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Pupils test multi-touch screens

Tom Warren   on 18 September 2008 - 06:48 · 3 comments & 4869 views

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School pupils are trying out desks with interactive screens that can recognise more than one person's finger presses.

Researchers at Durham University observed classroom interactions then worked with manufacturers to produce the necessary software and hardware.

Their SynergyNet system has a teacher's console to monitor what each child or group of children is working on.

The system will be tested in primary and secondary schools and in higher education over the next four years.

Dr Liz Burd, who led the project by Durham's technology-enhanced learning research group, said: "The new desk can be both a screen and a keyboard, it can act like a multi-touch whiteboard and several students can use it at once.

"It offers fantastic scope for more participative teaching and learning."

View: BBC News

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#1 Airlink on 18 Sep 2008 - 14:39
I'm giving even odds that either Apple or a crazed iPhone fan will now attempt to sue Durham University for copyright infringement, patent violation, or just becasue it's a violation of the Steve Jobs Reality Distortion Field*.
Only in the United States of Litigation, though.


* iPatent Pending.

#2 bluewind_89 on 18 Sep 2008 - 15:10
Hah. You said pupils.
#3 carmatic on 21 Sep 2008 - 17:55
like what happens if one pupil tries to do something on the screen and the kid next to him keeps on playing on his part of the screen and messing everything he tries to do up?

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