February 20, 2013

Advanced Educational Furniture and Technology

Today, our company went to the University of Washington's supplier fair where the various vendors showcase their products and hopefully get new sales. This is a great opportunity to highlight both new and old items to the members of the University who need these tools to make their workday a whole lot easier.

Fortunately for us, Steelcase has a wide range of products that fit in great at UW(as well as many other schools and universities) that we feel will keep paving the way for updated classrooms. Click on the names to go directly to their product page for more in-depth information.

 
Verb is an integrated collection of classroom furniture designed to support a full range of teaching and learning styles on demand.  
 
Node is designed for quick, easy transitions from one teaching mode to the next. A classroom can transition from lecture mode to team mode and back again, without interruption.
 
 
Fuse, the all-in-one digital visualizer, is a document camera to display and annotate over live demonstrations, web camera to connect with other classrooms and scanner to capture student work.
 
 
Through the integration of furniture and technology, media:scape is reshaping the way people collaborate in a connected world.
 
Have you seen these out in your schools? I know Gonzaga has the media:scape in their library...let us know!

 

February 6, 2013

Tired Eye Syndrome or Your Eyes vs. The Office

As I sat in the eye doctor's office this morning, my eyes dilated and scratchy, corneas yelling at me for wearing my contacts too long, too often, etc., all I could think about was having to wear my dumb glasses for the next 2 weeks and how I was going to run my race on Saturday with my dumb glasses tied to my head (I then went and bought less dumb glasses and talked the optometrist into letting me wear single use lenses for a few hours race day...whoot!).. What I wasn't thinking about was how much pain I'd be in when I get back to work and the amount of strain I put on my eyes normally.

We stare at our monitors and portable devices for hours and it does have serious impact on our comfort. Take a second and ask yourself, do you regularly get the following symptoms?
  • burning
  • dry and strained eyes
  • headache
  • neck ache
  • blurred vision
My neck and head constantly hurt throughout the day. I try to get up every 50 minutes but a lot of the time I'm deep in a project and the pile just gets higher. I do sit to stand at my desk, but that doesn't give my eyes a chance to rest. Here are a few tips good tips I found to help alleviate computer eyestrain.

1. Take a break. I know I said it's hard to pull away from the pile, but between the two articles I read, this is the highest on the list. IPN Lighting suggests that "if you can't leave your desk, lean back, close your eyes and relax".

2. Use proper lighting. Both sites have this as number 2 on the list and as a person who works in a dimmer area,, I definitely get the importance of having better light. If you can get away from overhead fluorescent lighting, that would be ideal. if not, see if you can get "the current fluorescent tubes with "full spectrum" fluorescent bulbs designed to be more similar to natural sunlight and therefore more comforting to the eyes than conventional fluorescent lighting".

3. Air Dry? Get humidity. "Natural plants in your workspace can increase humidity as well as control dust and other irritating particles".

4. Upgrade computer display settings. By adjusting the display, it can help to alleviate eye strain. Look at brightness, text size and font, and color temperatures.

All About Vision (article here) and IPN Lighting (article here) wrote great informational pieces with a few more tips. Check them out!

Let us know the tricks or tips you use to reduce eye strain in a message below.

Thanks!

Kendal