Paving the Way for Virtual Instruction Mason Engineeringâs Mark Pullen was a pioneer in distance education in the â90s, never dreaming that Masonâs faculty would end up using virtual instruction this spring during the coronavirus pandemic. âI was an early advocate of teaching online,â says Pullen, whoâin addition to teaching online himselfâdeveloped supporting software and recruited enough colleagues to offer Masonâs first online degree in 2005, a masterâs degree in computer science. âMy vision for online teaching was that it was inevitable that the day would come that it would be the norm, not the exception,â he says. âI thought that it would be a decade or two in the future, not that it would come about because of a medical disaster,â says Pullen, who recently retired as a professor in the Department of Computer Science and as director of Masonâs Center of Excellence in Command, Control, Communications, Computing, Intelligence, and Cyber (C4I & Cyber). He saw the advantages of distance education: Students wouldnât have to commute and could finish their degrees from anywhere in the world. Pullen taught his last course in fall 2019, and even though it was an in-person class, he offered online video lectures as an option for students.
MY VISION FOR ONLINE TEACHING WAS THAT IT WAS INEVITABLE THAT THE DAY WOULD COME THAT IT WOULD BE THE NORM, NOT THE EXCEPTION. I THOUGHT THAT IT WOULD BE A DECADE OR TWO IN THE FUTURE, NOT THAT IT WOULD COME ABOUT BECAUSE OF A MEDICAL DISASTER. âMark Pullen, professor of computer science ââMark Pullen, retired computer science professor
6 ď VOLGENAU SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING ANNUAL REPORT 2020
He came to Mason in 1992 after serving 21 years as a U.S. Army officer supporting military needs for advanced information technology. His last seven years with the military were at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, where he was instrumental in transitioning the internet from a federal research project to the commercial system used today. He also led major advances in networked military training. Heâs known today for his broad expertise in information technology with a special focus on interoperability and networked multimedia systems for education and mili tary training. Pullenâs goal at Mason was to teach computer networking while continuing his research in military information technology. âMy vision was that networks could improve human lifeâboth in distance education and for the international military community,â he says. When Pullen and his colleagues began working on virtual instruction in the early â90s, there wasnât much out there except correspondence videos, he says. He combined teaching in computer science with technology development in the C4I & Cyber Center to work toward changing this. âThere was little software of any kind for distance education. We took components from various places, integrated and customized them, creating a predecessor of todayâs conferencing tools like Zoom and Webex,â he says. âWe developed a usable prototype, where the commercial world followed.â Sanjeev Setia, associate dean for computing programs and initiatives, says Pullen led a project that enabled audio and video to be delivered synchronously over the internet. âThis was used to support the Computer Science Departmentâs efforts in online education, way before the rest of the university got involved in online education.â Robert Simon, a professor of computer science, says itâs difficult to overstate Pullenâs âcommitment to getting online education going at Mason. He was way ahead of his time.â âNanci Hellmich