Difference between revisions of "CLIO Examples"

From CLIO

 
(13 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:


==Overview==
==Overview==
CLIO and POP can used together to create a variety of different interaction experiences. You can use a POP kiosk to integrate digital activities into pop-up exhibits at local schools, libraries and community centers. A program facilitator can select the activities to display on-the-fly, or you could also create a kiosk to always display the same activities.
CLIO and POP can used together to create a variety of different interaction experiences. You can use a POP kiosk to integrate digital activities into pop-up exhibits at local schools, libraries and community centers. Program facilitators can select the activities to display on-the-fly, or they could also create a kiosk to always display the same activities. Alternatively, you can integrate CLIO into your institution with new or refurbished hardware.


Take those same activities and display them online as part of a virtual exhibit, use them within an online lesson plan, or send links to remote learners while you facilitate a full online lesson plan through video conference. CLIO was created to be a framework that supports and adapts to your institutions specific needs.
Take those same activities and display them online as part of a virtual exhibit, use them within an online lesson plan, or send links to remote learners while you facilitate a full online lesson plan through video conference. CLIO was created to be a framework that supports and adapts to your institutions specific needs.


==Usage==
== Educational Programs ==
{{Main|CLIO Usage Examples}}
Throughout the development of CLIO and POP, we have worked with educational professionals to create new pilot programs that could utilize these technology in new ways.  Technology would be integrated as a small part of the broader interactive, but it would never be used to replace the connection with an educator.  We chose to avoid quantifying scores and focus on the freeform nature of learning by allowing users to dive deep into subjects that piqued them, while keeping the extraneous out of the way.
With the increasing prevalence and availability of open-source technologies, museums have been provided with a plethora of low-cost tools to enhance exhibitions and educational programming at their institutions<ref>https://mw2016.museumsandtheweb.com/paper/open-hardware-belongs-in-your-museum/</ref>. While there are tools developed to tackle the digital interactive needs of museums, they often require extensive knowledge of coding and technology to fully utilizeWe aim to rectify this with CLIO, an open-source web application for GLAM institutions.
{| class="wikitable"
!Pilot
!Institution
!Description
|-
|[[CLIO Development#BurkeBox|BurkeBox]]
|Burke Museum
|The Burke Box is an educational program that delivers lesson plans, resources and museum-quality objects directly to classrooms.  It was designed for multiple groups of three to four students to share a single interactive for an extended period of time. Using CLIO and POP, students could access multimedia and resources about objects in the collection. Teachers had access to interactive digital copies of lesson plans alongside frequently asked questions that were designed to help them lead their classroom about these subjects.
|-
|[[CLIO Content Examples#Nature.27s Networks|BurkeMobile]]
|Burke Museum
|The BurkeMobile is an educational program that travels to schools and community events to facilitate pop-up exhibits. At these events, museum educators would direct a lesson for groups of up to 30 students before inviting them to independently explore their collection of carefully-curated exhibits. At each exhibit table, students could interact with short interactive activities designed to contextualize objects.
|-
|[[CLIO Content Examples#Bird Diversity|Bird Diversity]]
|Slater Museum
|This fully remote educational lesson plan offered pre-recorded facilitator videos, activities and student instructions that allowed teachers to use them, independently, as part of a lesson. Additionally, this pilot program used open-source video broadcasting software OBS to interactively embed activities into video conference software. This pilot program focused on using interactive activities as a tool for student and educator collaboration.
|-
|[[CLIO Content Examples#Tooth Sleuth|Tooth Sleuth]]
|Slater Museum
|This pilot program used open-source video broadcasting software OBS to interactively embed activities into video conference software. Slater Museum facilitators could guide school students through the lesson and how to use the activities before allowing them to be completed independently or in groups (breakout rooms) using their home computer.  This pilot program focused heavily on digitizing and integrating collections specimens into digital, remote lesson plans.
|-
|[[CLIO Development#The Evergreen State College|Indigenous Arts Campus]]
|Evergreen State College
|We worked the Evergreen Natural History Museum, the Daniel J Evans Library, the House of Welcome and the Evergreen Gallery to provide physical items, digital media and text-based interpretation for these exhibitsEach digital interactive kiosk contained activities that supplemented traditional museum-style interpretation and added further context, such as history, core themes or related information.  These digital interactives were primarily new additions to existing exhibition content, such as artworks in the Library or architecture on the Indigenous Arts Campus.
|}


CLIO can be used to create Activities, define their Audience, organize them into Programs, and then display them, both on-line and in-person, as a facilitated experience or a static exhibit. You can use your own electronics; follow the guides to recreate POP, a portable prototype touchscreen kiosk; or host it online through a publicly accessible web server.  
==Interactive Experiences==
 
CLIO can be used to create Activities, define their Audience, organize them into Programs, and then display them, both on-line and in-person, as a facilitated experience or a static exhibit. You can use your own electronics; follow the guides to recreate POP, a portable prototype touchscreen kiosk; or host it online through a publicly accessible web server.{{Main|CLIO Usage Examples}}Each CLIO Interactive can contain multiple Programs and entirely different sets of interactive activities can be loaded on-the-fly without internet access, even while away from your institution, making it easier to create pop-up exhibitions.  Activities can be sorted into Audiences, allowing facilitators to tailor their live educational experience more closely to their current environment.
Each CLIO Interactive can contain multiple Programs and all the required data is stored within the web application directory, decreasing the strain on your institution's internet network when using offline kiosk systems. Entirely different sets of interactive activities can be loaded on-the-fly without internet access, even while away from your institution, making it easier to create pop-up exhibitions.  Activities can be sorted into Audiences, allowing facilitators to tailor their live educational experience more closely to their current environment.


{{IllustrateMe}}
{{IllustrateMe}}
Line 18: Line 41:
!Usage
!Usage
!Description
!Description
!Example
|-
|-
|Facilitated Kiosk
|Facilitated Kiosk
|This interactive provides an environment where program facilitators can select the Activities they would like to view as a part of their exhibit. They can preview Activities in Activity Mode, view information about its suggested Audience, or change interface settings (such as Contrast Modes, or Themes). After they have selected the desired activities, they can put the interface into Exhibit Mode.
|Does your institution run mobile educational lessons, set up pop-up exhibits around your community, or provide tours? With a facilitated CLIO kiosk, you can give facilitators and educators the power to choose which digital interactive activities they want to integrate into their programs. Whenever you want to change the exhibit, all you need is access to the kiosk.
|Evergreen Gallery
BurkeMobile
|-
|-
|Static Kiosk
|Gallery Kiosk
|This interactive displays a collection of Activities for visitors to navigate and view in Activity Mode without allowing access to hardware and exhibit configuration settings.
|Does your institution have exhibits that could be supplemented by digital interactives, or galleries that could use an interactive infrastructure that evolves with your exhibits? Static exhibit kiosks will always show the same activities, even after you restart them. You can still change the activities anytime you want through Facilitator Mode, but these kiosks are more 'set it and forget it' than a facilitated kiosk.
|Longhouse
|-
|-
|Virtual Exhibit
|Virtual Kiosk
|Add educational context to your online exhibit with interactive activities.
|Don't always have access to your kiosk? Host CLIO over the internet and set-up a temporary kiosk on any computer with a mouse and web browser. Add context to your website by embedding a CLIO Activity or Exhibit.  You can even provide remote access of CLIO activity prototypes to your entire team to request feedback or provide avenues to involve the community at large in the evaluation of your new digital interpretation.
|Daniel J Evans Library
|-
|-
|Standalone Activity
|Blog-Based Lesson Plan
|This graphical user interface displays an Activity. Users have access to a collection of accessibility features.
|Does your institution provide online resources, such as lesson plans and instructional videos? Add CLIO to your online resources by embedding activities directly into your blog or online lesson plan. Pre-record educational videos with CLIO activities integrated into them.  Interactively illustrate concepts, review new material and provide ways to explore your collections.
|Slater Museum
|-
|Blog-Based Lesson
|Interactively demonstrate concepts within remote blog-based lesson plans.
|Slater Museum
|-
|-
|Video Conference Lesson
|Video Conference Lesson
|Integrate activities directly into your video conference feed and send online links to remote learners.
|Does your institution provide online synchronous resources, such as video conferences, symposiums or live facilitated lessons? You can integrate CLIO into video conference software like Google Meets, Microsoft Teams or Zoom. Presenters can interact with activities in real-time to demonstrate concepts or show off interactives for your remote audience. Want them to be able to interact with the activities, too? Send them as a web link so they can explore them with you.
|Slater Museum
|}
|}


== Content ==
== Digital Activities ==
{{Main|CLIO Content Examples}}
Activities are created through easily customizable activity templates, called Activity Types. You can use one of the seventeen Activity Types that are designed specifically for use in an informal education context, or you can create your own. They range in complexity and customization options. There are simple interactive activities with very little customization, as well as more complex activities that can be extensively customized to assist in the creation of a narrative.  {{Main|CLIO Content Examples}}Media Activity Types are designed to heavily rely on media and the contextualization surrounding it, and great for using collections media or re-using media that you've already created for in-person exhibits. Interaction-based Activity Types focus primarily on the interaction experience the user has with an activity and they help reinforce concepts taught through live facilitation.  Narrative-based Activity Types combine multiple Activities into one to create a new context.
Activities are created through easily customizable activity templates, called Activity Types. You can use one of the seventeen Activity Types that are designed specifically for use in an informal education context, or you can create your own. They range in complexity and customization options. There are simple interactive activities with very little customization, as well as more complex activities that can be extensively customized to assist in the creation of a narrative.   
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
Media Activity Types are designed to heavily rely on media and the contextualization surrounding it, and great for using collections media or re-using media that you've already created for in-person exhibits. Interaction-based Activity Types focus primarily on the interaction experience the user has with an activity and work well to reinforce concepts taught through physical exhibits or live facilitation.  Narrative-based Activity Types combine multiple Activities into one and works well to contextualize Activities together.
{| class="wikitable"
!Activity Type
!Activity Type
!Type
!Type
Line 60: Line 69:
|Media
|Media
|This activity type allows the user to interact with a digital three-dimensional object.
|This activity type allows the user to interact with a digital three-dimensional object.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Examples|Activity=matte|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Annotated Image (activity type)|Annotated Image]]
|[[Annotated Image (activity type)|Annotated Image]]
|Media
|Media
|This activity type can provide additional context to an image through the inclusion of ‘Look Closer’ buttons. Each ‘Look Closer’ button can display open to display rich text, an image gallery, or a video.
|This activity type can provide additional context to an image through the inclusion of ‘Look Closer’ buttons. Each ‘Look Closer’ button can display open to display rich text, an image gallery, or a video.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NICOBirdDiversity|Activity=birddiversity|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Collections Objects (activity type)|Collections Objects]]
|[[Collections Objects (activity type)|Collections Objects]]
|Media
|Media
|This activity type displays a list of objects, such as collections artifacts, that opens a full-screen gallery of images of that object with captions. This activity is designed to draw connections between a museum’s “home” collections and the objects on display in outreach programming.
|This activity type displays a list of objects, such as collections artifacts, that opens a full-screen gallery of images of that object with captions. This activity is designed to draw connections between a museum’s “home” collections and the objects on display in outreach programming.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Default|Activity=hardware|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Image Gallery (activity type)|Image Gallery]]
|[[Image Gallery (activity type)|Image Gallery]]
|Media
|Media
|A collection of images can be combined into a gallery that users can look through, with brief descriptions for each image.
|A collection of images can be combined into a gallery that users can look through, with brief descriptions for each image.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Default|Activity=kioskimages|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Rich Text with Narration (activity type)|Rich Text with Narration]]
|[[Rich Text with Narration (activity type)|Rich Text with Narration]]
|Media
|Media
|This activity displays rich text with an optional voiceover.
|This activity displays rich text with an optional voiceover.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Default|Activity=richtext|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Slideshow (activity type)|Slideshow]]
|[[Slideshow (activity type)|Slideshow]]
|Media
|Media
|This activity allows users to navigate through a slideshow, with optional “basement” slides that exist below the primary slide.
|This activity allows users to navigate through a slideshow, with optional “basement” slides that exist below the primary slide.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NaturesNetworks|Activity=salmonlifecycle|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Video Playback (activity type)|Video Playback]]
|[[Video Playback (activity type)|Video Playback]]
|Media
|Media
|This activity plays an MP4 video. It can be configured to disable the audio or the control bar.
|This activity plays an MP4 video. It can be configured to disable the audio or the control bar.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=HabitableWorlds|Activity=exoplanet|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Card Match (activity type)|Card Match]]
|[[Card Match (activity type)|Card Match]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity type is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas by trying to match cards.
|This activity type is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas by trying to match cards.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NICOBirdDiversity|Activity=beaks|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Flash Cards (activity type)|Flash Cards]]
|[[Flash Cards (activity type)|Flash Cards]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity displays topic cards that can be flipped to view a brief description, or opened to look at a longer rich text description.
|This activity displays topic cards that can be flipped to view a brief description, or opened to look at a longer rich text description.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Examples|Activity=hanfordreach|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Image Comparison (activity type)|Image Comparison]]
|[[Image Comparison (activity type)|Image Comparison]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity can be used to compare, contrast or overlay one image over another, allowing a user to interactively decide how much of each image they would like to see. You can also add ‘Look Closer’ buttons to highlight specific areas of the image.
|This activity can be used to compare, contrast or overlay one image over another, allowing a user to interactively decide how much of each image they would like to see. You can also add ‘Look Closer’ buttons to highlight specific areas of the image.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NaturesNetworks|Activity=whoseatingwho|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Media Dichotomous Key (activity type)|Media Dichotomous Key]]
|[[Media Dichotomous Key (activity type)|Media Dichotomous Key]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity type presents a gallery of images to the user and a series of questions. Using the images, they will answer to the best of their ability and, when there have been enough questions asked to reach a conclusion, they will be presented with their answer versus the correct answer based on their responses.
|This activity type presents a gallery of images to the user and a series of questions. Using the images, they will answer to the best of their ability and, when there have been enough questions asked to reach a conclusion, they will be presented with their answer versus the correct answer based on their responses.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NICOToothSleuth|Activity=beaver|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Pathfinder (activity type)|Pathfinder]]
|[[Pathfinder (activity type)|Pathfinder]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity type is a visual activity that uses a series of multiple choice questions to chart a path from an origin to a destination. Each question’s options can have additional information that is used to provide context to the choice and help shape their answer. As the user progresses, they can view the correct answer from the previous questions to help build connections.
|This activity type is a visual activity that uses a series of multiple choice questions to chart a path from an origin to a destination. Each question’s options can have additional information that is used to provide context to the choice and help shape their answer. As the user progresses, they can view the correct answer from the previous questions to help build connections.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NICOToothSleuth|Activity=pathA1|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Tile Match (activity type)|Tile Match]]
|[[Tile Match (activity type)|Tile Match]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas. Each set contains four cards that users can try to match, with configurable correct and incorrect responses.
|This activity is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas. Each set contains four cards that users can try to match, with configurable correct and incorrect responses.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NICOBirdDiversity|Activity=beaks|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Timeline (activity type)|Timeline]]
|[[Timeline (activity type)|Timeline]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity creates an ordered timeline that users can navigate through, date by date.
|This activity creates an ordered timeline that users can navigate through, date by date.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Examples|Activity=geological|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[True or False Quiz (activity type)|Binary Quiz]]
|[[True or False Quiz (activity type)|Binary Quiz]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This activity type can be customized to prompt users to select from a binary set of choices with correct and incorrect responses.
|This activity type can be customized to prompt users to select from a binary set of choices with correct and incorrect responses.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Default|Activity=micromania|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Visual Thinking (activity type)|Visual Thinking]]
|[[Visual Thinking (activity type)|Visual Thinking]]
|Interaction
|Interaction
|This inquiry-based learning activity can be used to highlight a collection of images and provide prompts for users to learn more about what they find most interesting.
|This inquiry-based learning activity can be used to highlight a collection of images and provide prompts for users to learn more about what they find most interesting.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=Default|Activity=types|Mode=activity}}
|-
|-
|[[Exhibit List (activity type)|List]]
|[[Exhibit List (activity type)|List]]
|Narrative
|Narrative
|This Exhibit will display the included Activities as scrollable list with optional custom titles and descriptions.
|This Exhibit will display the included Activities as scrollable list with optional custom titles and descriptions.
|
|{{CLIO|Program=NaturesNetworks|Activity=salmon|Mode=activity}}
|}
|}
== References ==

Latest revision as of 12:15, 9 March 2023

Add a photo.png

Overview

CLIO and POP can used together to create a variety of different interaction experiences. You can use a POP kiosk to integrate digital activities into pop-up exhibits at local schools, libraries and community centers. Program facilitators can select the activities to display on-the-fly, or they could also create a kiosk to always display the same activities. Alternatively, you can integrate CLIO into your institution with new or refurbished hardware.

Take those same activities and display them online as part of a virtual exhibit, use them within an online lesson plan, or send links to remote learners while you facilitate a full online lesson plan through video conference. CLIO was created to be a framework that supports and adapts to your institutions specific needs.

Educational Programs

Throughout the development of CLIO and POP, we have worked with educational professionals to create new pilot programs that could utilize these technology in new ways. Technology would be integrated as a small part of the broader interactive, but it would never be used to replace the connection with an educator. We chose to avoid quantifying scores and focus on the freeform nature of learning by allowing users to dive deep into subjects that piqued them, while keeping the extraneous out of the way.

Pilot Institution Description
BurkeBox Burke Museum The Burke Box is an educational program that delivers lesson plans, resources and museum-quality objects directly to classrooms. It was designed for multiple groups of three to four students to share a single interactive for an extended period of time. Using CLIO and POP, students could access multimedia and resources about objects in the collection. Teachers had access to interactive digital copies of lesson plans alongside frequently asked questions that were designed to help them lead their classroom about these subjects.
BurkeMobile Burke Museum The BurkeMobile is an educational program that travels to schools and community events to facilitate pop-up exhibits. At these events, museum educators would direct a lesson for groups of up to 30 students before inviting them to independently explore their collection of carefully-curated exhibits. At each exhibit table, students could interact with short interactive activities designed to contextualize objects.
Bird Diversity Slater Museum This fully remote educational lesson plan offered pre-recorded facilitator videos, activities and student instructions that allowed teachers to use them, independently, as part of a lesson. Additionally, this pilot program used open-source video broadcasting software OBS to interactively embed activities into video conference software. This pilot program focused on using interactive activities as a tool for student and educator collaboration.
Tooth Sleuth Slater Museum This pilot program used open-source video broadcasting software OBS to interactively embed activities into video conference software. Slater Museum facilitators could guide school students through the lesson and how to use the activities before allowing them to be completed independently or in groups (breakout rooms) using their home computer. This pilot program focused heavily on digitizing and integrating collections specimens into digital, remote lesson plans.
Indigenous Arts Campus Evergreen State College We worked the Evergreen Natural History Museum, the Daniel J Evans Library, the House of Welcome and the Evergreen Gallery to provide physical items, digital media and text-based interpretation for these exhibits. Each digital interactive kiosk contained activities that supplemented traditional museum-style interpretation and added further context, such as history, core themes or related information.  These digital interactives were primarily new additions to existing exhibition content, such as artworks in the Library or architecture on the Indigenous Arts Campus.

Interactive Experiences

CLIO can be used to create Activities, define their Audience, organize them into Programs, and then display them, both on-line and in-person, as a facilitated experience or a static exhibit. You can use your own electronics; follow the guides to recreate POP, a portable prototype touchscreen kiosk; or host it online through a publicly accessible web server.

Label important.png

Each CLIO Interactive can contain multiple Programs and entirely different sets of interactive activities can be loaded on-the-fly without internet access, even while away from your institution, making it easier to create pop-up exhibitions. Activities can be sorted into Audiences, allowing facilitators to tailor their live educational experience more closely to their current environment. [illustration needed]

Usage Description
Facilitated Kiosk Does your institution run mobile educational lessons, set up pop-up exhibits around your community, or provide tours? With a facilitated CLIO kiosk, you can give facilitators and educators the power to choose which digital interactive activities they want to integrate into their programs. Whenever you want to change the exhibit, all you need is access to the kiosk.
Gallery Kiosk Does your institution have exhibits that could be supplemented by digital interactives, or galleries that could use an interactive infrastructure that evolves with your exhibits? Static exhibit kiosks will always show the same activities, even after you restart them. You can still change the activities anytime you want through Facilitator Mode, but these kiosks are more 'set it and forget it' than a facilitated kiosk.
Virtual Kiosk Don't always have access to your kiosk? Host CLIO over the internet and set-up a temporary kiosk on any computer with a mouse and web browser. Add context to your website by embedding a CLIO Activity or Exhibit. You can even provide remote access of CLIO activity prototypes to your entire team to request feedback or provide avenues to involve the community at large in the evaluation of your new digital interpretation.
Blog-Based Lesson Plan Does your institution provide online resources, such as lesson plans and instructional videos? Add CLIO to your online resources by embedding activities directly into your blog or online lesson plan. Pre-record educational videos with CLIO activities integrated into them. Interactively illustrate concepts, review new material and provide ways to explore your collections.
Video Conference Lesson Does your institution provide online synchronous resources, such as video conferences, symposiums or live facilitated lessons? You can integrate CLIO into video conference software like Google Meets, Microsoft Teams or Zoom. Presenters can interact with activities in real-time to demonstrate concepts or show off interactives for your remote audience. Want them to be able to interact with the activities, too? Send them as a web link so they can explore them with you.

Digital Activities

Activities are created through easily customizable activity templates, called Activity Types. You can use one of the seventeen Activity Types that are designed specifically for use in an informal education context, or you can create your own. They range in complexity and customization options. There are simple interactive activities with very little customization, as well as more complex activities that can be extensively customized to assist in the creation of a narrative.

Label important.png

Media Activity Types are designed to heavily rely on media and the contextualization surrounding it, and great for using collections media or re-using media that you've already created for in-person exhibits. Interaction-based Activity Types focus primarily on the interaction experience the user has with an activity and they help reinforce concepts taught through live facilitation. Narrative-based Activity Types combine multiple Activities into one to create a new context.

Activity Type Type Description Example
3D Render Media This activity type allows the user to interact with a digital three-dimensional object.
Google material zoom in.png
Annotated Image Media This activity type can provide additional context to an image through the inclusion of ‘Look Closer’ buttons. Each ‘Look Closer’ button can display open to display rich text, an image gallery, or a video.
Google material zoom in.png
Collections Objects Media This activity type displays a list of objects, such as collections artifacts, that opens a full-screen gallery of images of that object with captions. This activity is designed to draw connections between a museum’s “home” collections and the objects on display in outreach programming.
Google material zoom in.png
Image Gallery Media A collection of images can be combined into a gallery that users can look through, with brief descriptions for each image.
Google material zoom in.png
Rich Text with Narration Media This activity displays rich text with an optional voiceover.
Google material zoom in.png
Slideshow Media This activity allows users to navigate through a slideshow, with optional “basement” slides that exist below the primary slide.
Google material zoom in.png
Video Playback Media This activity plays an MP4 video. It can be configured to disable the audio or the control bar.
Google material zoom in.png
Card Match Interaction This activity type is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas by trying to match cards.
Google material zoom in.png
Flash Cards Interaction This activity displays topic cards that can be flipped to view a brief description, or opened to look at a longer rich text description.
Google material zoom in.png
Image Comparison Interaction This activity can be used to compare, contrast or overlay one image over another, allowing a user to interactively decide how much of each image they would like to see. You can also add ‘Look Closer’ buttons to highlight specific areas of the image.
Google material zoom in.png
Media Dichotomous Key Interaction This activity type presents a gallery of images to the user and a series of questions. Using the images, they will answer to the best of their ability and, when there have been enough questions asked to reach a conclusion, they will be presented with their answer versus the correct answer based on their responses.
Google material zoom in.png
Pathfinder Interaction This activity type is a visual activity that uses a series of multiple choice questions to chart a path from an origin to a destination. Each question’s options can have additional information that is used to provide context to the choice and help shape their answer. As the user progresses, they can view the correct answer from the previous questions to help build connections.
Google material zoom in.png
Tile Match Interaction This activity is designed to draw connections between two sets of objects, images, or ideas. Each set contains four cards that users can try to match, with configurable correct and incorrect responses.
Google material zoom in.png
Timeline Interaction This activity creates an ordered timeline that users can navigate through, date by date.
Google material zoom in.png
Binary Quiz Interaction This activity type can be customized to prompt users to select from a binary set of choices with correct and incorrect responses.
Google material zoom in.png
Visual Thinking Interaction This inquiry-based learning activity can be used to highlight a collection of images and provide prompts for users to learn more about what they find most interesting.
Google material zoom in.png
List Narrative This Exhibit will display the included Activities as scrollable list with optional custom titles and descriptions.
Google material zoom in.png

References