Facilities

Dedicated at Homecoming 1995, the Franklin W. Olin Building is a state-of-the
art academic facility which houses the disciplines that invent, use, and
teach the methods of information technology: accounting, business, computer
science, economics, managment information systems, and mathematics.

For students majoring in economics and business, mathematics, and computer
science, Olin is the center of campus life; here they attend classes,
study, use computer technology, and make contacts with colleagues and
faculty mentors. Students majoring in other disciplines are frequent users
of Olin's facilities as well, learning to use information technology appropriate
to their major fields of study.
The building features 33 faculty offices, ten high-technology classrooms,
two computer classrooms, four networked computer laboratories, a 137-seat
auditorium/lecture hall, a large seminar room, a student study center,
and conference/interview rooms.

Classrooms are designed to be flexible to encourage interaction
between faculty and students and the formation of small study groups.
The advanced technological facilities in Olin offer students an excellent
opportunity to develop comprehensive computer skills in conjunction with
knowledge in their disciplines. Though computer skills are becoming increasingly
important in every major, they are essential for mathematics, computer
science, and economics and business students. Olin equipment and software
gives these students an edge in an increasingly technological world.

The Round Table Room, on Olin's third floor, features a network of 25
computer-based participant stations and one facilitator station, enabling
concurrent and immediate sharing of ideas and information. The computers
are used interactively by people working at separate workstations. The
result is a blend of traditional across-the-table talk and electronic
brainstorming, issue-analysis, commenting, assessment, prioritizing, and
report writing.
The software - Facilitate.com - supports processes such as building agendas,
developing surveys, and brainstorming, categorizing, prioritizing, and
voting on ideas. It is used widely be educational, non-profit, and corporate
organizations around the world.

All computers in Olin are networked to access within the
building, throughout the campus (to other buildings labs), and to the
internet.
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