Sunday, September 28, 2014

Lincoln's Online Museum and the Google OpenGallery Project

Lincoln's Online Museum

Lincoln School in Nepal was invited to participate in the beta test of the Google OpenGallery Project (https://www.google.com/opengallery), part of the Google Cultural Institute. The project allows museums, galleries, and individuals to display art, images, videos, and text in a format online that is similar to the experience of being at a sophisticated interactive museum.

The project is still developing, but now at Lincoln, we have our very own online gallery, located at: 


Google has provided the school with an online consultant located in Paris, and in return, we provided Google with feedback. 

The school has been able to create numerous exhibits with the Open Gallery. The vision for our museum gallery is to showcase exemplary work of the school community, raise the profile of the school, and to provide a new platform for the expression of school projects.

Our museum gallery was a perfect fit for AP Art student Yazmin’s exhibit "The Nepal Collection” (http://goo.gl/OYkG0s) as an example of exemplary work. 

One of the interesting features of the Open Gallery is how pictures are rendered. Normally when you create a web page, you want to use low quality images, otherwise it would take forever to load the page, something we are especially sensitive to, located in bandwidth poor Nepal. The Open Gallery is different. You upload high definition images and the Open Gallery automatically adjusts the image. This allows you to zoom in on images, taking advantage of all the pixels available as seen in the picture the below, taken by Peter Hennigar. Peter is one of our faculty and a fellow museum curator. The photo is featured in the "Exploring Nepal Exhibit “ (http://goo.gl/uYxoMj).


Magnified on the Gallery page - photo by Peter Hennigar

Visit our museum, checkout an exhibit, click on a picture and then use the magnification tool to zoom in on any part of a picture. Enjoy your visit!  

Go to Google's Open Gallery and sign up for an invitation. Once you get an account, you can add administrators and curators, and multiple exhibits. 

Besides the school's Google OpenGallery, I also manage my own OpenGallery that I hope to publish soon on my travel blog site: "Remember; no matter where you go, there you are."

The personal gallery will include stories and images of over 40 years of travels around the world, for example:




Create, curate, and spread the culture.

Bill Willis
Director of Technology

Lincoln School Nepal

The Functionality Overlap


Who is doing what to solve the various common problems and tasks we have at international schools? Several years ago at a NESA (Near East, South Asia) Virtual School conference we asked that question. We had a breakout meeting on student information systems then quickly realized there were many more concerns we either had in common. Warren Apel, who at that time was the Director of Technology at the American Embassy School in New Delhi created a shared Google SpreadSheet called the “Functionality Overlap”.

The collaborative document went beyond the question “which student information system are you using.” As a group we tried to capture many of the common processes of schools and added statements such as:

  • Athletic office uses a calendar to manage locations for athletic events
  • Teacher sends a parent of a student in their class an email
  • Teacher checks to see if a technology device (video camera, laptop cart, digital microscope, etc) is available from the technology department to check out
  • A teacher creates a website for their classroom
  • A principal sends a newsletter to parents 



Soon we had a list of over 100 common tasks schools faced. Each of us at the meeting took a column and added how our school dealt with the job. 

Over the years the document has flowed passed the borders of NESA and now includes over 40 schools from Europe to East Asia. There are currently 150 editors in the document.

New tasks/questions have continually been added to the list.



Around the world, school administrators and tech administrators have been using the document for comparison, planning and inspiration. Need help customizing your student information system? Use the document to see who else uses the same product. Maybe they or another school are using the same solution, but to solve another problem you have. It is a great resource and can be even better if your school is adding to it.

When you contribute to the document, an interesting side effect occurs.  Not only are you helping people understand your school, but you start to understand your own school a little more.  You realize that for some tasks, you might have 5 different systems in place.  And you realize that you might be paying a lot of money for a system that only does one task at your school.  As you scan sideways across the document, you see how other schools solved problems that you have.  And then you can start to make deeper connections.  

To see the document, visit: http://goo.gl/jR3pOQ

If you need to update your school’s data, or wish to add your school, send a request to become an editor of the Functionality Overlap document to Bill Willis at bill@macwillis.org or Warren Apel at warren.apel@gmail.com.

Bill Willis
Director of Technology
Lincoln School Nepal

Warren Apel
Director of Educational Technology
International School of Amsterdam