Meet Carmen – PLA member profile

Each month we will introduce a PLA member through 5 photos telling their Playful Learning journey. This month, we introduce you to…

Carmen Ionita: Final year PhD student in Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Manchester, involved in public engagement and science communication projects using interactive learning experiences.

Camen Ionita wearing an EEG cap
Attitude 

This is me wearing an EEG cap to show how participants in my experiments look like. I like using this picture when I am running science communication events (for young audiences in particular) because it creates a more friendly space by looking less serious in front of them.

A Twister mat with post-it notes on it
Brainster – what happens when you mix Twister and brains

During British Science Week one of the activities I designed aimed to explain what brain connectivity means and how different brain regions communicate when we are performing various tasks. What better way to show this than playing Twister…with a twist.

Cards with play-doh neurons on them
A neural network full of colours

When running events for primary school children I used play-doh to explain the structure of a neuron and then we created a network to show how neurons communicate. Less visible in this picture are the cake sprinkles we used to show different neurotransmitters that carry messages between neurons.

A desk with laptop, cards, clipboard etc
The most enjoyable research process

Being passionate about puzzles and escape rooms, I wanted to create an escape box about memory and brain research. But first I had to play many of these boxes myself to get some inspiration – EXIT boxes were the basis for the Big Brain Box. It was such an enjoyable process to play for “work” that it didn’t feel like work at all.

The 'Big Brain Box' and contents (cards, dial, notebook)
The Big Brain Box – Memory Maze

With help from many people, a first version of the Big brain Box has been created. It involves a series of 10 puzzles which, once solved, ‘unlock’ learning messages about the brain and memory. This is a beta version, as my learning from playing the game with more than 200 students and 2 adult groups (experts in game design for HE and youth work) is that it needs to go through several stages before becoming a game. The next stage involves fixing some bugs we identified and integrating the feedback we received so far.




Thanks for sharing your story and your photos Carmen.

If you are unlucky, you might be selected as next month’s sacrifice chosen member – we will be in touch!