Lessons Taught and Learned from the Operation of the Solar Energy E-Learning Laboratory
Keywords
remotelaboratories
solar
energy
solar
collector
e-learning
real
world
experiments
e-lab
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
DOAJ:Technology (General)
DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
Industrial engineering. Management engineering
T55.4-60.8
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
DOAJ:Industrial Engineering
DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
DOAJ:Technology (General)
DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
Industrial engineering. Management engineering
T55.4-60.8
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
DOAJ:Industrial Engineering
DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
Industrial engineering. Management engineering
T55.4-60.8
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
Industrial engineering. Management engineering
T55.4-60.8
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
Industrial engineering. Management engineering
T55.4-60.8
Technology (General)
T1-995
Technology
T
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Show full item recordAbstract
The solar energy e learning laboratory (solar e-lab) in Cyprus is a good example of a web-based, remote engineering laboratory. It comprises a pilot solar energy conversion plant which is equipped with all necessary instrumentation, data acquisition, and communication devices needed for remote access, control, data collection and processing. The impact that the solar e-lab had during its nearly 5 years of operation is indeed high. Throughout this period, the solar e-lab has been accessed by users from over 500 locations from 79 countries spread all over the world. In the period of November 2004 to October 2008, more than a million visits were recorded, out of which 25000 have registered on the site and surfed through studying the supplied material. Around 1000 hits concerned registered users that passed the pre-lab test and performed the experimentation part. The four years of operation of the solar e-lab demonstrated how the Internet can be used as a tool to make the laboratory facilities accessible to engineering students and technicians located outside the laboratory, including overseas. In this way, the solar energy e-learning lab, its equipment and experimental facilities were made available and shared by a number of interested people, thus widening educational experiences. Judging from the online evaluation reports that were received from the solar e-lab users during the last 2 years of operation, it can be concluded that there is nearly excellent satisfaction by the users.Date
2009-08-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:7a85a1f2866c4f6e9adaf53535cf3c9010.3991/ijoe.v5i5.955
1861-2121
https://doaj.org/article/7a85a1f2866c4f6e9adaf53535cf3c90
Copyright/License
CC BYCollections
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