Exploring the Collaboration Possibilities of Distributed Making for Storytelling Using 3D Printing Pens

Date

2021-10-23

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

El-Ashry, Amina H. et al.; Exploring the Collaboration Possibilities of Distributed Making for Storytelling Using 3D Printing Pens; CSCW '21: Companion Publication of the 2021 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing, Pages 44–48, 23 October, 2021; https://doi.org/10.1145/3462204.3481755

Rights

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Abstract

As digital making tools, such as 3D printers and laser cutters, become more affordable and easier to use by non-experts, new opportunities arise for geographically distributed designers to use them collaboratively and at a distance. In this exploratory study, we investigated the possibilities of a 3D printing pen for collaboratively creating multimodal stories around the themes of ecology and climate change for elementary school-aged children. Our interdisciplinary team of four students met regularly over a video link and used shared documents and 3D pens to create a multimodal adventure book, with audio and tactile elements, that we then used as a design probe to elicit feedback from experienced community science educators working with children about the possibilities of using hands-on distributed collaborative techniques in the future. We found that using this approach is promising for facilitating creative verbal and visual collaboration at a distance, and using tactile and audio representations with narrative elements provides new ways to reflect on complex topics, such as climate change.