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Showing posts from September, 2019

Lower Schools (1st-4th grade) First Experience With The Design Process

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For our first, second, third and fourth grade, the third week of the year sees them being introduced to the design process (start with a Goal...then Question, Imagine, Plan, Make, Evaluate). After they understand the process, they are given a design challenge to put accomplish. First grade, being the first time any of our students will see this process, we tell them their goal is to build a tower; we talk about what a tower is, what are some towers they have seen, and what are some towers they have built. Then they close their eyes and imagine building a tower out of Legos. They are then put in groups of 2 and asked to share their ideas with their partner. Next they decide on one idea to try and on the signal, they given 15 Legos (each group has the same types of Legos) and can build for 5minutes. At the end of the time, they stop and we look at all the towers and talk about what just happened. The students are then challenged to build a tower that is taller then the one they just bu

This Years First Unit For Each Grade

My job last year was to create a science curriculum for the Lower School (1st-4th) that would excite and engage our students. Having been a elementary classroom teacher for over 16yrs, a science teacher for 2yrs, an engineering/design teacher-science coordinator for 2yrs and a STEM/MakerSpace Teacher for 4yrs, I had a pretty good idea of what I wanted to do. With the start of the 2019-2020 school year, all the work I put in get's to be put into practice. Here is how we started each grade this year: The first day for all the grades was the same...the "Welcome to our new lab" speech, going over the rules (in all the years I have taught, I have only had two rules...Be safe. Be kind. I tell my students, before you do anything, ask yourself "Is it safe? Is it kind?" if the answer is yes to both, then you can do it. If the answer is no to either or both, don't do it. No need to have a lengthy list of dos or don'ts on the wall...keep it simple), explore the

Summer's Over...Back To School...Back to Doing Science! But first this...

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It was a great summer! I was only able to do one Profession Development session and it was "Science in the Rockies-Steve Spangler's STEM Experience". What an amazing time. Steve Spangler is a science teacher, author and TV personality (you may have seen him on the Ellen Show). This program is targeted to educators, administrators and curriculum specialist in pre-K through 8th grade who are "Looking to provide best practices, instruction strategies and high-level engagement pedagogy, hoping to inspire students in STEM." For three days, Steve shared his insight on teaching science and demonstrated cool experiment, to help teachers get their kids excited and engaged in science education. Here are some of my take-away thought: "Choose to engage." Some teachers fall back on dittos or worksheets to teach science. Steve encouraged the attendees to teacher their students with hands-on science education: looking for ways to excite the students helping