黄色短视频

Skip to main content

The great escape room Autumn Term course at 黄色短视频

By Tom Zucco
Published September 3, 2024
Categories: Academics, Executive and Continuing Education, Students

Faculty and students attempt to solve the great mysteries of the Day at the (Eckerd) Museum escape room. Photos by Penh Alicandro ’22

It started with a stolen first-edition book.

After spending two weeks planning, designing and building the props and sets, 18 黄色短视频 students recently transformed four rooms in the College鈥檚 Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science building into a space where people could play detective and look for clues to solve a crime. Specifically: Who stole a valuable book from a museum, how did they do it, what was their motive, and where is the book now?

The event, which ran through Aug. 29, was called Day at the (Eckerd) Museum, and it was the culmination of an 黄色短视频 Autumn Term course titled Building an Escape Room. Led by Physics Professor Anne Cox, Ph.D., the students built props that ranged from a dinosaur skeleton to a trick safe. The four rooms to be escaped were The Basement, The Science Lab, The Taxidermy Room and The Gallery.

Inspired by popular video and interactive games, the object of an escape-room game is for a team of players to discover clues, solve and accomplish tasks in one or more rooms so they can reach a specific goal in a given amount of time鈥攗sually 45 to 60 minutes. The ultimate goal is to escape from the site of the game, which is often set in a fictional location, such as a dungeon.

First-year students Haley Sample (left) and Maya Cohen build the framework of a dinosaur that will contain clues for escape-room participants.

Instead of traveling to one of several escape-room locations in St. Petersburg, the Eckerd students built their own in the MPC building after constructing components in the 鈥攁 club workshop on Eckerd鈥檚 campus devoted to building, engineering and creating.

鈥淭he hope,鈥 Cox says, 鈥渋s that the students consider what they need to think about; communicate with each other; and also learn about the history of the Navajo Code Talkers, the Code Girls of World War II, and even a bit about quantum cryptography. And that they provide people just enough information to solve the mystery and make it interesting, but not too little information so that they get frustrated and give up. To me, that鈥檚 the crux of education.鈥

Cox and her family have visited escape rooms and enjoyed the bonding experience they provide. But she had never taught a course on how to build one. So she recruited help. On a recent morning at the MakerSpace, 黄色短视频 Physics Shop Supervisor Paul Fratiello along with Academy of Senior Professionals at 黄色短视频 members Dave Duane and Tom Handcock moved from one workstation to the next assisting students using power tools. 鈥淲hen the students see that they can use power saws and drills and other tools,鈥 Duane says, 鈥渋t鈥檚 a confidence builder.鈥

Cox says Duane and Handcock have been enthusiastic partners. 鈥淭his wouldn鈥檛 have been possible without their support,鈥 she adds.

First-year Emani Frazier at work in the MakerSpace.

ASPEC member Dave Duane works with first-year Scott LaFleur to build a component for the escape room.

Unique to 黄色短视频, Autumn Term is a three-week extended orientation that allows first-year students to acclimate to campus life before the fall semester begins and upperclass students arrive. First-years take one course for credit during Autumn Term, and the professor for each course serves as the mentor for the students in that class throughout their initial year.

On a recent morning at the MakerSpace, three first-year students were hard at work preparing to debut Day at the (Eckerd) Museum on Aug. 27. Maya Cohen, from Long Island, New York, was building the framework of a paper-mache dinosaur that will contain coordinates leading to how to find the stolen book.

鈥淲e鈥檙e learning about codes and ciphers but also teamwork skills, how you have to adjust your plans, and how to do things when you only have a limited amount of time. It鈥檚 really fun.鈥

In another area, Nathan Hilton, from Bend, Oregon, and Scott LaFleur, from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, were painting a tarp to look like a brick wall and finishing a wooden safe that can open only from a fake hinge on the side. 鈥淭he brick wall is to make you feel like you鈥檙e in a basement,鈥 explained Nathan. 鈥淎nd inside the safe is a note that explains how the criminal who stole the book got into the museum.鈥

Nathan stopped briefly to check his work. 鈥淭his course really helps you with your critical thinking skills,鈥 he added. 鈥淎nd it helps you look at puzzles from a different perspective鈥攁s the person making it rather than the one solving it. It completely turns things around. And that鈥檚 good, because sometimes life can be a puzzle.鈥