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UBC alumna Ernielly Leo uses an augmented reality app to tour Vancouver's historic Chinatown neighbourhood. Developed by UBC professor Siobh‡n McPhee and students, the app is a historical walking tour that uses geolocation and audio files to enhance a user's experience. (Photo by Abigail Saxton)
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Open Dialogues: Using augmented reality to enhance learning

By Abigail Saxton on July 18, 2018

In a media-rich world, UBC geography professor Siobhán McPhee is using technology for her students’ advantage.

In collaboration with students and the university’s Emerging Media Lab, McPhee developed an app utilizing augmented reality to create an urban history tour of Vancouver’s historic Chinatown and Downtown Eastside neighbourhoods following the influence of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the late 19th century.

One of her pedagogical aims, she said, is to mimic the technology students use on their smartphones.

“Educational technologies allow the instructor and the student to have more of an ownership of their own learning,” she said. “I really believe in combining the idea of active learning and experiential learning.”

Part of that idea, she said, was to expand traditional learning spaces beyond the classroom walls. The app allows students to travel through some of the Vancouver spaces covered in McPhee’s Geography 121 course, Geography, Environment and Globalization.

“It makes the urban environment the classroom but also makes everyday life a learning experience,” she said.

That’s the nature of the discipline, she said, making open approaches ideal for studying geography in a contemporary context while maintaining relevance for students.  

Ernielly Leo, one of the app’s student developers, said the app’s use of augmented reality excels in allowing people to learn experientially and at their own pace.

“Learning styles vary and augmented reality connects you with your learning — it’s not just textbooks and theories,” she said. “This is a walking tour that can be used by a lot of people — not just those who are in higher education.”

Echoing that sentiment, McPhee’s teaching philosophy is inclusive of approaches that make education accessible and relevant to more students. It is one of her missions, she said, to empower students and make them active partners in their learning.

“I see education as the ultimate equalizer,” she said. “Open is about that ability to take education as it was in the past — a very elitist idea — and making it available to anyone who wants it.”


To download the walking tour app, visit the Apple App Store or Google Play Store and search for “UBC Vantage College Walking Tour.”

The CTLT is located on the ancestral and unceded territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ - speaking xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) peoples. These lands have long been a place of learning for Musqueam, with cultural and traditional knowledge passed down from generation to generation for thousands of years.

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