange technology ideas and provide evaluations from hands-on users of educational; accounting software, was held five; times over the next 10 years. Technology has since made the conference obsolete; past attendees can now exchange information using the Web. A chance meeting in 1991 with a former University of Maryland; mentor, Roger Hermanson, helped Rice bring technology into the classroom. The two men discussed how, at one time in the mid-1960s, Hermanson's classroom was outfitted with mechanical keypads embedded Inserted into. See embedded system. in the desks and connected to rotary dials The rotary dial is a device mounted on or in a telephone or switchboard that is designed to send interrupted electrical pulses, known as pulse dialing, corresponding to the number dialed. The early form of the rotary dial used lugs on a finger plate instead of holes. at the front of the room to give the professor feedback on multiple-choice questions. Rice got the idea to take the old Q&A system further by using handheld keypads as polling devices in the same way companies today use them to gauge opinion at large meetings. Rice worked with Loyola's Information Services Department The Information Services Department (ISD) (Traditional Chinese: 政府新聞處; Simplified Chinese: 政府新闻处 to get an IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries) grant in the summer of 1992. The grant allowed Loyola to install a multimedia computer and keypads in a refurbished classroom, and Rice subsequently became the college's first faculty member to experiment with technology in class. "I force my students to take a position in little more than a minute on any question," Rice explains. "Most students have been able to fake their way from kindergarten to twelfth grade This article or section deals primarily with the United States and Canada and does not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. by memorizing and not thinking. After the freshman year, I insist they do analytical thinking on problems. Many are taken aback at first, but it forces them to use their minds." And based on his frequent contact with practitioners through continuing education continuing education: see adult education. continuing education or adult education Any form of learning provided for adults. In the U.S. the University of Wisconsin was the first academic institution to offer such programs (1904). programs, committee work with the Maryland Association of CPAs The Maryland Association of Certified Public Accountants is a statewide professional association that provides leadership, training, advocacy and resources for its nearly 10,000 CPA members, who are employed in private practice, industry, government and education. and firm visits, Rice believes that's just what CPAs in firms and in businesses are finding they need young recruits to do. Rice thinks many schools still don't prepare students for that. The classroom is not the only place Rice uses technology. He serves as coordinator of Accounting Education Using Computers and Multimedia (AECM AECM Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia AECM Albert Einstein College of Medicine (New York, New York) AECM Aeromedical Evacuation Crew Member(s) ), an electronic interest group he created early in 1994 as a forum for discussion of hardware and software for accounting education at the college and university level. More than 1,000 subscribers front more than 30 countries have exchanged information on a variety of topics ranging from noteworthy educational accounting software and hardware and related conferences, workshops and seminars to questions such as, "What is the best software to use in my managerial accounting Managerial Accounting The process of identifying, measuring, analyzing, interpreting, and communicating information for the pursuit of an organization's goals. Notes: course?" Using his experience with AECM, last August Rice developed CPAS-L, an online forum for CPAs outside of education to address issues affecting any area of accounting. Already, more than 200 subscribers contribute regularly to the discussions of software, hardware and client-related matters. It's another way Rice stays in touch, not just with accounting ideas in academe but also with accounting practices in the real world. That way, he can pass what he learns back to his students, giving them the firm foundation they'll need to negotiate the changes and challenges they'll face as CPAs in the next century. "CPAs should be like Indiana Jones--creative, innovative and open-minded," Rice says. "One of the most important things in life is learning how to break the rules." Too many college accounting programs, Rice feels, "force students into little boxes." At Loyola College, Rice is trying to help students step beyond that and think for themselves. "They have to learn not only how to use the tools at hand to survive but also to experiment with the unknown to discover what lies ahead," he says. RELATED ARTICLE: Characteristics of a Pathfinder * Develops and champions a successful new service for a firm, employer or profession. * Plays a key role in making a new service successful. * Has the ability to grow a practice or expand services to meet employer needs. * Makes extensive use of technology and has plans to increase use as innovations become available. * Exhibits creativity and entrepreneurial attributes. * Is sensitive to other--shows understanding and empathy. * Has personal plan or vision for the future. * Is willing to take reasonable risks in order to grow professionally. Source: CPA Vision Project Web site (http://www.cpavision.org). RELATED ARTICLE: For More Information To learn more, visit Barry Rice's Web site at http://pacioli/loyola. edu/rice, or send an e-mail to rice@loyola.edu. The Web site also includes links to the home pages for each of his courses, as well as to AECM, the discussion group site for educators, at http://pacioli. loyola.edu/aecm, and his general site for the accounting community, CPAS-L, at http://pacioli. loyola.edu/cpas-l. SCOTT H. CYTRON is a Dallas-based consultant advising CPAs and other professionals across the country on issues related to marketing, public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most and communications. |
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