Facilities and Technology
Current foreign language videos
and software
Located on the second floor of Chapman Hall are the
audiovisual and multimedia computer laboratories of the Department
of World Languages and the office of the director, Mrs. Barbara
W. Crider. The audiovisual laboratory has thirty listening booths
that also offer the students the opportunity to record their lab
programs. Students at the beginning and intermediate levels participate
in structured sessions lead by student lab assistants. Analog audio
and video tapes along with various digitized sound and video files
are used along with DVD´s in an interactive environment as students
explore the culture and gain further experience in understanding
and reproducing the target language.
During structured sessions in the computer laboratory, students
do vocabulary and grammar drills, test their reading and listening
comprehension, write compositions, and use the internet to read
authentic texts and to do a variety of research activities.
Scheduled lab sessions take place from 8:00 a.m until 3:10 p.m.
Monday and Wednesdays, from 8:00 a.m. until 8:00p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays, and from 8:00 until 2:00 p.m. on Fridays during the fall
and spring terms. Outside of these hours, the computer lab is available
for independent use by all students until 10:00 p.m. Monday through
Thursday and in the afternoon on Friday until 5:00 p.m. Both
labs are closed on Saturdays and Sundays. The multimedia lab is
operated and maintained by University Computer Services and serves
as a general access, university lab when not in use by the department.
Language students at all levels are free to use the
audiovisual and computer labs for review, independent
video viewing, or for completion of class assignments during a monitored
open lab session on Mondays from 3:15 until 6:00 p.m.
World Languages and Cultures Computer Lab
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Hardware |
Software |
60 Dell Optiplex GX280
(30 Multimedia, 30 Audiovisual) |
Microsoft Office XP
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| Pentium IV Processors |
Internet Explorer
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| 3.2 Ghz processors |
Groupwise E-Mail
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| 512 megabytes RAM |
RealPlayer
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| DVD/CD-RW Drives |
Windows Media Player
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| 2 USB ports |
McAfee VirusScan
|
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World Languages Multimedia Software, see below for listings
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Software available for teaching multiple languages
- Rosetta Stone I and II – An immersion approach to listening
and reading, listening, reading, pronunciation, and dictation
available in 12 languages: French, Spanish, German, Russian, Swahili,
Arabic, Japanese, Italian, Thai, Portuguese, Chinese, Hindi.
- Critical Language Series in Portuguese and Chinese
- Accent (writing assistant program)
- Berlitz Interpreter (dictionary in various languages)
- Adobe Reader
- Quick Time Player
AV resources available for teaching multiple languages
Esprit audiovisual system manufactured by ASC technologies capable
of multiple activities such as:
- Listening comprehension through the use of digitized WAV and
MP3 sound files present for all languages taught
- Pairing exercises for spontaneous interactions among class members
- Introduction to target language culture and further listening
comprehension through the use of digitized WMV video clips providing
independent, self-paced review
- Oral exercises for increased oral proficiency and individual
evaluation
The Esprit laboratory system has an additional 3 Dell computers
for instructional use by the faculty and student staff.
The Language Lab also has four Apple Macintosh systems, used for
running the latest version Arabic instructional software.
The offices and classrooms for the Department of World Languages and
Cultures are housed on the first floor of Chapman and Burns Halls.
All classrooms are equipped with TV/VCRs, overhead and computer projectors,
internet connection, and capability for receiving international satellite
programs such as SCOLA. Classrooms are designed for interactive learning
and are enhanced by language-specific cultural regalia.
Samford's
Computer Services
Chapman Hall
Multimedia Lab
More Technology in Samford
University Library
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