Technology Clinic presents final recommendations for proposed Easton  flood museum
By Courtney Morin ’10
Students in a Technology Clinic class presented their  final report to the New York-based Nurture Nature Foundation concerning  educational exhibits and a marketing plan for a proposed flood museum in  Easton.
Tech Clinic is a hands-on course founded in 1986 that brings  together students from different majors to help solve real-world  problems of a business, nonprofit organization, or government body.
The students’ mission was to create ideas and exhibits that focus on  flood-related issues of immediate local importance for The Flood Project  of the Nurture Nature Center. The center will be located at the former  VFW building at 516 Northampton Street and run by the foundation.
The students created interactive exhibits and multimedia  presentations designed to engage the Easton community and the College  with issues surrounding floods. They include an interactive computer  game, a documentary, a video lesson, a web site, a floodwall, a water  entranceway, and an art component.
The computer game, titled “Dam Manager,” will teach the social and  technical aspects of managing a flood control dam. The documentary  consists of various interviews with numerous individuals, workers,  residents, and business owners affected by the 2004, 2005, and 2006  Easton floods.
A video lesson on water cycle and floods was designed for viewing at  elementary schools before visiting the museum or as an alternative to a  field trip to help generate interest in the museum.
“My main role in the project was looking into an art exhibit in the  flood museum and to see what art has contributed to the subject. Also, I  worked on the floodwall exhibit, an interactive display that shows  historic flood levels set against Easton landmarks to provide visual  scale to visitors, and the entranceway, which will project water footage  on all sides of the visitor in the entrance hallway,” says Mark  Panny ’10 (West Cape May, N.J.), a history and government & law  major.
The art aspect and other marketing tools can be used to broaden the  museum’s scope. The students are hoping that using the arts will bring  about other possibilities, including social events, exhibit offerings,  and a diversified audience. The main goal of utilizing the arts at the  Flood Project is to show a more personal aspect of flooding.
Other students involved in the project are civil engineering major Andrew  Baldridge ’10 (Oreland, Pa.), anthropology and sociology major Amanda  Berger ’09 (Parkland, Fla.), biology major Julie Pollack ’11 (Scarsdale,  N.Y.), history major Sarah Reddan ’09 (Monroe Township, N.J.),  and Julia Sorkin ’09 (Whippany, N.J.), a double major in  economics & business and psychology. The faculty advisers were Dan  Bauer, professor of anthropology and sociology, and Dru  Germanoski, VanArtsdalen Professor and head of geology and  environmental geosciences.