Presentation of Knowledge through Virtual Museum


This publishment is the last post of virtual museums in this blog. I would like to say good bye and thank you to every classmate who has shared their experiences and put comments in this blog. For this post, I found another useful blog which suggests how to create virtual museums from PowerPoint. The author is Dr. Christy Keeler, a pedagogy scholar from Clark County School District’s Teaching American History Grant. I found it is interesting because the blog contains samples of student-made and teacher-made virtual museums, tips to build the rooms and to put pictures (tips available in video), ready-made museum templates, as well as benefits of using virtual museums.

Teachers in any subject can assign the virtual museum project and I believe that students will definitely be engaged in the task when they get a chance to build their own virtual museums. This is another challenging way for students to present their knowledge!

Educational Virtual Museums Developed Using PowerPoint

My Reflection on Blogging

By doing this blog assignment, students teach each other. We take the role of both teachers and students. To post the information onto the blog, we have to search for appropriate information before making the decision of what we should present to friends. The students need to be very responsible to the audiences who will read the information and especially when it is online where anyone can read. During the process of searching for information, students gain more knowledge about the topic because we have to go through a lot of information about the selected tools. Also, students have to maintain a blog by answering questions or commenting on ideas posted by friends. These are the roles of teachers to facilitate learning. As students, we read the post and comment on the information on others’ blogs. To make a meaningful comment, we have to understand the post. Subsequently, we know more about various tools from other people’s blogs and get some ideas to apply in education. From this task, most information posted by friends is updated. I am not a person who keeps abreast of technology so the information has made my world wider.

The blog assignment is a good activity for the class. Every student is required to take part. However, it is necessary that everyone participates actively in the activity – posting every week as required, commenting on the information and maintaining the blog. There is a sense of teamwork underlying this task even though it is individual work. If it happens that many students do not cooperate, the activity cannot move forward. Discipline is a big word for this way of learning. I think if this blogging is used with children, teachers will have to intervene quite a lot by helping to either pose or answer the questions. This is to make clearer views of knowledge because younger students may not be able to explain it well to their friends.

Surfing through existing weblogs, I found that many educators share their experience about teaching in their blogs. Weblogs are generous places where people exchange personal experience causing sharing in an educational online community. The visitors can also interact with the authors by using the comment features. If we want more information, we have a means to contact with the author. Educators learn from other teachers’ experience from any place in the world. Even though some information is personal, as educators I believe that we can analyze and adapt whatever is appropriate to suit our situations. Blogs then are good resources for teachers as they can help teachers generate some ideas to make their classroom more effective.

In this assignment I have presented 2 technological tools: Flickr and Virtual Museum. I studied many projects about Flickr and virtual museum related to classroom activities but I haven’t tried them myself. If I have a chance in the future I will try to make use of these tools in the classroom or in training. However, what I have already done is that I have sent a sample of a virtual museum created by a student to the teachers in my school along with the useful sites for virtual museum creation. I hope that the project will be a suitable replacement for some traditional assessments like a paper report or an ordinary PowerPoint presentation.

Best Online Interactive Museums Exhibits for Students

I came across a blog which compiles list of interesting online museums. The author also puts the main contents of each museum so it is easy for teachers to find the online museums which are related to their subjects.

Check it out at http://mrssmoke.onsugar.com/Best-Online-Interactive-Museum-Exhibits-Students-2871369.

Virtual museums can build up

Computer enjoyment – Pleasure a student derives from using computers

Computer Importance – The perceived value or significance of knowing how to use computers

Computer Learning Engagement – Students are actively involved in their own learning by using computers


Virtual museum and inquiry-based learning


Virtual museum is a database-driven source where the student can explore and learn in an interactive manner. Students can study an organized collection of electronic artifacts and information resources. A good virtual museum will provide information which the student can perform searches ranging from simple questions to those of greater depth. For inquiry project, students raise a question and do the research to support their assumption. They will have greater depth of knowledge as they can construct their own knowledge. This is a shift of paradigm where in the old approach, teachers give lecture and students bank information in their brain. Virtual museum can be a very good resource for students to search for knowledge to support their ideas.

Some more interesting virtual museums

National Museum of Women in the Arts http://www.nmwa.org/

The Museum of Unnatural Mystery http://www.unmuseum.org/unmain.htm

Virtual Museum of Arts El Pais http://muva.elpais.com.uy/flash/muva.htm?&lang=en This is an award winning site.

Reference: Mindi Donaldson, Virtual Destinations and Student Learning in Middle School: A Case Study of a Biology Museum Online, 2006

Personal Virtual Museums

Tons of virtual museums can be found on internet. Teachers can create a lot interesting lessons from these virtual museums- another innovative online edutainment. They are very good resources for students to learn with fun element. However, in another way round, teachers can ask students to create exhibit for their personal virtual museums.

The possible activity can be:
  • Select a person, event, or culture to study


  • Research for information on the selected topic of study


  • Edit and write research so that it can be read by people from the ages of 10 to 60


  • Create a virtual museum exhibit

By the end of this task, students will have more knowledge on the chosen topics, have information presentation skills and have acquired new computer skills. This activity can be another interdisciplinary activity for classroom such as Science, Technology and Literacy or History, Technology and Literacy.

The link below shows museum literacies in a second grade classroom
http://books.google.co.th/books?id=4UrpSH1JG3UC&pg=PA64&dq=virtual+museum+classroom&hl=th#v=onepage&q&f=false

Reference: Computers, thinking and learning: inspiring students with technology, David Clive Nettelbeck, p.108, 2005

Making Interdisciplinary Lessons with Natural History Museums


American Museum of Natural History

This museum contains collections of specimens and cultural artifacts. Surfing through the collections which include more than 30 million items can be a great experience for students to learn about life forms and cultures on earth.

Possible activity in the classroom: Have students explore the fossils in the Fossil Halls and then ask them to use Microsoft Publisher to make a four-page illustrated brochure with informative and inviting messages about fossil halls. This activity integrates elements of Social Studies, Science, Technology and English into one assignment.

The Worldwide Museum of Natural History

The Worldwide Museum of Natural History (WMNH) is an online museum of photo galleries that features excellent educational products for schools and homes. New galleries and updates are added every month. Categories of exhibits are Vertebrate Life Galleries; Invertebrate Life Galleries; Planetary Science and Astronomy Galleries; and Gem and Mineral Galleries.

Possible activity in the classroom: Encourage students to visit the Dinosaurs Galleries in the Vertebrate Life Galleries. Then have them click the image of Dreamstar's Dinosaurs and draw their own imaginary dinosaurlike creature from the photographs they see and write about extinction. Students will learn Science and apply drawing skills in the task.

Reference:

http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr057.shtml

At this moment there are 100

At this moment there are 100’s of museums and the like that have created virtual tours of there facilities. After spending some time looking into this tool I realize that the world is at our fingertips.

This will indeed spark great interest in students of all levels. The limits of normal field trips are now forgotten. There can be nothing in between the students and learning. Money and time can now be forgotten as excuses for not going. Of course a power failure could damper the virtual tour!

An example of an excellent tour is the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Online exhibits include AIDS: The War Within; Apollo 8 Command Module; the Big Dig Construction Site; the Coal Mine; Hatching Chicks; Giant Heart; and Animated Industrial Gears. A nice aspect of the virtual museum is the inclusion of exhibits that will appeal to students in grades 1 to 4 as well as exhibits more suitable for older students.

Activity: Invite students to explore the Coal Mine exhibit and then ask them to write a paragraph explaining whether they would like to work in a coal mine, and why or why not. A more complex activity for students in grade 5 o above involves visiting a local business or industry and photographing its operations. Students can then use the photographs as a basis of their own exhibit on the business or industry.

Optional Activity: Have students visit the The Chick Hatchery exhibit and write captions for the online photographs of a chick's birth.

Reference website- http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr057.shtml

Point and Click Museums


A virtual museum houses a collection of electronic artifacts and information resources-anything that are accessed through electronic media. The examples of collection are paintings, drawings, photographs, diagrams, graphs, recordings, video segments, newspaper articles, transcripts of interviews, and databases. It contains both actual objects that are digitized and objects that are digitally created. It is also an open door to great resources around the world relevant to the museum’s focus such as historical, scientific and cultural interest.

Other terms of virtual museum are online museum, electronic museum, hypermuseum, digital museum, cybermuseum or Web museum.

I think that a virtual museum can be a great component in the lessons for various subjects. It can help the teacher to create a fun, creative, and virtually effective class. I will look for more information about interesting websites of virtual museums and the integration of virtual museum to classroom.

Check out this Wikipedia link for virtual museum categorized by countries.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_museums

References:

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/630177/virtual-museum

http://fno.org/museum/muse.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_museum