How To Engage Your Students With No-cost Technology

Heather Calabro of CyArk Tech Center, Mid Pacific Institute, Discusses Classroom Applications for 3D

by Heather Calabro
January 7, 2016
Students are more engaged on field trips than they are by a textbook. Who can blame them? It is so much more fun to experience an object or a place than to only read about it. But, with field trips come costs and logistics and because of those two things, many times field trips are not possible.

Good news! There is an exciting technology that you can utilize, free of cost (yes, free of cost) that will allow your students to experience an object or a place without having to leave your classroom. This technology is called 3D Scanning. A 3D Scanner uses light or a laser to capture all of the surfaces of an object or structure, creating an exact digital replica. 3D Scanning is now being used to digitally preserve artifacts and historical locations around the world in an interactive format that is engaging for your students. And the best part is that your students can access these 3D files from the convenience of your classroom or any web browser!

The Smithsonian has an excellent resource available for you to incorporate 3D Scanning into your lesson plans. Your students can experience a variety of artifacts by rotating them, zooming in on them, and even measuring them with nearly exact accuracy (which can be particularly handy for a science or math lesson)! History students that are learning about the American Revolution will surely be engaged investigating all of the nooks and crannies on the Smithsonian’s Gunboat Philadelphia from their seats in your classroom through this great interactive 3D file.



Another fantastic resource that allows you to take your students on a digital field trip is through the CyArk Archive.The wonderful folks at CyArk have used 3D Scanning technology to capture significant historical sites around the world. Through their website, you can take your students to Mount Rushmore! Or, to Angkor Wat! The best thing about the CyArk website is that they have a number of great and complete lesson plans ready for you to download and execute in your classroom tomorrow.

At the elementary level, the lesson plan from CyArk has students take measurements from a 3D file (for example, George Washington’s nose at Mount Rushmore) in order to figure out what those measurements mean through active exploration (for example, how many kindergarteners can fit inside George Washington’s nose?). At the secondary level, students are asked to calculate volume from a 3D file, or understand petroglyphs, brainstorm restoration work, and demonstrate the basics of architecture in order to better engage with complex mathematical concepts!

At MidPacific, where I teach a Historical Preservation Course with the aid of our school technologist Tony Johansen, my students were lucky enough to work with CyArk to create 3D files from scratch. Through a grant (your school can too apply for a grant), we purchased a 3D Scanner from FARO and put it to use on a variety of projects during the course’s pilot year. The students, mostly seniors, teamed up with CyArk to capture the remains of a World War II internment camp here in Hawai’i called Honouliuli where Japanese Americans and prisoners of war were held.

On their own, the students completed a capture of a WWII aircraft from the Pacific Aviation Museum.

Pacific Aviation Museum's Dauntless Aircraft by Mid-Pacific Scans on Sketchfab




If your school is looking to get students of all ages involved with creating original 3D files, there are a variety of products out there to fit every budget. Structure scanners are hand-held and can be relatively affordable while providing great accuracy. Some inexpensive scanners even attach to an iPad to capture small objects! Another way to explore creating 3D files inexpensively is through photogrammetry apps available on iPads and smartphones.

As the 2015-16 school year progresses, consider one of the many 3D Scanning resources available through the websites of museums and organizations, free of cost, to you to engage your students with artifacts and places both near and far. More and more lesson plans using 3D Scanning will become available as time goes on. Your students will be excited to experience these 3D objects and places as they learn about the events they are associated with, without ever having to leave your classroom! 3D scanning not only shows your students the world but lets them engage with it as well.

photo by Brian Dote of MidPacific Institute
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