I agree!!! From the 10k: The Company has developed eSchool Online(TM) ("eSchool"), a Java-based software suite that permits a teacher to use the Internet as an accompanying instructional tool during a lesson. (Java is a programming language developed for the Internet by Sun Microsystems.) eSchool integrates Web content and a chat application with educational video effectively to create a "virtual" classroom. eSchool software can be used for pre-recorded as well as live programming, while the video can come from any source.
With eSchool software, a student can receive a traditional video lesson through a frame in his or her Web browser, or from a television in the classroom. Simultaneously, eSchool provides separate frames in the Web browser that display 1) Web sites with supporting information/examples; 2) dialogue with teacher and/or other students during a live lesson; and 3) a "playlist" of Web sites received to permit navigation from one to another. eSchool content creation software allows an instructor to easily select and order the addresses of the Web sites and related questions to be included in the playlist. The Web site addresses and questions can be assigned times and sent automatically to students during a pre-recorded program, or in a live lesson. The instructor can trigger any Web site address or question to be sent to the students at any time.
eSchool's components include instructor and student user software, authoring software and database assessment software. The Company expects to continue to refine and upgrade its eSchool software in the future. In addition, the Company provides Internet content development assistance, hosting of eSchool programs on its computer servers, and consulting to schools and universities.
The Company recorded its first eSchool sale in mid-1997 with the School District of Philadelphia. The Philadelphia City Schools are using eSchool to create and deliver new instructional and staff development programs. Since that time, the Company has entered into contracts to deliver eSchool to educational institutions in Nebraska, New York, Massachusetts, and Georgia.
The Company has also developed two-way analog and digital programming technologies for distance learning. The Company offers a point-to-multipoint broadcast system that can deliver pre-recorded individualized lessons or can integrate individualized segments into live distance learning lessons. Students receive individualized responses to their input made with a simple remote control. At the end of the lesson, the system's memory component can recall each student's performance throughout the lesson, giving the local facilitator a detailed accounting of the results. |