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    Send the Marines to Language Lab

    Written by

    Alison Diana
    Published May 22, 2006
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      eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

      They train for weeks, learning combat and disarmament skills, educating themselves in psychological and physical warfare—as well as foreign languages and cultures. In fact, while they are the few and the proud, even the Marines can need help when it comes to assimilating and operating in a foreign land, dealing with different languages and ways of life.

      Armed with a new high-end training solution, the Marine Corps Command and Staff College recently prepared 174 students for temporary life in Arabic-speaking nations, said Linda Rohler, operations manager and registrar at the Quantico, Va., facility.

      The program was designed to help field grade officers—such as majors and lieutenant commanders who are responsible for military planning—improve their effectiveness, partly by educating them in foreign languages and cultures.

      “The USMC [United States Marine Corps] has a need to train and maintain a global language capability in support of the global war on terror,” according to the statement of work the Marines provided to Trofholz Technologies, during its prepurchase request for information.

      “The USMC plans on offering a full spectrum of language courses designed to satisfy USMC mission requirements. There is a pressing need to update the current teaching environment to support the growing emphasis on the USMCs language capabilities,” read the statement.

      But this solution did not come about without the type of teamwork for which the Marines are famous.

      Trofholz Technologies and its partners worked together to overcome real estate problems and time constraints to deliver two MTS (Modular Training System) units, replete with student and instructor workstations, sophisticated collaborative technologies, and satellite television reception.

      “Trofholz Technologies has been really responsive to any request weve made,” Rohler said.

      Even in a time of war, government real estate is at a premium, and the college did not have enough space to facilitate the two full-time language labs it needed to educate up to 195 students attending the institution each 44-week semester, Rohler said.

      Yet, just as the Marines frequently overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles, with the help of solution provider Trofholz Technologies and its vendor partners, the Marines were able to get the solution they required.

      The college needed two separate classrooms, kitted out with 16 student desktop PCs and an instructor workstation.

      /zimages/6/28571.gifClick here to read about how the Marines are employing RFID.

      Since officers were being taught a language that uses a different alphabet, it was especially important to have collaborative and high-end display technologies, as well as the capability to create custom course work and CDs for independent study.

      “To be able to bring in a temporary structure that comes fully equipped is really a great asset to the school,” said Rohler.

      Marine Corps headquarters initially contacted Trofholz Technologies, requesting a bid for the design, installation and support of MTS units at various military bases, including some on foreign soil, said Mike Russell, program manager at Trofholz Technologies, in Rocklin, Calif. Based on the competitive nature of its bid, plus the solution providers experience providing MTS to other military and government agencies, such as the U.S. Army and the Defense Language Institute, Trofholz Technologies won the contract.

      “They came to us and said, We want this,” Russell said. “We went out and did a request for information and testing.”

      Having seen a need for portable training facilities for military, government and corporate clients, Trofholz Technologies spent several years designing a portable training facility, Russell said. Despite its investment in time and money to develop this solution, Trofholz Technologies further customizes each facility to individual clients requirements.

      “Well physically do a site survey, and well adapt the solution to their needs. Thats the key: We can adapt it,” said Russell. “Its taken us about two years to build and develop the adaptability.”

      In the case of the Marines, Trofholz Technologies worked with Smart Technologies, of Calgary, Alberta, and its interactive, collaborative technologies, as well as Hughes Network Systems, in Germantown, Md., for its satellite television capabilities, Russell said.

      While this marked the first time the solution provider had worked with Hughes—and only in a limited capacity—Trofholz Technologies has an ongoing relationship with Smart Technologies that dates back more than five years to an Army MTS installation in Monterey, Calif., Russell said.

      “We work with them a lot,” he said. “Their Smart Boards and their software were integrated into the Modular Training System in an extremely smooth fashion. Their hardware is extremely robust, and their software is phenomenal. Thats why weve partnered with them many, many times.”

      Trofholz Technologies first encountered Smart Technologies when the solution provider put out a request for information for the Army MTS solution. The Army wanted to do away with its whiteboards, so Trofholz explored options from several vendors of interactive, PC-based boards, Russell said.

      “Smart obviously met the majority of the criteria. They are constantly improving, constantly adapting—and we like that fact,” Russell said of the ongoing relationship. “Theyre very responsive to requests for features we get from our customers. It is so rare for folks to be receptive to requests for a certain capability.”

      In the case of the Marines MTS units, the 16 student workstations and one teacher workstation are not networked to each other or the Corps network. This provides additional security and allows students and instructors to download information from foreign sites often blocked on the organizations networks, Rohler said.

      “We also have available 11 Arabic TV channels and two French channels via DirecTV,” Rohler said.

      Whether in a boardroom or a war zone, collaboration is crucial, said David Martin, chairman and co-CEO of Smart Technologies. “Its all about engagement,” he said. “You cant be looking out the window in this type of classroom.”

      /zimages/6/28571.gifEDS wins an intranet contract extension with the Marine Corps. Read more here.

      In fact, Smart Technologies products are in use in the Pentagon, the Situation Room of the White House and other command and control posts, said Martin. “Its about, in a crisis environment, being able to see whats going on at the same time youre listening,” Martin added.

      Having delivered the trailer, Trofholz Technologies installs devices that meet the clients specific needs. In the case of the Marine Corps, the college wanted Windows XP-based PCs by MPC Computers that could adapt to an ever-changing learning environment and meet the Department of Defenses language proficiency testing requirements, said Russell. At the request of the Marine Corps, the solution provider also installed software—such as a keylogging program to prevent visits to unauthorized Web sites—as well as a Brother Industries multifunction device.

      The Marines will continue to rely on Trofholz Technologies to support its two language classrooms. After setup, Russell taught an introductory class for instructors, gave an overview to faculty and provided technical training to the system administrators, Rohler said.

      In the future, more MTS units could be deployed outside of the United States, said Russell. The air-conditioned trailers can be equipped with generators for regions without electricity, and they can easily be moved.

      “We can apply this solution to many different scenarios,” Russell said. “Troops, especially the Marines, are deployed for a long time. They could deploy this with them.”

      Alison Diana is a freelance writer based in Merritt Island, Fla. A partner in www.professionalink.biz, she is at [email protected].

      Case File

      • Customer Marine Corps Command and Staff College
      • Location Quantico, Va.
      • Business problem Lack of space coupled with need to teach language and culture to field grade officers in the Marine Corps
      • Technology partners Trofholz Technologies; Smart Technologies; Hughes Network Systems
      • Recommended solution Trofholz Technologies Modular Training System; number of users: 174
      • Future plans Expand use of array of software to develop instructor-created CDs and learning materials; roll out to additional Marine Corps bases around the globe

      /zimages/6/28571.gifCheck out eWEEK.coms for the latest news, views and analysis of technologys impact on government and politics.

      Alison Diana
      Alison Diana

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