By Jeff Murphy, March 3, 2021

Missouri Governor Mike Parson, left, was guided through a demonstration of equipment
used at the 91µ¼ŗ½ās new Mixed Reality Studio housed in the
Gigabit Lab at the Missouri Innovation Campus in Leeās Summit. Working with the governor
during a visit to the MIC was Jeff Danley, director of innovation for VMLY&R, Kansas
City.
WARRENSBURG, MO ā Reflecting on workforce development goals he set early in his tenure as Missouri Governor, Mike Parson on March 2 said a new initiative at the Missouri Innovation Campus (MIC) to prepare students for the workforce of the future āis exactly what we need to doā as a state.
The governor made his remarks during a visit to the MIC in Leeās Summit to see firsthand how projects funded through the Missouri Excels (MoExcels) program are helping to prepare the next generation of researchers, developers, and entrepreneurs. The University of Central Missouri, Leeās Summit R-7 School District and area businesses came together for his visit to showcase the new Mixed Reality Studio as a key educational project that will help address the stateās critical need for a well-trained, technology-focused workforce.
Joining in the activities were leaders from UCM and the Leeās Summit R-7 School District, UCM faculty members who use the Mixed Reality Studio, Velocity Leeās Summit, Leeās Summit Economic Development Council, Leeās Summit Chamber of Commerce, Leeās Summit community government leaders, and representatives of the Kansas City area marketing company VMLY&R.
The Mixed Reality Studio was launched by UCM in the fall of 2020, and is part of the Gigabit Lab housed within the MIC. MoExcels, which was implemented by the Missouri Department of Higher Education and Workforce Development, provided almost $675,000 toward the Information Technology Expansion Project that included the Studio and related UCM initiatives. All are designed to help facilitate development and expansion of employer-driven education and training programs to increase educational attainment.
āTwo and half years ago, we had a vision in the Governorās Office: what are the two things I can do to really make a difference for the future of this state,ā Parson said. āIt was workforce development and infrastructure. I knew if I could get those two things as priorities in the state and stay focused on that, it could really make a difference.ā
He said meeting such goals has hinged on public schools, universities, communities and the public sector working together. Such efforts, he said, have helped Missouri become second in the nation in apprenticeship programs, and have made possible āfast-trackā programs that help students to accelerate their degrees.
āWhen I speak a lot, I speak about Leeās Summit and Perryville, Missouri. They are two communities that are really on the right track, setting the stage, setting a goal for other communities,ā he said. āWhen you put the high schools in place, put the university in place, look what you have here today. I guarantee you, how many other communities would love to have this facility in their town, in their area where kids can come here and get an education?ā
āI couldnāt be in a better place than to be here today,ā Parson said, reflecting on visit with individuals involved with the MIC and the Mixed Reality Studio.
āThatās what the state of Missouri is all about. Itās not about government. Itās not about universities doing their own thing. Itās not about high schools doing their own thing, and itās not about the private sector doing their own thing. Itās about doing things together. Thatās how we change the needle for this state,ā Parson said. āThatās why today itās important for me to come to Leeās Summit. This is exactly what we need to do, and the only thing is, we need to do more of it,ā he said.
Also joining in the March 2 event were speakers, David Buck, superintendent of the Leeās Summit R-7 School District; Bill Baird, Leeās Summit mayor; Julia Hampton, chair of the Velocity Leeās Summit Board of Directors; Rick McDowell, president and chief executive officer of the Leeās Summit Economic Development Council; Jeff Danley, director of innovation for VMLY&R, and Lauren Hays, assistant professor of instructional technology at 91µ¼ŗ½ Roger Best, UCM president, welcomed the group and shared information about Mixed Reality Studio and the MIC.
āSince its inception, this outstanding facility has served as a model for what can be accomplished when a public school district and a university work jointly to create educational opportunities that are focused on the needs of students and the many businesses and industries that contribute to our state economy,ā Best said.
āAs the name of this facility implies, innovation is at the core of what we do at the MIC. Weāre grateful for Governor Mike Parson and members of our legislatureās support of our efforts in creating a highly skilled workforce by making possible initiatives such as MoExcels,ā he added.
During the MIC event, the governor put on virtual reality goggles, and Danley, as a representative of a group that has worked with UCM-Leeās Summit on developing the Mixed Reality Studio, led the state leader through a demonstration about how the Studio can be applied to education and to the workforce.
āI think a lot of people associate virtual reality with video games,ā Danley said. āThose video games are so realistic, and weāre applying that same gaming technology to education.ā
He cited advantages to using virtual reality such as the ability to take students on a field trip without actually leaving the classroom. āI know when I was in school and we were thinking about Roman history, thereās a lot of reading, and you might have a teacher roll down a video cart so you could watch a video in the room, but in virtual reality, you can actually teleport into the Roman Colosseum and walk around and explore that space. That is greatly going to benefit education.ā
But how does the same technology benefit business and industry?
āItās really exciting to see how the entrepreneurs are applying this type of technology to fields like architecture and engineering where they can actually create a virtual model of a building or a structure that they are working on,ā Danley said. āWeāve even seen fast food restaurants that have created virtual environments where they can train their employees without having wasteful by-products of cooking food that never gets eaten.ā
The Mixed Reality Studio supports research, application development, education and workforce initiatives to help students, entrepreneurs and companies drive innovation in their industry through the power of virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR). Using these technological tools, it has established a learning lab that is focused on creating programs that that will help build a pipeline of VR/AR talent, instrumental in building the curriculum of professional education programs that include hands-on learning opportunities for students, allows faculty to perform research and create curriculum experiences at the MIC and at the UCM campus in Warrensburg, enables UCM to offer membership that includes consultation services to companies, including access to startups, projects and corporate innovation programs, and provides a state-of the-art location to prototype new solutions and launch new ventures.
The Mixed Reality Studio is equipped with various software and design platforms, multiple headset configurations, workstations, filming and graphic resources.
In addition to preparing students, through its work with Velocity Leeās Summit, UCM will utilize the Mixed Reality Studio to help entrepreneurs take their business idea/concept/startup to the next level, providing advice, support, mentoring, networking and preparation for funding.

