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With that in mind, I saw Peter Vogel's post on G+ yesterday on QR codes and began thinking about some ways we could use them. It would be very easy to have students generate a QR code (e.g. with Google's URL shortener tool), linking to a document that could then be easily shared. For example, I do a Greek vase project with my 8th graders, having them make a vase that depicts a myth of their own choosing (preferably myths they make up). In the past, I've asked for a short write-up of the story, including a short "museum" discussion of the depicted image and its significance for the myth. Now, though, I can ask them to write their discussions in a Google Doc and link it to the vase with a QR code that can be pasted directly on the vase. No more need to give me a sheet of paper or write a name on the vase.
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When we're done with that, we can show off our collective work in some of our school gallery space, I hope, as is typically done with artwork in the Visual Arts Dept. We don't need QR codes, to be sure, but they could add a nice twist and even give our students a chance to share their work outside of the gallery space. Anyone with a QR reader app could be taken directly to the Doc with more information about the vase. And perhaps we could even give a prize to the best couple myths and/or vases. An opportunity to show of their projects to all their peers may give students a chance both to take more pride in it and even to develop more of a personal investment in their foreign language study. Right now, I'm thinking out loud, but I like the direction and am eager to give this a try. Rome wasn't built in a day, after all.
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