Learning and Building Together in a Virtual World

June 1st, 1999

Categories: Applications, Education, Tele-Immersion

A child (represented by an avatar) planting in the NICE garden.
A child (represented by an avatar) planting in the NICE garden.

Authors

Roussou, M., Johnson, A., Moher, T., Leigh, J., Vasilakis, C., Barnes, C.

About

This paper describes the design, evaluation, and lessons learned from a project involving the implementation of an immersive virtual environment for children called NICE (Narrative-based, Immersive, Constructionist / Collaborative Environments). The goal of the NICE project was to construct a testbed for the exploration of virtual reality as a learning medium within the context of the primary educational reform themes of the past three decades. With a focus on informal education and domains with social content, NICE embraces the constructivist approach to learning, collaboration, and narrative development, and is designed to utilize the strengths of virtual reality: a combination of immersion, telepresence, immediate visual feedback, and interactivity. Based on our experiences with a broad range of users, the paper discusses both the successes and limitations of NICE, and concludes with recommendations for research directons in the application of immersive VR technologies to children’s learning.

Resources

URL

Citation

Roussou, M., Johnson, A., Moher, T., Leigh, J., Vasilakis, C., Barnes, C., Learning and Building Together in a Virtual World, Presence, vol 8, no 3, MIT Press, pp. 247-263, June 1st, 1999. http://www.evl.uic.edu/aej/papers/presence/presence.html