Museum Makers

Students create digital support materials to enhance the visitor experience at a museum.

Apps: Wixie® or Pixie®

National Air and Space Museum

Task

Artifacts in a museum are typically supported by plaques with textual information displayed near the exhibit. Some museums are providing even more detail by creating multimedia presentations that help visitors truly connect with the story the exhibit is sharing.

In this project, you will create digital plaques for museum artifacts. Your creation must provide more than merely the date and location where the item was found. Your goal is to immerse museum visitors in the time and place of the artifacts in the museum.

Engage

Museum exhibits often contain artifacts, objects from a specific time and/or place, which help tell a story. Museum curators create a brief history for each artifact and display these on plaques around the exhibit.

While all exhibits contain artifacts from a museum’s collections, many museums enhance the experience for visitors with audio tours, videos, and multimedia. However, smaller, local museums may not have the budget and/or staff to create these supplementary materials.

Educator Debbie Bohanan had her students create materials to enhance the artifacts at the Museum of Military History in Kissimmee, Florida to demonstrate their understanding and knowledge of the various artifacts on display. This also provided her students the opportunity to develop and create authentic materials that make a real difference in their communities.

Begin by taking your students on a visit to a local museum to allow them experience the “flatness” of exhibits that are not supplemented with digital enhancements. Students today are used to being surrounded by media, and an experience that doesn’t include multiple modes of presentation will be an excellent opportunity for reflecting on what made the visit interesting, or not.

Discuss as a class ideas for making the actual museum experience more interesting. How can the use of digital tools and multimedia better help the museum convey a complete experience to its visitors?

Next, share an online interactive museum experience like those of the Anne Frank House online and The Henry Ford collections. You may want to divide students into small groups to explore online materials of several museums, asking them to record and later share their thoughts.

How did these museums take advantage of technology and media tools to enhance the visitor experience and make the artifacts seem more relevant? What other options might they consider? In what ways can online resources be used as part of a physical museum tour?

Work together to create a list of guiding principles for what works and what doesn’t. Discuss how these ideas might look as digital enhancements to specific objects at the museum you are designing for.

Create

Have students work in small teams to design and develop enhanced materials for the museum. Work with staff at a local museum to choose artifacts from their collection that would benefit from additional media information and storytelling. Alternatively, you may want students to choose artifacts they are curious about or are eager to share with others.

Have each team brainstorm ideas, begin preliminary research, and outline their plan to digitally enhance their artifact. Have each team share this vision with the rest of the class for feedback and additional ideas. If the students understand the purpose of the digital enhancement and their artifact's relevance to the museum, it is much easier to design effective digital products.

If this is the first time your students have worked on a task like this, it might help to share some ideas for components to can include. If students are creating their support materials in Wixie, you could suggest including:

  1. A photograph of the object.
  2. History of the artifact, including when it was found or where it was used.
  3. Images that show how the object is/was, used.
  4. Images that reflect the events surrounding the use of the artifact.
  5. A description of the materials in the artifact.
  6. Additional information that would help bring the object to life for the visitor.

As they build their presentations, teams will also need to consider whether the digital resources will play as a self-running slide show or if the visitor will be expected to interact with the presentation.

Share

To make the materials accessible to museum visitors, post them online. The museum may be interested in hosting student content on their own website. Since Wixie projects are already online, you could build or embed files on a blog or upload them to a public folder on a file sharing site like Google Drive. If you have created videos, upload them to YouTube.

Once materials are online, students can create QR codes to post near the artifacts. Visitors can use a code reader on their phone or tablet to access the supplementary materials.

Have a small team of students create materials, including QR Codes and/or Aurasma instructions, for placement around the museum for visitors. This team should be sure to test the codes and support materials in context.

Revisit the museum as a class. Have students take their mobile devices and explore the museum to see how their interactive components contribute to the overall experience.

Assessment

The final digital materials provide a fantastic performance task for research as well as informational writing. You may also be able to gauge student competency with informative and narrative writing. You can also choose to evaluate groups for teamwork, responsibility, organization, and problem solving.

Create your own rubric for free at rubric-maker.com

You will get a sense of student interest in and prior knowledge of the content after the first museum visit. Use discussion time to evaluate students’ ability to discern features of effective communication, in print and visual form.

As teams begin to research and share their plans for their digital enhancement, you can monitor for understanding and identify misconceptions.

Resources

Janet Hoskins. Biographical Objects: How Things Tell the Stories of Peoples’ Lives. ISBN: 0415920124

Dawn Raffel. The Secret Life of Objects. ISBN: 193754303X

British Museum - Online tours

The Secret Annex - The Anne Frank House online

The Henry Ford - Online Collectionss

Standards

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts

Literacy in History/Social Studies

Reading Theme

CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.6-8.1 Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary sources.

Writing Theme

CCSS.ELA-Literacy.WHST.6-8.2 Write informative/explanatory texts, including the narration of historical events, scientific procedures/ experiments, or technical processes.

CCSS.ELA-Literacy.WHST.6-8.7 Conduct short research projects to answer a question (including a self-generated question), drawing on several sources and generating additional related, focused questions that allow for multiple avenues of exploration.

ISTE NETS for Students 2016:

3. Knowledge Constructor
Students critically curate a variety of resources using digital tools to construct knowledge, produce creative artifacts and make meaningful learning experiences for themselves and others. Students:

a. plan and employ effective research strategies to locate information and other resources for their intellectual or creative pursuits.

b. evaluate the accuracy, perspective, credibility and relevance of information, media, data or other resources.

c. curate information from digital resources using a variety of tools and methods to create collections of artifacts that demonstrate meaningful connections or conclusions.

d. build knowledge by actively exploring real-world issues and problems, developing ideas and theories and pursuing answers and solutions.

6. Creative Communicator
Students communicate clearly and express themselves creatively for a variety of purposes using the platforms, tools, styles, formats and digital media appropriate to their goals. Students:

a. choose the appropriate platforms and tools for meeting the desired objectives of their creation or communication.

b. create original works or responsibly repurpose or remix digital resources into new creations.

c. communicate complex ideas clearly and effectively by creating or using a variety of digital objects such as visualizations, models or simulations.

d. publish or present content that customizes the message and medium for their intended audiences.

Middle school lessons for Chromebooks
Advertisement
Artifact Interviews

Lesson: Artifact Interviews

Wixie student projects

What can your students create?

Advertisement
Connecting Curricula for Deeper Understanding

Connecting curricula for deeper understanding

Historical Journal

Lesson: Historical Journal

Get Started with Rubrics

Make It Matter! Move from projects to project-based learning

Advertisement

More sites to help you find success in your classroom

Wixie

Share your ideas, imagination, and understanding through writing, art, voice, and video.

Rubric Maker

Create custom rubrics for your classroom.

Pics4Learning

A curated, copyright-friendly image library that is safe and free for education.

Wriddle

Write, record, and illustrate a sentence.

Creative Educator

Professional Learning

About Us

Get the Creative Educator Newsletter

Topics

Creativity

Digital Storytelling

21st Century Classrooms

Project-based Learning

Teaching and Learning

Curriculum

Literacy

Literature

Informational Text

English Language Aquisition

STEM

Lessons

Language Arts

Math

Science

Social Studies

Visual Arts

Add me to the Creative Educator email list!