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GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE MULTI-USER CLASSROOM
Guidelines: home
| classroom
| laboratory
| fieldwork
| Archbold
staff
- Faculty/instructors are to read this form, sign the 2nd
copy and return to the Facilities Coordinator. Faculty/
instructors are to share this important information with
fellow faculty/instructors and with students before using the
classroom.
- Visiting faculty/instructors - not Station staff - are
responsible for the well being of their students
in this
classroom. All visiting students and faculty/instructors must
read and sign an Archbold Release of Liability form
before participating in any activities at the Station and be
aware of potential risks.
- This classroom was renovated in 2000-2001 with funds from
a National Science Foundation award (DBI-Field Station and
Marine Labs #DBI0084141) to improve research and education
infrastructure and enhance educational opportunities at
Archbold Biological Station. Our preference is to have classes
and workshops with 20 or fewer students use this classroom to
reduce conflicts for access to the auditorium.
- A fee structure is has been established to help cover
the costs of maintaining the lab facilities and recharging
supplies (see the fee schedule http://www.archbold-station.org/abs/visitorinfo/fees.htm).
- Visiting classes, researchers, agency workshops, etc.,
should ensure they make advanced reservations with the
Facilities Coordinator for use of the classroom.
- Faculty/instructors with visiting classes and visiting
investigators will be required to take a brief orientation
to the classroom and associated equipment (please set this
up with the Facilities
Coordinator) for use of the classroom
and associated equipment The Facilities Coordinator will also check
out faculty/ instructors and classes at the end of the
class session to ensure all equipment is returned.
- Faculty/instructors and visiting classes will be required to
abide by these guidelines as to the use and care of
classroom equipment and facilities. Faculty/instructors and
visiting investigators may be held responsible for
avoidable breakage or losses during their stay in the
classroom.
- There is a numeric keypad entry to both the front
door of the classroom and the back door of the lab (same
number as the Library). Classes will be told this number on
arrival. Instructions to activate and deactivate the keypad
are posted inside the classroom door. Do not leave the
classroom unlocked if unattended. In the classroom most
cabinets are locked for secure storage; faculty/instructors
will be allocated a key for these cabinets as well as a
key for the outdoor shed behind the multi-purpose lab that
contains the drying oven, muffle furnace and cutting mill.
- Classes with students are expected to perform the majority
of their indoor work in the classroom area. Access to the
multi-purpose lab is limited due of the amount of
expensive equipment in the lab. Students are not to use the
dissecting and compound microscope or the analytical balance
in this lab except under direct and continual supervision of a
faculty/instructor who is familiar with the equipment.
- Students should only be in the multi-purpose lab to:
- retrieve small equipment items stored in the
multi-purpose lab
- sieve and wash out aquatic samples in the double deep
sink
- use the balances under faculty/instructor supervision
(normally the top loading balance - not the sensitive
analytical balance)
- The 26’x 27’classroom is designed to hold a 20-seat
(maximum) class with a flexible layout. Faculty or
instructors may set up the tables and chairs in any convenient
layout to suit their needs, excess tables can be removed
temporarily. The table shelving on the tables is removable and
can be stored in the adjacent lab if not required. Note the
location of overhead power strips before setting up tables
for AV equipment and dissecting scope use.
- AV equipment. The overhead projector, slide
projector; and LCD projector is stored in the AV Cabinet in
the classroom. A TV/VCR is mounted in the corner for class
viewing. Also available are: a 70" x70" wall screen,
large blackboard and dry eraser board. Faculty/instructors
should bring their own laptop for class presentations (use
with a surge protector). With prior warning we may be able to
loan a laptop for use in the classroom. To be connected to the
www for laptop/LCD presentations faculty/instructors need to
make prior arrangements with our Systems Administrator.
- The TV screen is connected to the networked computer in the
adjacent multi-purpose lab and can be used for remote viewing.
The TV also acts as a remote wall-mounted monitor, with
cabling connection to the dissecting scope and compound
microscopes in the adjacent multi-purpose lab for
projection to the classroom. This allows classes to view or
manipulate specimens and conduct computer-aided taxonomic
identification. Students should NOT be operating
the high-grade compound and dissecting microscope in the
adjacent multi-purpose lab – these should be operated only
by knowledgeable faculty/instructors.
- A computer station is available with 2 Windows 2000
workstations connected to Archbold Intranet, T1 line
Internet access, basic word-processing, spreadsheet and
statistical software, HP840C laser printer. Instructions on
how to log-on the system as a visitor are posted on the
notice board above the computer station. Computer software
manuals are stored in the Library, by the copy room; and must
be returned. Faculty/ instructors and students are expected to
be knowledgeable about connecting to their home emails via the
www. Additional computer facilities (more workstations,
scanner, remote log-in location, etc.) are available in the
Computer Center above the Library.
- Faculty/instructors are to sign the Station policy on use
of the Archbold computer network on behalf of their
classes. Use is a privilege. Policies are posted above the
computer station on the notice board. Be especially wary of
downloading emails or programs that may lead to the
introduction of computer viruses into the Station
network. Please avoid printing large documents – waste of
paper. Recycled paper is available for use.
- Visiting classes may store computer files created
during their visit on the "D" hard drive on the
classroom workstations in the Visitor Folder (this is the
default). All stored files should be deleted before departure;
the System Administrator will purge remaining files.
- Archbold information. The Station web site www.archbold-station.org and the Library are primary sources
of extensive information about Archbold. A box with general
Archbold material (biennial reports, etc) is on the reference
shelf in the classroom. Species lists for the Station
and Ranch are on the Web site at http://www.archbold-station.org/abs/data/lists/biodiver.htm
and also provided as hard copy in the Biotic Inventory Folder
on the reference shelf in the classroom. Abrahamson et al.
(1984) paper on "Vegetation of the Archbold Biological
Station, Florida: an example of the southern Lake Wales
Ridge" is also in this folder.
- Classes typically provide their own field guides,
although there are some guides on the reference shelf in the
classroom and also materials in the Library to consult.
- Maps on the classroom walls provide useful
information about Station vegetation, burn histories, regional
scrub, and protected area networks. Spare copies of the
original Station vegetation map (use in conjunction
with Abrahamson et al. (1984) "Vegetation of the Archbold
Biological Station") are available in the classroom for
student field use. Also available are small-scale maps of burn
units, tracts and roads and trails. GIS maps can be found at http://www.archbold-station.org/abs/gis/gisABSmaps.htm. Other
Station GIS products and imagery may be available if arranged
in advance with the GIS System Manager.
- Dissecting microscopes. In the locked cabinets in the
classroom there are 8 high quality Olympus SZ40 stereo zoom
microscopes with 8 Tungsten halogen external light sources.
These are expensive scopes and should be treated with great
care. An instruction manual for the scopes is available on the
reference shelf. Please note carefully the instructions for
the goosenecks on the external light sources; they are easily
broken if bent. Also available are 6 Accuscope dissecting
scopes (boxed in cardboard boxes). Again treat these
carefully. In addition there are 4 older dissecting scopes
that may be used for large classes – only one has an
external light source. Be careful when connecting any
microscopes or external light sources to the overhead lab
power supplies – do not pull down on these hanging strip
outlets.
- Binoculars. 16 pairs of lightweight binoculars are
available for visiting classes. Please treat these with care
– they were bought with a donation for our K-12 program. Do
not use over water or out in the rain and avoid getting sand
onto them. Report any binoculars with problems to the
Education staff.
- First Aid equipment is in the large black cabinet by
the sink area. An eyewash unit is available in the
adjacent multi-purpose lab. In case of an accident Emergency
information and emergency numbers are posted on the Notice
Board in the classroom.
- There is a sink unit in the classroom for general use, but sorting
wet samples and equipment should be done either outside
using a hose or in the wet lab area in the multi-purpose
lab.
- Small equipment items and supplies are stored (in locked
cabinets) in the classroom and the adjacent multi-purpose lab
as shown on the attached check-off list. Classes are
welcome to use this equipment and these supplies, however,
they should be returned clean to the locked drawers and
cabinets. Faculty/instructors are expected to be knowledgeable
about use of this equipment. Equipment items that are
missing or damaged or supplies that need replenishing should
be reported to the Facilities Coordinator on the back of
the check off-list provided.
- Larger equipment items (analytical and top balances,
freezer, refrigerator, pH meter, compound and dissecting
scope, oven, muffle furnace, and cutting mill) are also in
the multi-purpose lab or outside shed. Please see the instructions
for use of these items in the guide to use of the
multi-purpose lab.
- Please do not go into the K-12 storage area. Arrangements
can be made to set up K-12 display material in the
multi-user Classroom on request (e.g. skulls, feathers,
natural history curiosities, insect trays, posters, wall
displays on portable tabletop display units). This is stored
in a 10’ x 17’ custom storage area, adjacent to the
classroom. Use of K-12 display material must be pre-arranged
through the Education Coordinator.
- Use of research reference collections is only with
express permission of the relevant lab head. We do not
encourage use of these collections by large classes. We have a
long-term goal of providing teaching collections, or digital
access to reference collections, for visiting classes.
I have read and understand these guidelines for use of the
classroom at the Station. I agree to abide by the guidelines and
convey this information to other participating
faculty/instructors and students:
YOUR NAME (print)
SIGNED
DATE
I am responsible for
CLASS/GROUP NAME
Visiting on these dates
DATES of CLASS VISIT
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