Auditorium of the future

Auditorium of the future

College of Veterinary Medicine unveils high-tech auditorium

By April Frawley Birdwell

Dr. Glen F. Hoffsis, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, demonstrates some of the ways in which the college’s new auditorium will aid in teaching efforts during the grand opening celebration Aug. 19./Photo by Maria Belen Farias

Clad in navy blue scrubs and surgical masks, the team swarmed around the small brown dog, swabbing the pup’s belly and prepping it for the day’s procedure. A camera in the University of Florida Small Animal Hospital operating room captured the activity.

A few buildings away, a crowd gathered in the College of Veterinary Medicine’s new auditorium watched the scene unfold live in high-definition on a white-screen wall as wide as the lecture hall itself. The ability to videoconference in high-definition with operating rooms and lecture halls at UF and around the world is one of the key features of the new space, which College of Veterinary Medicine leaders officially unveiled Aug. 18.

“We can take advantage of this technology to enhance our teaching,” said Glen Hoffsis, D.V.M., dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, as he demonstrated the room’s capabilities. “This can be a teaching tool for the whole class instead of just who is in operating room.”

The new auditorium, located behind the Veterinary Academic Building, seats 161 and has everything needed to not only connect to a wider audience but also do so in the most technologically advanced way possible. The hall is equipped with three high-definition cameras, high-definition projectors, a sound system with flat panels embedded in the ceiling to capture not only what the lecturer says but also what students say and an expanse of white-screen wall large enough for three projections to appear at once. In addition, four large flat-screen monitors were placed toward the back of the room for folks sitting in the last rows.

Lecturers can use a desktop computer or laptop to present their material and a document camera is in place in case they want to project a specimen. A tarantula helped demonstrate this capability to the crowd, crawling across a staff member’s hand as every fuzzy leg was projected in high-def glory on the vast white screen.

As the only veterinary school in Florida, class sizes will likely continue to expand in coming years and lectures remain the most efficient way to educate these students, an important fact in today’s economic climate, he said. Currently, there are about 100 students in each class, and second-year students spend the bulk of their time in lecture halls.

“We are going to be educating a lot more veterinarians and we are going to need more facilities. So our idea was let’s build this for the future,” Hoffsis said. “It was my wish that we would have lots of technology in here. That we would have a showcase for the whole campus and the technology would last long into the future.”

Aside from incorporating new technology, Hoffsis and other leaders also wanted the room to be comfortable for students. The lighting is optimized for note-taking, wireless connections and outlets are available for laptops, and the chairs were selected by this year’s sophomore class.

In addition to the new Small Animal Hospital and auditorium, the college is also poised to begin construction of a new education center, remodeling its reading room into a place where students can meet and use the same technology found in the auditorium in small groups.

“I hope with the facilities we have here that we truly can be leaders in veterinary education,” said Paul Gibbs, Ph.D., B.V.Sc., associate dean for students and instruction at the college. “I think this is going to be an enormously welcome auditorium for the sophomores.”

Mark Belyeu, president of the second-year class, said: “We are excited to use this new technology and see where it comes into our learning … We are excited this is going to be our new home for the next year.”