Museum Presentation of Science

nano controller

In Design, HCI, Research, UX Posted

Museum Presentation of Science at the University of Chicago

From 2003-2008 I directed and managed the design and development of interactive exhibits and STEM demonstrations for informal educational settings, including the Museum of Science and Industry and Alder Planetarium. Worked with interdisciplinary teams of graduate students to build prototypes and conduct user studies

From 2007-2008 we formed groups of two to three interns from different disciplines to work on a particular project. Following are the accomplishments of the year.

Cracking the mystery is a current science show. We invite visitors of the Adler Planetarium to meet a scientist from the FLASH center at the University of Chicago and explore together how stars explode. These explosions called supernovae are very distant objects — appearing as just a dot on the sky. We normally only observe them after the explosion occurred and we can’t really see the details using our telescopes. To get more information we have to do something different. At the FLASH center, we build models of stars on a computer. These models produce fascinating graphics and tell us much about how a supernova occurs.

In this demonstration we introduce Museum of Science and Industry‘s audience to self-assembly, how we can use molecules that attract or repulse each other to design objects too small for traditional manufacturing. This process, called self-assembly, is demonstrated using several interactive activities, including magnetized pieces of wood moving around on an air table and magnetized strings of beads lining up in rows. 
Interspersed with the activities are explanations of the nano-scale and of applications in cancer treatment, a topic chosen in response to museum visitor interests. 


Light Benders invites MSI visitors to experience how light travels. Light can bend and bounce and take unexpected paths! Through a series of small activities with laser beams we explain how light moves inside different materials and how that affects the way we see everything around us. Vistors make objects dissapear and learn how optical fibers work.