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TEACHING IN SECOND LIFE: MORE THAN JUST PRETTY PICTURES? Peter Miller Biological Sciences
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Page 1: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

TEACHING IN SECOND LIFE: MORE THAN JUST PRETTY PICTURES?

Peter MillerBiological Sciences

Page 2: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

Outline

What is Second Life?

What did we try to do?

Did it work?

What happens next?

Page 3: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

Second Life is built from user-generated content (prims)

Architecture

Single prim

Princeton

Urban planning (Unity)

Berkurodam

Page 4: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

Mont St Michel

Page 5: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

In SL you can build worlds that are imaginary or that no longer exist

HUDs for audience,actors and navigation

Theatron Island

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Can we use SL to model the architecture of the cell?

Annu. Rev. Biochem. 2008. 77:583–613Opening of Skylabs on Nature’s Elucian Omega Island, June 2009

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Why? Active learning!

Page 8: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

What were we trying to achieve?

Core skills module; focus on communication and problem-solving

2 h introduction and 5 x 1 h sessions

Introduce students to working in multi-user virtual environments

Context: interaction between host and bacterial cell wall

Intro: how is information conveyed in SL?

Texturing a prim

Protein rezzing

Database use

Making a presentation

Page 9: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

Cell components

Proteins Simple image Multi-prim Animated texture Sculpted prim

Peptidoglycan

Prim-based model

Scratch

Image

Page 10: Peter Miller - Teaching in Second Life: more than pretty pictures?

Student workspaces and cell wall model with proteins

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What did we learn? Students do not know about SL

Students will edit their appearance

Need simple, consistent navigation

Plan carefully (include groupwork)

Meaningful milestones and de/briefing

One hour barely long enough for a class

Hard to be inworld and helping students

Keep it simple

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Student evaluations

26% named SL sessions as one of three most disliked elements100% of students satisfied with project allocation (n = 19)External Examiner strongly supportive of continued use of SL

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Tuberculosis build

Cityscape

Cellscape

Datascape

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis: Cityscape level

Notecard

Hyperlinkedimage

Features found in alpineTB sanatoria

Quests across multiple levels,Notecards can be annotatedIntegration of images, either inworld or personal

Inworld label

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ORFs on giant genome

Gene marker (yellow)withinteractome (cyan) and accessory map

Protein

Metabolicpathwaybrowser

Mycobacterium tuberculosis: Datascape level

Drug

Quests across multiple levelsData/web integrationShared presenceComparison with other species

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Conclusions

More than pretty pictures: context!

Does not Suit all students Handle text /web well Like low-end PCs

Does Suit visual and

kinesthetic learners Opportunity to tailor

projects to students

Development getting easier Procedural simulation

authoring tools

PIVOTE (paramedic training)

Citrus Virtual (H&S)

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Elsewhere: Washington U and i-GEM synthetic biology challenge

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Student work: Gut microbiota with focus on possible rolesin obesity and diabetes

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Student work: Training simulation for environmental health inspectors

Notecard

Hyperlinkedimage

Features found in alpineTB sanatoria

Poorly organisedfood storage

Issues in kitchen design/layout

Robot avatar programmedto respond to questions from inspector