Sibley County ICTV System
The Sibley County Interactive Cable TV System was a groundbreaking form of distance education using interactive television that drew national media attention.
Overview
Launched in 1985, the ICTV system connected classrooms in four Sibley County, Minnesota, schools together by using four unused channels on Triax Cablevision's cable TV lines that already served the communities. The system was designed to address the problem of falling enrollments that the four schools were facing, by allowing the schools to share teachers.- The schools on the system were Gibbon, Winthrop, Arlington, and Gaylord.
- The total cost of the system was $150,000.
In 1989, the National School Boards Association launched school-site visits to several areas, including Sibley County, to show off distance learning systems.
Operation
At each school, the system consisted of a classroom wired with the following equipment:- 8 Televisions.
- * 4 facing the teacher, showing each of the four classrooms.
- * 4 facing the students, showing each of the four classrooms.
- 3 Cameras. Only one could be active at a time, select-able via push-buttons on the teacher's podium.
- * 1 facing the teacher.
- * 1 facing down at the teacher's podium.
- * 1 facing the students.
- 2 Microphones.
- * 1 to pick up the teacher's sounds.
- * 1 to pick up the student's sounds.
- 1 Computer running a slide show program.
- 1 Push-button switchbox.
- 1 Cable TV Modulator.
To transport the TV signals generated by each school to all of the other schools, they were broadcast over the local cable television system that already connected the four communities, on four unused channels:
Because the cable TV system was used, people at home in the communities could also watch classes being taught, although they could not interact with them. Taking advantage of this "feature", each school also connected a computer running a slide-show program to the system that broadcast school-related news and information to their respective communities when classes weren't being taught. The computer was select-able from the push-button switchbox.
Shutdown
The system was shut down around 1990. By this time, Gibbon, Fairfax, and Winthrop had consolidated to form GFW Schools, and Arlington and Gaylord had consolidated to form Sibley East Schools.The larger class sizes as a result of these consolidations meant the system was no longer necessary.