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Source:
Rosanna Vail, 785-532-2720, rvail@k-state.edu
Friday,
December 1, 2006
LONGTIME
DIRECTOR OF K-STATE'S EDUCATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS CENTER, MEL CHASTAIN,
TO RETIRE
MANHATTAN
-- Mel Chastain, director of the Kansas Regents Educational Communications
Center at Kansas State University, will retire Jan. 3, 2007.
Chastain's
tenure has been marked by numerous professional awards for the center,
as well as technological advancements that helped to enhance educational
access opportunities for people in Kansas and throughout the country.
Chastain
joined K-State in 1988 as director of the newly established Educational
Communications Center, a statewide effort of the Kansas Board of
Regents to bring greater learning opportunities to Kansans through
the use of communications technology. The center has been in Bob
Dole Hall since 1991. The building includes two broadcast-quality
television production studios, a technology-enhanced classroom,
a videoconference room, two instructor-driven studios, a mobile
production unit, a multimedia development laboratory, several non-linear
editing suites, both fixed -- or steerable -- and transportable
KU-Band uplink capabilities, a low-power television station, and
Cable Channel 8, serving Manhattan and Junction City. The facility
was named in honor of former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas.
"Dr.
Chastain has done a simply outstanding job of visualizing a professional
television, video production and media creation center to assist
the university in teaching and learning and telling its story to
the world," said Elizabeth Unger, vice provost for academic
services and technology and dean of continuing education at K-State.
"Under
his leadership, the facility was created, thousands of high school
students across the nation learned Spanish in schools that did not
have a teacher of modern languages, and coverage of university and
state events like the Landon Lecture Series and the governor's annual
State of the State address were made available to the citizens of
Kansas," Unger said. "Mel will be sorely missed but he
has left the Educational Communications Center in a position of
stable prominence."
The
center supports the educational, informational and training needs
of a wide variety of clients through conventional videotape or discs,
multimedia or via the Internet.
Members
of the center's staff assist university faculty members whose needs
can range from videotaping lectures to the production of entire
mediated courses. For nearly two decades, a nationally distributed
Educational Communications Center program has enabled high school
students to learn Spanish via satellite and interactive DVD. Kansas
attorneys also regularly earn continuing legal education credits
through center programming.
One
of the most visible of the center's activities is providing video
for the video boards at home K-State football and men's and women's
basketball games. Among some of the more noted projects the center
has been involved with included providing worldwide video feeds
for the GlobalFlyer world record flight. In addition, as a Kansas
Board of Regents facility, the center collaborates on educational
programs and projects with all of the state's Regents institutions.
During
Chastain's tenure, the Educational Communication Center's staff
has won more than 50 state and national awards for its educational
programming and advancements, including several University Continuing
Education Association Distance Learning Community Program of Excellence
Awards, multiple American Distance Education Consortium Excellence
in Distance Education Awards and numerous Telly Awards.
"I
am most proud of the staff we have here at the Educational Communications
Center," Chastain said. "We have a great building and
the latest equipment, but to be successful, we must have people
who are what I call good 'translators.'
"Our
first task is to listen carefully to the faculty, staff or administrator
and help them identify the public they're trying to reach, the message
they need to communicate and the 'change in behavior' they wish
to create as the result of that interactive experience. From that
information, we work closely with each client to tell the story
that achieves that objective. Each member of our staff is an excellent
'storyteller,'" he said.
Chastain,
who was born in Baldwin City, earned his bachelor's degree in radio-TV-film
and his master's degree in communicative arts, both from the University
of Denver, and his doctorate in educational administration from
Texas A&M University. He began his career in educational television
at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, and the
University of California at Berkeley. At Texas A&M, Chastain
established a multiple-channel campus closed circuit TV system,
a PBS television station, an NPR radio station and a contract productions
unit. He taught journalism and mass communications at the undergraduate
level, and curriculum design and learning theory at the graduate
level while he was a member of the Texas A&M graduate faculty.
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