So… I was at the Mobile Learning Institute at the Smithsonian Museum today. I was talking about the ways museums and schools can use digital media to share goals and collaborate and create really powerful learning experiences for kids. More importantly, I was listening to some really interesting people talk about what they were doing in education.

I met with David Gagnon and learned about what his group at U. of Wisconsin is doing with Aris Games, and my mind immediately began racing to all the ways SLA could harness this technology to do some amazing place-based storytelling.

But this was also a chance for me to talk to some museum people about some ideas I’ve been kicking around with folks at The Franklin Institute. Some folks in the poster sessions in ISTE were doing some really amazing things with QR codes, and at the time, I was thinking that we could collaborate with some student-led projects at TFI where we embedded QR codes around the museum to create an enhanced experience for museum visitors.

What if, for example, kids designed physics experiments around the exhibits of The Franklin Airshow and people could read a QR code that led to video explanations of the experiments and the math behind it? What if the QR codes led to a wiki with much more detailed information about what you were looking at than the museum write-ups are able to give? What if the QR codes led to a survey you could take or a way to take part in an on-going conversation about the exhibit? How could that enrich the experience for museum goers, and how could that create an incredible — and on-going — experience for the SLA student-designers? The tools to do more place-based learning with mobile devices (and with the laptops to create the experiences) are getting more and more robust. We just have to start to get creative about the way we harness them.

And as a final thought, it was experiences like today that speak to why we need to make an effort to get out of our comfort zones. This was not my usual group of folks today, and I am — and hopefully SLA will be — better for it.

– Posted using BlogPress from my iPad