Educational Virtual Museums Developed Using PowerPoint

This blog, developed and maintained by Dr. Christy Keeler, introduces the concept of educational virtual museums, provides examples of student-made virtual museums, and instructions (including videos) teaching how to create virtual museums (either from scratch or using templates). Virtual museums were first developed by educators at Keith Valley Middle School in Horsham, Pennsylvnia and were introduced to the educational community during NECC 2005.

What is an Educational Virtual Museum?

Virtual Museums were first introduced at the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) National Educational Computer Conference (NECC) in 2005. The slideshows were developed and presented by educators from Keith Valley Middle School in Horsham, Pennsylvania. It is with appreciation to Valerie Fasy, Diane Heitzenrater, Stacy Rotchford, and Greg Telthorster that the virtual museum idea, samples, and instructions are available to other educators. They began using virtual museums as a replacement for the original art history report done in 6th grade Art 1 courses, and later realized the potential for the museums across the curriculum. Students at Keith Valley Middle School are successfully developing virtual museums from scratch, and are using these museums to further their knowledge of curricular objectives in academic subjects in addition to art.

Keith Valley technology teachers have provided a useful site for learning to create virtual museums. There, you will find documents providing detailed descriptions (as well as screenshots) to guide you through the creation of a virtual museum. The following documents (created by Keith Valley personnel) have proven particularly helpful as I began developing my own virtual museums:

Virtual Museum Samples

Virtual Museum Templates

Below are links to several sample virtual museum rooms I developed based on an example I was provided by the generous educators at Keith Valley Middle School. The first sample is a full template to use in the development of a virtual museum. Use and share it freely. The room samples, with the exception of "Class Slides," were all developed by Keith Valley personnel and I modified them for use in new museums. Note that the "rooms," as opposed to the template, do not include active links.

Full Virtual Museum Templates

Virtual Museum Rooms

Alternative Non-Linear PowerPoint Techniques

During ISTE 2010, I had the privilege of learning about a new method of using non-linear PowerPoint. Michelle Lynn of Fox Creek Elementary in Highlands Ranch, Colorado along with Jessie Bertman, Kim Eikenberg, Lindsey Moore, Katie Patterson, Angel Wolf, and their students presented a poster titled "Interactive Primary Lesson or Non-linear Moon Phase PowerPoint." Their students combined a graphic of moon phases with the non-linear technique to create a project that demonstrated their understanding of their science content. You can see some examples of their student work at http://drop.io/nonlinearppt.

After viewing their presentation, I realized their were many other ways to use the platform to teach or reinforce cross-curricular content. Of course, many have seen the techniques used to make game boards in the past, but here are some other ideas I hadn't seen before.

Alternative Techniques [Note that the HTML versions linked below provide visual representations of the slideshows, but, in many cases, the internal links are inactive. You must download the PPT file to engage interactively.]

Using Virtual Museum Templates

This video introduces a method of creating virtual museum "rooms" in PowerPoint.

Video: Creating Your Own Virtual Museum Rooms

This video introduces a method of creating virtual museum "rooms" in PowerPoint.

Benefits of Using Virtual Museums

During an in-class activity of the Teaching American History Grant module on Native Americans and Technology Integration, third, fourth, and fifth grade teachers responded to prompts. The prompts and their responses appear below.