This paper is based on a presentation at the NSEAD/AAIAD Millennium Confere
nce in Bristol, April 2000 and takes as its focus a recent multimedia publi
cation, a CD-ROM, commissioned by Glasgow 1999, entitled 'Scanning the City
.' The commission was to find effective ways that students in schools could
interrogate the diverse urban fabric of Glasgow. The electronic revolution
has shifted the paradigms of teaching and learning by creating the opportu
nity to engage interactively with visual and textual data in ways that perm
it investigation of the built environments at a number of levels of intensi
ty. The paper explains the background to the CD-ROM, describes the design,
content and theoretical underpinning of 'Scanning the City' and discusses w
ays it might be used in a variety of educational contexts. It concludes by
looking forward to the next stages of the research including a study of how
young people and teachers are using the CD-ROM and other related multimedi
a publications.