Difference between revisions of "CLIO Design Proposals"

From CLIO

Line 9: Line 9:
{{See|Many Voices: A Storytelling Toolkit Proposal}}
{{See|Many Voices: A Storytelling Toolkit Proposal}}
===BurkeBox Object Kiosk===
===BurkeBox Object Kiosk===
{{Stub}}
We submitted a proposal to the Burke Museum's Education department for a technology project that would work to supplement their existing BurkeBox program.  The Burke Box<ref>https://www.burkemuseum.org/education/educators-and-schools/burke-boxes</ref> is an educational program provided by the Burke Museum that delivers lesson plans, resources and museum-quality objects directly to classrooms.  This program provides engagement and enrichment to elementary and middle school students about earth science, life science, and culture.
 
We would be creating the first ‘advanced learner’ Burke Box, intended for high school students.  This new Burke Box would be about the effects of nuclear development on ‘downwinders’ in Hanford, WA.  Our lesson plans followed Washington State educational standards to include content from local history and culture, geology and physics, as well as multimedia recordings and first-hand accounts from those affected by the nuclear development.
{{See|BurkeBox Proposal}}
 
===BurkeMobile Object Kiosk===
===BurkeMobile Object Kiosk===
{{Stub}}
{{Stub}}

Revision as of 18:59, 12 May 2022

Overview

Numerous proposals were drafted for CLIO and its precursors with each one improving on the last by widening the scope. These proposals are provided to illustrate the design process and evolution of the CLIO project from its inception.


Burke Museum

Oral History Kiosk

We submitted a proposal for University of Washington’s Resilience and Compassion Lab micro seed grant named “Many Voices: A Storytelling Toolkit for Community-Based Oral History Projects”.  The project would be based on previous work by the Eastwick Oral History Project[1] at the University of Pennsylvania.  We would fabricate an interactive kiosk exhibit for the Burke Museum and it would use entirely free- and open-source technologies.

BurkeBox Object Kiosk

We submitted a proposal to the Burke Museum's Education department for a technology project that would work to supplement their existing BurkeBox program. The Burke Box[2] is an educational program provided by the Burke Museum that delivers lesson plans, resources and museum-quality objects directly to classrooms.  This program provides engagement and enrichment to elementary and middle school students about earth science, life science, and culture.

We would be creating the first ‘advanced learner’ Burke Box, intended for high school students.  This new Burke Box would be about the effects of nuclear development on ‘downwinders’ in Hanford, WA.  Our lesson plans followed Washington State educational standards to include content from local history and culture, geology and physics, as well as multimedia recordings and first-hand accounts from those affected by the nuclear development.

Read more.png


BurkeMobile Object Kiosk

Imbox style.png

CLIO

Imbox style.png

Slater Museum

Nature in the Classroom Online

Imbox style.png

Evergreen State College

Community-Focused Technology Development

Imbox style.png