Sunday, November 20, 2022

VR and AR - ARGH - Module 13 - November 20

 Well, I guess the title gives it away that I am pretty frustrated at trying to find an AR or VR resource to write about.  I was really excited about using Quiver since my students love to color but met with a lot of frustration getting it to work.  I was pretty much left with this red photo that did not come to life as advertised!  I am still working on it, but at the time of this publishing, I had not yet achieved success.  

photo of the Quiver app Life Cycle of the Butterfly.
Photo from Quiver's free collection (California State Parks)

The app indicates that you can download and print coloring sheets to color - no special crayons or pens are needed.  Then using the mobile app, scan the photo and watch it come to life in various ways that help you teach and connect to your classroom or library.  For me, it just never came to life!  But if you would like to try, go to Quiver!  I hope if you have success, you will teach me!

Watching the demo video on the Quiver site had me really excited thinking I could work the coloring sheets into life in the library very easily.  Every time I have had any exposure to AR or VR I get excited, but I have just never seen it actually play a consistent role in any K-12 classroom.  I am fully aware, however, of what a success other industries have had in using VR.  I loved the links in the class module that reminded me of Pokemon Summer and obviously that has been a very successful venture for the Nintendo company.  Airplane pilots train using simulators and welders are able to learn their trade using simulators.  But as of yet, I have not seen it used consistently in K-12 public education.  Perhaps private, charter, or online schools use it more successfully.  

About five years ago - maybe more, I was invited to Midlands Technical College to see a demonstration of Google Glass and Google Oculus.  I will never forget wearing the device and absolutely knowing I was in a room at Midlands Tech, but virtually experiencing being on a rooftop of a tall building where I was supposed to jump about two feet to the top of another tall building.  I absolutely could not make myself jump.  This video makes me laugh because at least I saved myself this embarrassment!  When I experienced being on these buildings and being in the ocean, I thought this was it!  The next big thing in education, but it just hasn't become all that prevalent.  Students may get an experience with it once or twice, but how are we really using it?  

Two tall buildings
Photo from Pixabay



Labster looks very promising for learning from what I saw in the demo videos, but it is still just staring at a computer instead of the fully immersive experience that I believe is possible.  That is how I felt about RoundMe - great panoramic video/photo experience, but still just looking - not experiencing.  Essentially taking Google Earth in a slightly different direction.  

How are you using VR or AR in your school on a consistent basis? I would really like to know where I could visit a school that is doing it right in an affordable, sustainable way.  



Sunday, November 6, 2022

Making.....Three New Ideas To Try

 Well, new to me!  From our lecture this week, I loved and immediately attached to Black Out Poetry (Makerspaces Summer, 2021).  I think I am going to try that with our classes as soon as they do their poetry units!  One reason I attached to that so quickly is I can do that kind of "making" in my library. I have the space, supplies, and budget for paper projects and making.  

Leaves block out certain pieces of text in a book.
Photo from Pixabay

As I sorted through all that there was to learn in this week's module on making, I am running the information through a filter that acknowledges that I operate 2 small libraries - each the size of one standard classroom and each housing about 10,000 books.  I have about 2 tables in each room and no closets!  

A picture of me in my library.

After a major weeding project last summer with more books to weed, I can find many pages of text to use for such a project.  I am excited to do this kind of making.  This concept also appeals to my ideas related to the question that everyone likely asks - what is making.  Again from the lecture in the module (Makerspaces Summer, 2021) I appreciated hearing a professor acknowledge that "making" is not easily defined and it certainly doesn't require a 3D printer.  I love the idea that verbal people who aren't tinkerers can also be makers.  

As for the tinkerers, I did find this great blog - The Daring Librarian - that really focused on making with no budget.  She showed photos of her students donating legos and some of the building projects they made with TP and PT rolls that were painted and notched.  Because I have already noticed that my students LOVE it when I simply put out the whiteboards and dry-erase markers - I don't even have to suggest or assign a task - they are just drawn to them (no pun intended). I see now that I can just start by setting out tinkering supplies and see what happens.  It could be related to a lesson (like novel engineering), but it doesn't have to be.  So now I am dedicated to the idea of sitting out some blocks (lego or otherwise) and puzzles this week to see what kind of interest that brings.  I think I will ask for paper towel rolls to be donated then I can cut different sizes.  I think I will let families keep their toilet paper rolls, LOL.

Faceless android sitting with lego-like blocks.
Photo from Pixabay

The Daring Librarian also blogged about a Making Starter Kit which had ideas that were really easy to put to use in any library - even mine (crayons, coloring books, etc.).  Her blog also has entries on other topics that are very appealing - her latest one is germane to this class as its title is It's OK to Date New Technologies, You Don't Have to Marry It.  Lastly, I am definitely going to take her idea of origami and run with it - I have origami books that are rarely checked out and paper and scissors.  I can't wait to see what the students choose to do with this!  

The last idea that really resonated with me was the Making Grid: Cut, Attach, Build that Dr. Moorefield-Lang attributed to Maggie Melo from UNC and shared in her lecture (Makerspaces Summer, 2021).  This is just like the way I learned to make my own salad dressings!  An oil + an acid + a sweetener (one of my favorites is Dill Olive Oil + Lemon Balsamic + honey).  I think I can get into this - Cut with your hands, use a glue stick and build with junk mail.  Yes!  Who doesn't love a formula?

Formulas, donated items, small space projects -- all parts of making I can relate to and hopefully use!  

My to-do list:
1.  Black Out Poetry - find text pages and black markers
2.  Put out paper and origami books
3.  Ask for donated materials for building blocks
4.  Subscribe to the Daring Librarian
5.  Subscribe to TechFifteen on YouTube

Reference:

Makerspaces Summer. (2021, May 18). [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWQ6B4UnZaA



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