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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
25, No. 6, Sept. 15, 2005

On
the job: Tony Suttle
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Tony
Suttle
is an instructional media planner for Academic
Outreach in the Office of Continuing Education. |
|
|
Fans of the
film “The Wizard of Oz” may remember the scene in which
Dorothy and her companions discover the man behind the curtain who performs
the technical wizardry that makes the “Great and Powerful Oz”
come to life. Tony Suttle, an instructional media planner for Academic
Outreach in the Office of Continuing Education, is the man behind the
curtain who maintains the videoconferencing facilities and equipment
that help the UI connect with colleagues around the globe. A long-distance
runner, Suttle also is a member of the Second Wind Running Club and
the editor of the club’s newsletter.
Tell
me about your career at the UI.
I started in this field as an undergraduate student employee in 1978
or 1979. After I graduated from the UI with a degree in ornamental horticulture,
they offered me a full-time position. I’ve been in pretty much
the same job since then.
I support our distance-education technologies: online courses, videoconferencing.
I maintain the videoconferencing equipment for our distance-education
classes here, at the Multi-University Center at Oak Brook and at the
Illini Center in downtown Chicago.
This semester, we’ve started expanding into some of the UI Extension
offices as remote sites. Joliet is the first one.
We provide a technician in the classroom to run the equipment during
class so all that the instructors need to do is come in and teach. The
technician is also responsible for making sure that the connections
stay up. Things work very smoothly 98 percent of the time. It’s
that 2 percent that makes it a challenge. Fortunately, the equipment
is very reliable. We’re very much like firefighters: If there
aren’t any problems, it’s a good night, but we have to be
ready.
With some of the technologies we used in the past, we would set up different
sites every semester in locations around the state. We’d have
to set the equipment up at the beginning of the semester then retrieve
it when the semester was over.
We do a lot of international videoconferences – probably six or
eight a semester. Those could be meetings, special presentations by
faculty members or a content expert in another country, job interviews
and Ph.D. defenses where the student or one of their committee members
is in another country.
What is the most challenging aspect
of what you do?
Trying to keep up with new technologies and dealing with things that
you have no control over, such as the network and the weather. Sometimes
the weather will prevent the instructors from traveling to a remote
location to teach and they’ll need to do an emergency video class
that night.
What do you enjoy most?
Working with different people. Every semester brings new challenges
and opportunities.
How long have you been a runner?
For about seven years. I belong to Second Wind Running Club and to an
informal group called the Buffaloes, who are mainly trail runners, which
is what I enjoy the most. It’s more of a social opportunity and
the running just happens to bring us together. We run at forest preserves
in Pekin, Danville and at Clinton Lake. Three or four times a year,
15 or 20 of us may go to a race out of state. On my vacation in July,
I ran a race in Vermont.
How did you do in the race?
I finished it. It was 30 or 31 miles in the mountains. We ran in a river
for a mile or two, through a mud bog, and they even threw in a little
bushwacking. It was an adventure, let’s put it that way, but it
was a lot of fun. It was definitely the most difficult race I’ve
ever done.
I run about 25 to 30 miles a week. I’ve taken up mountain biking,
too, for cross training. They have a nice set of trails at Kickapoo
State Park. I used to ride motorcycles out there when I was a lot younger.
I also have a new grandson, Caden, who is about 4 months old, so that
takes up a lot of time. I have one daughter who is a sophomore at the
UI and my other daughter graduated with a master’s degree in engineering
last December.
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