Zainab visits Chicago to participate in the Three Minute Thesis regional competition

EMDD student Zainab Aamir visited Chicago to participate in the regional Three Minute Thesis competition hosted by the Midwestern Association of Graduate Schools.

EMDD’s Zainab Aamir on her Three Minute Thesis experience in Chicago.  

Written by: Steven Donahoe

After placing first among Ball State students in the Three Minute Thesis Competition, EMDD’s Zainab Aamir traveled to Chicago to compete in the regional competition hosted by the Midwestern Association of Graduate Schools. In addition to the competition, the three-day event also featured talks on designing graduate school curricula as well as improving graduate student life. Zainab’s thesis, titled “Users’ Privacy Considerations in Virtual Reality”, explores how users’ opinions of virtual reality (VR) change when they fully understand how their data is collected by VR headsets.

Zainab arrived in Chicago with her husband on Thursday, March 30, 2023, the day before the competition. The two spent the day exploring the city, with their most notable stop being the Art Institute of Chicago, home to famous works such as Grant Wood’s American Gothic, Van Gogh’s The Bedroom, and several selections from Monet’s Water Lilies series. Afterward they enjoyed a meal with a stunning view of the Chicago River at River Roast.

“Just walking through the city was amazing. It’s a far cry from Muncie,” she said.

To Zainab’s surprise, the majority of the Chicago competition participants were Ph.D. candidates rather than master’s students. Still, despite the highly-qualified competition, Zainab says she was not intimidated – instead she felt inspired by her competitors.

“Everybody was so awesome there,” she said. “They were definitely well-prepared – one judge said, ‘I’m never volunteering to judge again.”

The competition was indeed stiff. Of 50 participants, only 10 would move on to the final round. Zainab was the first to present, delivering her talk confidently and within the three-minute time limit. Unfortunately, she did not advance to the final round.

“Not everyone could advance in a group of 50, but I’m really proud of my performance,” she said.

Read more about the three-minute thesis competition here.

 

 

The Amazing Tong Li

Ta-Da! – Dr. Tong Li on his magic approach to teaching.  

Written by: Steven Donahoe

 

It’s 8 p.m. on a Wednesday night. You peak into the door of EMDD 392 where Dr. Tong Li is teaching his small group of second-year graduate students. Instead of drooping, tired faces, there are enthusiastic expressions of disbelief as Li performs yet another bewildering magic trick – this time making a feather levitate in mid-air.

“How’d you do that?” asks the giddy class of twenty-five to thirty-year-old professionals.

“Magic,” Li answers with a grin.

Long before he ever began performing for his students, Dr. Tong Li was an avid fan of the art of magic. His interest in magic began in 2010 when he was studying in his native China, where his college roommate taught him some beginner card tricks. After learning from his roommate, he continued to dive deeper, watching tutorials and learning from YouTube videos (now he has his own!). As he improved his sleight-of-hand and audience patter, he began performing for others – first classmates and then larger audiences in talent shows.

“I always enjoyed giving an audience a sense of wonder. Making people believe that something impossible just happened, even if only for a moment, is a, well, magic feeling,” says Li.

As a gamer, he draws a a parallel between a well-performed magic trick and an immersive video game world, in which the player is allowed to “live in a place without the limitations we have in the real world.” Self-described as “more of an introvert”, he appreciates the chance to come out of his shell and play the part of entertainer. Fundamentally, he views magic as a freeing force for both himself and his audience.

However, as much joy as magic had brought him in his life, Li had never full grasped the potential for magic to be utilized in an educational context until he worked as a teaching assistant at an elementary school in Connecticut in 2011. Li’s goal was to make his class as much fun as a magic show is for his students – no small feat. In a demonstration of how the world would be without gravity, he made a table levitate. The kids ooh’d and ah’d, completely captivated by Li’s lesson. Just as those adolescents were amazed in 2011, so too are Dr. Li’s current students and colleagues as he effortlessly weaves illusions and mind games into his lessons on design thinking.

“I love having Tong as a professor! He always finds fun ways to keep the class engaged but still teach the design/HCI principles,” says student Hailey Leonard.

“Tong’s magic tricks make me look forward to class and help me to visualize the concepts he’s explaining,” echoes student Hayley Burris.

From an EMDD perspective, Li believes that, “magic is similar to design thinking in that you learn equally from your failures as you do from your successes.”

 

 

Photographs by: Alexis Miller

Picture of Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe is a second-year graduate student with EMDD and a graduate assistant for the School of Journalism and Strategic Communication and EMDD.

Meet Dr. Joshua Fisher

Meet Dr. Joshua Fisher

 

Written by: Steven Donahoe

 

EMDD’s resident augmented reality expert Dr. Joshua Fisher is a self-proclaimed workaholic, and Fisher channels the bulk of his energy and talents into inspiring his students to strive for excellence. However, he says that the journey to where he is today is “the opposite of a straight line.”

Fisher spent his childhood in Highland Park, Ill., a northern suburb of Chicago. He always loved video games (and still does), sinking countless hours into Quake 2, Doom, and Diablo. Still, despite appreciating the artistic and design elements of video games, Fisher never considered the possibility of working in the gaming industry. Instead, when he turned 18, he pursued a major in biochemistry at Illinois State University.

“I was sitting in my first class, and I thought to myself, ‘Oh my God, I hate this.’”

Fisher switched his major to English and began working on becoming a writer – more specifically, a poet. After winning a few poetry competitions, Fisher graduated from Illinois State and began doing freelance writing work – namely how-to articles. However, despite having achieved his dream of becoming a professional writer, he found the reality of his career choice to be less romantic than he had imagined.

“I spent eight hours a day in a room writing articles that I’m pretty sure were for Wikihow. I remember one was ‘How to Plan a Wedding,’ which I had no business writing about.”

Fisher eventually stopped freelance writing and began traveling the world, first participating in the Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WWOOF) program in Portugal and later teaching English in South Korea. In his travels, Fisher took special note of how the young people in these countries used their devices for storytelling. This sparked his interest in digital storytelling, inspiring him to return to the US to earn a master’s degree in writing and publishing and a doctorate in digital media.

With a special focus in augmented reality, Fisher founded the Immersive Media program at Columbia College Chicago where he taught for three years before arriving at EMDD.

His current research examines how AR can be used in community workshops for cultural heritage, civic storytelling, and social change. Fisher wants to understand how participants end up using AR outside of the workshops and if they view AR as a capable tool for empowerment. Ultimately, his goal is to shift the view of AR from pure entertainment to utility.

 

 

Photographs by: Alexis Miller

Picture of Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe is a second-year graduate student with EMDD and a graduate assistant for the School of Journalism and Strategic Communication and EMDD.

EMDD Students Featured in Ball State’s Top 100

“EMDD gives me the chance to expand on my undergrad in visual communication and my work as the student lead of the design team with the Ball State Digital Corps!” - Sunny Clark
“This program is full of some of the most incredible people I’ve ever met, and professors I keep in touch with on a daily basis!” – Kami Geron

Meet EMDD’s Top 100 Students Sunny and Kami. 

 

Written by: Steven Donahoe

 

Ball State’s Top 100 Student Awards recognizes outstanding junior and senior undergraduates who represent Beneficence both in and out of the classroom. All applications were reviewed and scored by BSU alumni across the country. EMDD is excited to recognize our very own Madison Clark and Kami Geron among BSU’s Top 100 Students.

Madison “Sunny” Clark comes from Brownsburg, Ind. She completed her undergraduate degree in Visual Communications at Ball State with a minor in Digital Media. She is enrolled in the Entrepreneurial Leadership Institute’s Gen:i program and is a student ambassador for the Excellence in Leadership program. Sunny chose to pursue an accelerated master’s degree in Emerging Media Design and Development because she enjoyed the undergraduate design thinking course (EMDD 216) that she took her sophomore year. This led to her promotion at the Ball State Digital Corps as student design team lead. During the upcoming 2023-24 school year, Sunny is excited to take her talents to the next level in the Entrepreneurial Leadership Institute program as a graduate assistant.

Kami Geron is a double major in Journalism and Studio Art, and is pursuing an accelerated master’s degree in EMDD, as well. Kami has been involved in a number of organizations on campus, including serving as vice president of recruitment and marketing for her sorority, Kappa Delta, art director for Ball Bearings magazine, and creative assistant at the McKinley Avenues Agency, to name a few. Kami is a true ambassador for the School of Journalism and Strategic Communication.

Kami has also been working hard to bring emerging media into her artworks. Her piece “Transmedia Experience” was featured in the 88th Annual Juried Student Art Show at Ball State. As she continues into her senior thesis project, she is excited to use her knowledge of EMDD to make her artworks come alive. Kami’s art can be viewed in the Ned and Gloria Griner Art Gallery, open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. until March 16, 2023.

All of Ball State’s Top 100 Student Award recipients will be recognized from 3 to 4 p.m. during One Ball State Day on April 5, 2023.

Picture of Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe is a second-year graduate student with EMDD and a graduate assistant for the School of Journalism and Strategic Communication and EMDD.

The 2022-2023 David Letterman Learning Experience

The 2022-2023 David Letterman Learning Experience 

 

Written by: Steven Donahoe

 

The second-year EMDD project teams have hit the ground running as they forge ahead into their final semester in the program. The David Letterman Learning Experience (DLLE) team includes low-residency students Ruthie Grigoletti and Jennifer Criss and on-campus students Alexis Miller, Hayley Burris, Lydia Bertsch, Anshika Singh, Hailey Leonard, and Zainab Aamir. The DLLE is an annual project that tackles a new opportunity space each year, often inspired in some way by David Letterman, Ball State’s most notable alum.

The opportunity: Inspired by a quote from an interview with Dave — “we are all the same,” — the DLLE team decided to explore how to foster connections among Ball State students and alumni. Many students on college campuses can feel isolated, despite being surrounded by thousands of peers. This project seeks to show college students that their differences are fewer than their similarities.

The research: The group first dove into academic research to examine how to create a sense of belonging, how shared experiences affect people, and how immersive technologies like extended reality (XR) might foster a sense of connection and presence. They also interviewed BSU alumni and current undergraduate and graduate students to gain a clearer understanding of how best to engage the BSU community.

The solution: Based on this research, the DLLE team is developing several innovative storytelling platforms, including an augmented reality (AR) app, an interactive touchscreen wall, and a social media campaign. Through the app, users will explore Ball State history through an AR experience that allows them to scan campus landmarks and learn more about them. Users will see how campus has evolved, explore BSU traditions, and learn more about notable Ball State alums. Through the interactive touch wall passersby will explore stories contributed by members of the Ball State community. Stories will highlight the experiences that make being a Cardinal unique. Finally, both platforms will be promoted through a robust social media storytelling campaign. Follow the DLLE on Instagram and Facebook.

 

Photographs by: Alexis Miller

Picture of Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe

Steven Donahoe is a second-year graduate student with EMDD and a graduate assistant for the School of Journalism and Strategic Communication and EMDD.