By James Morrison
[This article is a re-formatted manuscript that should be cited as
Morrison, J. L. (2005). Experiencing the online revolution. In G. Kearsley
(Ed.), Online learning: Personal reflections on the transformation of
education (pp. 248-261). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Educational Technology Publications. Note: This book presents a comprehensive history of the field of online education as told by twenty-four of the pioneers who created it. A complete description of the book is provided here.]
James L. Morrison, professor of educational leadership emeritus at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has founded and served as
editor of three periodicals,
On the Horizon, a
futures journal for higher education, The Technology Source, an e-journal designed to assist educators as
they face the challenge of integrating information technology tools into
teaching and into managing educational organizations and Innovate,
an e-journal that focuses on the creative use of information technology to
enhance active learning methods irrespective of sector (K-12,colleges and
universities, corporate universities). He has published over 230
articles, book chapters, books, and monographs on environmental scanning and
forecasting, planning, management, and using technology in educational
organizations. In 1999 he received the Distinguished Scholar Award from the
American Educational Research Association's Special Interest Group on Strategic
Change.
In a comprehensive book entitled The Diffusion of Innovations,
Everett Rogers (1995) characterizes people who adopt innovations as being in one
of five categories: innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority,
and laggards. I am an early adopter. In this chapter, I describe how I became an
early user of information technology (IT) tools in my work as a professor and the
lessons that I have learned over the years. I conclude with brief comments on
the major forces impacting education and the changes that will mark colleges and
universities in the future.
Early Efforts: My First Use of Technology in the Classroom
I began my professorial career in 1969, but it was an Army Reserve assignment
that first introduced me to personal computers in the mid-1980s. I was tasked to
prepare a preliminary report for a general officer steering committee at the
Pentagon, and I was told to use a Compaq "luggable" so that my unit would have
an electronic copy of the document. I quickly saw the advantages of using a
computer to write and modify manuscripts. When my duty ended, I purchased a
personal computer, which I used mostly for clerical tasks. I enjoyed the fact
that I was no longer dependent upon a secretary who worked for six other
professors to type and retype manuscripts and letters.
It was several years before I began to integrate technology in my courses,
and I was one of the first in my school to do so—albeit in an elementary manner.
I used Microsoft PowerPoint to present introductory lessons and Word to conduct
interactive group process sessions. For example, in an educational management
course that I team-taught in 1989, I used the Nominal Group Technique (Morrison, 1998) to focus
discussion on the topics for which I was responsible. I first asked a topic
question (e.g., What potential developments on the horizon could affect the
future of education?) and then requested that students compose responses on
paper. After 5 to 10 minutes, I began a round robin, where each student in turn
suggested one answer to the question. I typed these comments on my laptop and
displayed them on a large screen via a projector. I asked students to think
about each nominated response from their colleagues: Did it bring to mind a
point that they had not previously considered?
When responses to the question were exhausted, we began our discussion of
each response. Did everyone understand what was meant by the comment? Did
everyone agree that it was an appropriate response to the question? This
discussion resulted in a collaborative effort to refine and edit student
answers. By using Word and a projector, we found such editing relatively easy,
particularly when contrasted with the use of flip charts and magic markers. I
printed the results of the discussion after each class and distributed them at
the beginning of the next class meeting. Employing PowerPoint and Word jazzed up
my classes, and I viewed the use of these tools as state-of-the-art
instructional technique. I received outstanding student evaluations for the
course.
The very questions that I asked my students were the crux of my own research.
I was a futurist who focused on identifying signals of change in the
macroenvironment and deriving their implications for education. In 1992, I
founded a professional publication titled On the Horizon to explore
important trends (e.g., the globalization of the economy, the impact of
telecommunications on this economy, the growth of the Internet and the
development of new pedagogical technologies) and their implications for
educational leaders who were guiding their schools into the future. It became
clear to me that to be successful in the Information Age, college graduates
needed to do more than master the content in their chosen fields; they also
needed to be technologically literate. The growing use of technology tools to
enhance productivity in professional workplaces, the boom in online education
initiatives, and an expanded emphasis on evolving competencies (rather
than static knowledge) demanded that students—particularly those preparing to
become educational leaders—develop and continually update a new set of computer
skills.
One day it struck me that although my classroom use of PowerPoint and Word
was a good example, my efforts were only minimally enhancing the ability of my
students to use technology themselves. These people were preparing for careers
as educational leaders, primarily in public schools. It was vital that they have
not only a conceptual understanding of technology use in education, but also the
practical ability to demonstrate its advantages and facilitate the integration
of technology in the curriculums of their organizations.
The Transition: Redesigning One Course to Enhance Technology Competencies
I slowly began the transition from my exclusive use of technology in the
classroom to my students' use of technology when I began to team teach the
course with David Thomas. In the fall 1991 offering, we included this objective:
"Use technology as an aid to your work as a manager." Professor Thomas agreed to
handle the majority of topics in the course (e.g., site-based management,
staffing, budgeting, special populations) and to teach students how to write
decision memos and book reviews. My responsibility was to teach the
strategic management portion of the course, which included the major project; I
also assumed responsibility for technology integration. Professor Thomas and I
both reviewed students' work and mutually determined grades.
For my portion of the course, I had students read a strategic management text
(that I was writing with two colleagues) as a guide for their course projects.
The assignment was either to work with practicing school administrators to
develop a strategic plan for the school, or to simulate being on a team
charged with planning a new school in the local county. I set up a class
listserv to facilitate communication and required that the projects be turned in
on disk and presented in class using PowerPoint at the conclusion of the
semester. (The written project and presentation constituted 35% of the semester
grade, decision memos constituted 40%, and class participation constituted 25%.)
I specified that PowerPoint be used in the project presentations for three
reasons. First, the university had a site license for Microsoft Office, thereby
making the software a relatively inexpensive purchase. Second, Microsoft's
productivity tools were supported by the university's Office of Instructional
Technology, which periodically scheduled training programs; this meant that
students could get help if they needed it. Third, our lab had only Macs at the
time, but many students had PCs at home; Office allowed students to transfer
data files from Macs to PCs and vice-versa with ease.
I also required that students join three mailing lists where the main topic
of discussion was the future of education. We started the semester with an
environmental scanning assignment in which students sought articles or listserv
postings that described signals of change in the external environment. Students
were required to abstract two such articles or postings, add a section titled
"implications for public education," and post their drafts to the class
listserv. In class, I showed students how to download postings from email, take
out the paragraph markings at the end of each line, format their manuscripts,
and place the files in a folder on their hard drives (or, if they were in the
computer lab, on a floppy disk). These manuscripts were to be used as part of
the external analysis portion of their projects.
Because written communication skills are important tools for educational
leaders, I projected one draft abstract from each student on screen and focused
class discussion on how it could be better written. I assigned the second draft
abstract from each student to a classmate, who had to write a critique of it. In
order to reduce anxiety, I did not grade either the draft abstracts or the
critiques.
At the beginning of the semester, no student had an email address or had ever
subscribed to a listserv, and only one student had ever used a presentation
software program; by the end of the course, students were competent in the use
of these technologies. Although their course projects were good in many
respects, Professor Thomas and I felt that the quality of their writing could be
improved. We offered students the option to revise their written projects and
decision memos, with the possibility of receiving a higher grade. The
university's graduate school handbook specified that a grade of P (pass) be
given to work normally expected of graduate students, an L (low pass) to
substandard work, and an H (high pass) to exemplary work. Professor Thomas and I
awarded Ps to all but a few of the papers initially submitted. Every student who
received a P completed at least one revision of his or her work, a process that
greatly improved the written documents, the student's knowledge, and, in some
but not all cases, the student's final grade.
Student Complaints and a Second Attempt
Professor Thomas and I thought that the course was highly successful.
Unfortunately, the students' perspective was quite different, and they gave the
course a mean rating below the school of education average. Chief among their
complaints was that the emphasis on technology and on learning to use technology
took away time that should have been devoted to lessons on school management.
I was dumbfounded, but after some thought, I came to two conclusions: (1) I
had not sufficiently "sold" my rationale—that written and oral communication
skills and the use of technological productivity tools were so important that
they would be factored into student grades; and (2) I had not compensated for
the fact that these added requirements increased the class workload
substantially. Students had not expected the class to consume so much of their
time and energy; they found learning to use email, listservs, Internet search
engines, and presentation software a burden.
I relied on this analysis when charged with taking sole responsibility for
another class entitled "The Social Context of Educational Leadership." This
course was originally designed with specific content and taught via lectures and
discussion. I made sure that my version was congruent with the objectives
expressed in the university bulletin, but I redesigned the course to focus on
career challenges the students were likely to face in the Information Age and
the competencies they would need to navigate these challenges successfully. In a
world where the professional knowledge base was changing rapidly, it was clear
that these prospective administrators needed to be able to access, analyze, and
communicate information with both traditional methods and information technology
tools. The question then became: What kind of learning experience do the
students need to develop these skills?
I used an active-learning simulation approach, whereby students were to act
as a task force that informed the U.S. Department of Education of the major
issues challenging public education. The task force consisted of several teams
assigned to prepare and present issue-analysis papers. To complete this
assignment, the students—all of whom were experienced public school
teachers—first had to identify the issues through an environmental scanning
exercise and then develop issue-analysis papers. To access and communicate this
information, they had to learn to use such tools as Internet search engines, a
Web page editor, file transfer protocol (FTP), and presentation software.
I made a detailed syllabus (available only through the Web) to structure this
enterprise, and I helped students learn how to use information technology tools
and improve their papers and presentations. In essence, scanning and issue
analysis—plus the resulting papers and presentations—constituted the content of
the course. I acted as a mentor, facilitator, and guide. The only content I
provided was several papers on anticipatory management that I made available on
the Web, via the syllabus.
In terms of outcomes, the course was successful. Students developed their own
Web pages, each of which included a resume, an environmental scanning abstract,
an issue-analysis paper, and PowerPoint presentation slides. These products
reflected competencies that few of the students had prior to the course.
Moreover, their abstracts and papers were quite good, especially after several
revisions. These materials were published online and became useful to the
broader educational community (I have received notes from many authors who have
cited material from student papers).
But this does not mean that the students were happy campers. In fact, they
were dissatisfied with their experience. When I asked students on their
comprehensive examination to explain the anomaly of successful learning outcomes
and relatively low course ratings, I received a number of explanations. I was
told that:
- I provided little content in the course.
- My critiques of their writing and presentations were too severe, and their
extra revision efforts did not necessarily lead to higher grades; indeed, my
critical attention was perceived to be a threat to their grade point averages.
- My emphasis on communication skills was out of balance with the title of the
course. (A sample comment: "This course should be retitled 'Technology and
Journalism.'")
- Learning to use technology tools was not worth the time and effort expended,
especially given their heavy schedules (16 semester hours) and the different
skills they perceived as important to their future roles as assistant
principals.
In addition, several students pointed out that the course required skills and
behaviors quite different from those encouraged in other classes: Students
typically worked alone, but in my course they were required to work as part of a
team; students were accustomed to learning and recalling concepts presented by
their professors, but in my course almost all of their time was spent applying
knowledge and skills; students usually turned in their work for evaluation at
the end of the semester, but in my course they received steady feedback on their
work throughout the semester, which required continuous revision; students were
comfortable completing their assignments using the library and basic word
processing, but in my course they had to work with multimedia materials, the
Internet, email, and the Web, as well as the library. In other words, this
course demanded a shift in their approach to learning and performing—a shift
that made them uncomfortable.
Some students were so uncomfortable that they complained to an incoming dean
that the course had no content (I gave only one lecture, and that at the
beginning of the semester). The dean's response was to order my program chair to
remove me from teaching the course and assign me other duties. When I asked her
about this decision, she told me that "students expect faculty members to
provide knowledge—to lecture. If you won't lecture, you cannot teach required
courses, only seminars." My resolution was to buy out my teaching time; in my
last 2.5 years on the active faculty, I taught only one full course, which was,
ironically, the social context class because no other professor was available to
teach it that particular semester. I also was assigned to teach a half-course
once a year on using technology in education—a class in which I was not expected
to lecture—and to assume other additional duties and committee assignments.
Underlying Issues and Professional Costs
I have related these experiences to illustrate the disjuncture involved when
a social institution is undergoing a paradigm shift (Mack, 2003). I
changed my role as teacher from actor to director and demanded a corresponding
transition in student behavior that countered prevailing norms. Several of my
colleagues were upset because I had deviated from a paradigm that regarded
educational administration/leadership as a field of defined knowledge that is
taught to students, usually sequentially. My constructivist approach focused on
process, not defined knowledge. In essence, the course consisted of students'
writing scanning abstracts, collaboratively writing issue-analysis papers, and
presenting those papers. Students chose their own topics; my role was to help
them learn how to use listservs and search engines, to explore the issues they
identified as most critical to the future of education, and to provide a
professional critique of how they argued these issues to the world at large.
Therefore, student papers—not my lectures—constituted the "content" of the
course.
Ironically, the way in which I taught was consistent with the Secretary's
Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS) report (1992) for classroom
reforms, a report that was required reading in other educational leadership
courses. In essence, the report advocated moving from a passive to a
participative classroom environment as described in Table 1.
Table 1: The Conventional Classroom Compared
with the SCANS Classroom |
From the
conventional classroom |
To the SCANs
classroom |
Teacher knows answer |
More than one solution may be
viable and teacher may not have it in advance |
Students routinely work alone |
Students routinely work with
teachers, peers, and community members |
Teacher plans all activities |
Students and teachers plan and
negotiate activities |
Teacher makes all assessments |
Students routinely assess
themselves |
Information is organized, evaluated, interpreted and communicated
to students by teacher |
Information is acquired,
evaluated, organized, interpreted, and communicated by students to appropriate
audiences |
Organizing system of the classroom is simple; one teacher teaches
30 students |
Organizing systems are complex:
teacher and students both reach out beyond school for additional information
|
Reading, writing, and math are treated as separate disciplines;
listening and speaking often are missing from curriculum |
Disciplines needed for problem
solving are integrated; listening and speaking are fundamental parts of learning
|
Thinking is usually theoretical and "academic" |
Thinking involves problem solving,
reasoning, and decision making |
Students are expected to conform to teacher's behavioral
expectations; integrity and honesty and monitored by teacher; student
self-esteem is often poor |
Students are expected to be
responsible sociable, self-managing, and resourceful; integrity and honesty and
monitored within the social context of the classroom; students' self-esteem is
high because they are in charge of their own learning |
Source: The Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills
(1992, April), Exhibit 4, pp 10-11.
Joel Barker (1993) argues that our paradigms powerfully distort and
even blind us to self-evident truths until we experience the moment of insight
which enables us to "see the world anew." Immersing people who have not
had that insight in paradigmatic change produces cognitive dissonance. Although
my students experienced the SCANS reading regimen, they had a difficult time
when placed outside of their conventional classroom comfort zone.
From my perspective, requiring that students learn to apply information
technology tools to complete course requirements was an opportunity to prepare
them for the future world of work. No doubt it would have been easier for them
to adjust to these requirements had they been adept at using the basic tools
before they enrolled in the course. The students'
unfamiliarity with these tools, the fact that in the early to mid-nineties email
programs and HTML translation programs were not intuitive, and the fact that
anti-virus programs did not handle computer viruses easily or effectively served
to increase student frustration. All in all, the combination of my
conducting the course in a different way and the students' discomfort with the
technology available in those days entailed significant changes for all of us.
Moreover, these students were adult learners—practicing teachers who already
had experience in the field and who had opinions about what skills they needed
to be successful administrators. Technological proficiency rated low on their
lists. Ed Neal, the director of faculty development at my university's center
for teaching and learning, put the problem this way: "Learning to use electronic
technology might . . . seem pointless, since [the students] have typically
worked in public school environments that have little technology available. The
promise that these tools will eventually be as common as the telephone is
insufficient to convince them that they should spend time learning them now."
The gap between my definition of a successful course and that of my students
arose, Neal surmised, from a mismatch between my goals and expectations for
students and their own goals and expectations (personal communication, May 22,
1998).
While the technology component obviously unsettled the students, their
complaints also pointed to two separate, underlying issues: grade inflation and
the concept of writing as a process. In the school of education at my
university, H became the common grade—in part, I suspect, because of the
importance of student evaluations in tenure and merit decisions. Indeed, some of
my colleagues routinely gave all students a "high pass" (H) and announced that
they would do so near the beginning of the semester; their rationale was that
this approach removed the tension of grades and allowed them to focus on
learning. I did not adopt this view, but followed the grading standard specified
in the graduate school bulletin. In a course that already asked students to
think, work, and participate differently, my adherence to strict grade standards
violated the student norm that if you worked hard, you deserved an H.
The same might be said of my emphasis on writing as a process. Many students
were accustomed to spending all semester gearing up for a single paper or
project that would be handed in on the last day of class and comprised a
substantial portion of their final grade. Some professors might provide a few
written comments or suggestions for revision, but by that time the course was
over and the assignment was completed. I stressed the value of multiple drafts,
peer and instructor feedback, and improved writing skills as a worthwhile goal
in and of itself (rather than as a guarantee of a better grade). All of the
technological tools that I employed and that I asked students to master
facilitated this approach, but students generally overlooked the underlying
pedagogical rationale. Students were also slow to link constructive criticism with their
attractiveness as job candidates. I pushed them to write better papers and
publish their final projects on the Web not to increase their stress levels, but
to give students an opportunity to contribute to the broader scope of knowledge.
Ideally these students would market themselves by applying their coursework to
their careers rather than just to their degrees.
The technological components that I mention above (computer projection
equipment, presentation and Web page software, listservs, and so on) are basic
ones—very useful but also somewhat rudimentary in terms of the more recent
advances in educational technology. At that point, I had not stepped very far
out on the technology/constructivist learning limb, but my "unorthodox" teaching
methods nonetheless had professional costs: After a 30-year career as a
professor, I essentially was relieved of my teaching duties and assigned to
various committees and projects in which I had little interest.
I made the best of the situation, however, by pouring my energy into On
the Horizon and into the development of a new peer-reviewed electronic
journal focused on the potential of technology to enhance and improve education.
With a former student (James Ptazynski), I founded The Technology Source in 1997, and today it
remains a valuable and trusted resource for educators worldwide. As editor, I
enjoy publicizing the newest and most exciting trends in the field: the
proliferation of academic e-journals that use information technology tools to
enhance professional communication; the movement for open, electronic archives
of scholarly research; the impact of blogs on social and political policy;
advances in publishing made possible by rich site summary . . . the list of
innovations (in terms of both new technologies and new applications of older
ones) is too great to exhaust.
Course Adjustments and Positive Feedback (At Last)
Rogers (1995) describes early adopters as opinion leaders. This was not true
in my case. In my enthusiasm to apply a constructivist perspective to teaching,
incorporate requirements to use IT tools, focus on writing and presentation
skills, and maintain the university grading standard, I violated faculty and
student norms. Rather than "showing the way," I suffered criticism from both
faculty members and students. My colleagues felt that I was not providing
content, and although they did not seem to mind my emphasis on writing and
presentation, they themselves did not incorporate their evaluation of these
skills when assigning grades. Students felt that I overemphasized the need to
learn IT tools and to increase writing and speaking competency to the exclusion
of content. My behavior did little to affect these norms.
I took all criticism seriously, however, and modified my approach over time
in an attempt to make it more acceptable to everyone involved. Initially, for
example, I critiqued student papers using the "track changes" feature of
Microsoft Word and then returned the annotated papers to students via email.
Later I modified this procedure to require a face-to-face session in which I
reviewed my critique with each student. I also changed the course schedule to
allot much more time to student presentations and related discussion and to
require one less rewrite of the major paper. In the last class I taught, I
provided only formative evaluations as we proceeded through the semester;
students did not know their course grades until they received them from the
registrar. In that class, my student evaluations were above the school mean.
Some one to three years after my students had completed the social context
course, they took comprehensive exams and had the option of responding to the
following prompts: (1) "Comment on the anomaly of the course producing
successful outcomes but generally receiving low ratings"; (2) "What are the
implications of the social context course (content as well as instructional
process) for you in your role as an educational leader?" Notably, many students
gave positive responses, among them the following:
- "I acquired greater detail and synthesis of information because I was
responsible for myself and to my team members as we worked together to construct
the issue analysis paper. This was an important experience because in most
positions of leadership, the leader will be required to work in an effective,
collegial manner with faculty and staff colleagues."
- "Although the class was a painful experience for many, it was a fruitful one
with boundless new opportunities within our grasp after the completion of the
expectations and course requirements. . . .We as educators are human and react
just as the students we taught. We want to be spoon fed. We want to be lectured
to. We want bold print and make sure that important things are repeated three
times. Why do we desire this format? It is what we know. It is what we are used
to. Those are the very reasons you should not change a thing! It was a painful
GOOD learning experience for us."
- "This course changed my paradigm of learning. I now realize the power of
knowing how to learn. I was always good at memorizing facts, but now I
understand the importance of doing research to find facts, thinking critically
about them, and then integrating them into concepts. The course also taught me
how to use technology to do better research, write, and then present
information."
- "As a course designed more for skills development than transference of
information, it has provided me with the primary and most essential tools for
dealing with change: The capability to recognize it, make sense of it, and
communicate what I see on the horizon of the educational landscape."
Finally, at a program lunch to which I was invited after my retirement, I sat
next to a newly appointed professor. Responding to my comment that I had
experienced criticism during my final years at the university, she said that the
word on me was that I was "ahead of my time."
Final Thoughts: The Future of Education
I believe that we are in a period of transition in higher education, one
driven by the combined forces of demographics, globalization, economic
restructuring, and information technology; I am confident that these forces will
lead us to adopt new concepts of educational markets, organizational structures,
how we teach, and what we teach (Morrison, 2003).
Globalization requires that employees become adept at working with people from
diverse cultures, and that they become proficient in the effective use of IT
tools. Globalization also spurs economic restructuring, which increases the need
for workers to be productive and to the demand for retraining by workers who are
"downsized." Consequently, we are experiencing a large growth in the number of
people who need higher education, and, since we do not have sufficient space on
existing campuses to accommodate the demand, we are seeing an exponential
increase in online courses and programs that do not require classrooms.
In the not too distant future, colleges and universities will expand their
markets to include all people who have Internet access. We will see an increase
in virtual universities. Residential campuses will offer predominantly hybrid
courses. Substantial online instructional capability will be a standard feature
of practically all institutions. Moreover, institutions will predominately use
competency-based exams (rather than credit-hour accomplishment) to award degrees
and will guarantee that individuals who receive those degrees are indeed
qualified to perform at the implied level.
As changing demographics and technology alter the context of higher
education, the mindset of faculty members will need to change as well.
Specifically, instead of viewing themselves primarily as content providers in
their teaching role, professors will see themselves as designers of learning
experiences for an increasingly diverse student population. Students, viewed
today as sponges whose task is to soak up knowledge from their professors (Spector,
2002),
will become junior colleagues who acquire knowledge while working through
project-based courses. Faculty members will no longer work in isolation, but
will serve on teams of instructional designers, media support staff, and
assessment specialists. These teams will prepare courses that can be taught
online or as hybrid courses in campus classrooms. Classes will be conducted
largely by junior professors, instructors, or (in universities) by graduate
assistants who will mentor students as they progress through virtual courses.
At the same time that information technology is revolutionizing the world of
teachers and students, it is also changing the context of scholarship.
Specifically, the movement spearheaded by MIT to put faculty scholarship
online, in conjunction with the efforts of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic
Resources Coalition (SPAR) and the free online scholarship movement, will
establish the acceptability of peer-reviewed online scholarship in terms of
merit, tenure, and promotion activities.
The higher education landscape will look quite different in 2020 than it does
today. There will still be many "bricks-and-mortar" residential campuses,
particularly for the young, but their classes will be hybridized (i.e., a
combination of online and in-class instruction). Lectures will no longer be the
predominant mode of instruction; rather, group and individual project-based
learning will be the norm. The focus of education will be to produce graduates
who can use a variety of information technology tools and techniques to access,
evaluate, analyze, and communicate information and who can work effectively in
teams with people from different ethnic groups to address a wide range of
real-world issues and choices, too complex to be solved by tidy textbook
answers.
The world is evolving, and our teaching and learning paradigms must evolve
with it. The goal is not to replace the instructor with a computer, but to use
technology in appropriate ways to support and enhance learning, to prepare
students for a workplace that increasingly values technical skills, and to
create new ways of discovering and applying knowledge. The road to that end may
be bumpy, but I see the sun rising ahead on a promising educational future. This
is a journey worth taking.
References
Barker, J. A. (1993). Paradigms: The business of discovering the future.
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http://horizon.unc.edu/conferences/dead_files/interview.asp
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