Digital Mysteries: Volcanic Eruption is a unique app in allowing pairs to work simultaneously on one iPad with a task designed to encourage discussion and higher-level thinking while students learn about volcanoes.
The process users go through is based on the popular paper tool ‘Mysteries’, created by Professor David Leat and the Thinking Through Geography team in the 1990s. Users are given illustrated slips of information on a 16 year old boy called Fidel, who lives on the Island of Montserrat. After the volcano comes to life in 1995, Fidel’s world is turned upside down. The story is used to engage students in the main aim of looking at the physical causes of the eruption and the effects.
Students must read the slips, organise them into groups and then sequence them to represent their thought pattern in coming to an answer. This is in response to the open-ended question ‘Why is Fidel on a flight to London?’ A PDF report is generated afterwards which can be printed off or shared as a record of learning. Students can also go through the Reflection Stage in which they can playback the process and reflect on their ideas.
There are extras to the task including suggested sub-questions for teachers to ask during the session, as well as possible learning outcomes.
Who is Digital Mysteries: Volcanic Eruption for?
This app works well with those aged 11-16. By having three difficulty levels, it supports differentiation in class and can be suited to varying abilities...