STEM in Primary

STEM in Primary
A blog for those interested in primary school STEM education

Thursday, 14 December 2017

What are teachers doing?

What are teachers doing?

There are many Australian teachers who have embraced the call to improve STEM offerings in the primary classroom and have been noticed internationally. Two standouts are  Rick Johnson who was a finalist in last year's Global Teachers Prize. He has created a fantastic STEM classroom at Rostrata Primary School in Perth and runs a website to help other teachers with resources and inspiration.

Then there is Eleni Kyritsis who, apart from many other things, has started the organisation TeachTechPlay to help other teachers bring technology into the classroom. Her efforts include a regular YouTube channel with various guest teachers from around the world and conferences which bring in various experts in their field.

Then there are many teachers who are taking advantage of the great number of free professional development resources available including the Uni of Adelaide's Digital Technologies Massive Open Online CourseGoogle's Computational Thinking CourseGoogle's Certified Educator ProgramMicrosoft's Certifed Educator Program and the UKs brilliant Barefoot Computing website. These resources are actually open to everyone so if you are not a teacher but want to learn more then visit any of these sites.

So hopefully you are hearing about various teachers at your school upskilling themselves so they can deliver the new Technologies subjects with confidence and authority.

To finish, this past week was the annual global Hour Of Code initiative. Australia is always on holidays when it runs but you can still use these activities to fill in an hour or so over the break. Just Google "Hour of Code"!
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Stuff in the news

Brisbane teachers keen on mixed reality, robotics and wearable tech - Sixty-five teachers are converging on the Brisbane CBD this week to learn how to use mixed reality, robotics and wearable technology in their classrooms.. An article from EducationHQ Australia 1 November 2017
How to ensure AI is good for girls: a robot for every child - The gender imbalance in AI and robotics could have serious implications for the world AI algorithms shape. An article from the Sydney Morning Herald 6 November 2017.
7 skills your child needs to survive the changing world of work - Education may be the passport to the future, but for all the good teaching out there, it would seem that schools are failing to impart some of the most important life skills, according to one educational expert. An article from the World Economic Forum website 4 September 2017

Stuff to buy

Its that time of year!

A Spot-On Gift Guide Of STEM Toys For Kids - An article from the Huffington Post 11 November 2017
Top Tech (STEM) Gifts for Kids Aged 5, 6 and 7 - Coding, Robots, Gadgets - A blog post from Tech Age Kids 
Top Tech (STEM) Gifts for Kids Aged 8, 9 and 10 - Coding, Robots, Gadgets, Maker - A blog post from Tech Age Kids
*At this point in time I earn no money from any product I list and I am not affiliated with any other company.

Stuff in education


Why Australia is falling behind in teaching keyboarding and handwriting - The skills and learning attached to handwriting are not automatically subsumed into keyboarding. While both promote fine motor skill development, they are distinctly different yet equally important. An article from EduResearch Matters 25 September 2017
AI: Urgent need to 'reconceive schooling' to ensure workforce not consigned to joblessness - Schools must urgently adapt to confront the enormous challenges presented by artificial intelligence, according to leading educators who are calling for an overhaul to curriculum, assessment and teaching methods. An article fromABC News 2 November 2017
Something's gone badly wrong with teaching - Econocrats have finally twigged that the big problem with the nation's education and training system isn't its high-cost to budgets, but its failure to provide enough of our youth with the skills they need to get and keep a decent job. An article from the Sydney Morning Herald 11 November 2017.

Stuff to do Australia Wide

Code Camp - Three day holiday program is now open for bookings.
5 Podcasts That Will Change The Way Your Kids See The World (and that you’ll enjoy too) - A list of five podcasts that will entertain your kids and they will learn something along the way!
Give a Child the Gift of Science - A great collection of activities you can do at home
CSIRO CREST Program - CREativity in Science and Technology. Engage your students with open-ended science investigations and technology projects through the CREST program.
- - -
Young Engineers Australia - Provides an engaging, hands-on learning platform using LEGO® and K’nex® assembly kits
CoderDojo - A volunteer run programming club
Code Club Australia - A global network of coding clubs for kids aged 9 to 11.

Stuff to do in Brisbane

RoboGals - Register to be the first to book for workshops on 15 and 16 December 2017.
Brainiac Live - Join the Brainiacs for an actioned-packed hour of incredible experiments and explosive high energy entertainment. 9-13 January 2018.
- - -
SLQ Digital Futures - Each year the State Library of Queensland presents a theme of interest to the Queensland community. Throughout 2017, they invite you to join in exploring Digital Futures.
STEM in a Box has ongoing coding, robotics and 3D printing activities
Brisbane Library Service has purchased the very flash NAO Robot and is showing it off in various libraries.
The Cube at QUT has a number of changing programs. 
Brisbane Planetarium - Features entertaining and informative shows for adults and children
STEAMPUNX - Not to be confused with the organisation above! Offers in-school and out of school workshop programs
Flying Fox Studios - A studio offering programs in the arts, music and construction areas from babies to teenagers in Brisbane
It's Rocket Science School Incursions - Educational and fully interactive project based rocket science incursions for primary and secondary schools in a safe and empowering learning environment.

Sunday, 12 November 2017

What are other schools doing?

What are other schools doing?

You might be happy with what your school is doing with STEM or you might not. However I think the best way to form an opinion is to know what other schools are doing around Australia and then you can yardstick your school against them. So I will now do a short tour around Australia to showcase what some schools are getting their kids into.
Gordon East Public School in NSW runs a robotics program as part of the curriculum. All students from 2-6 get one hour per week in a dedicated "Lego Robotics Room". The school has an excellent array of resources and steps the children through the Lego Wedo platform in years 3 and 4 before moving to the more advanced NXT robots in years 5 and 6.
Rostrata Primary School in WA is fortunate to have on staff a Science Specialist Support Teacher who was a top ten finalist in the Global Teacher Prize awards in 2016. Rick Johnson's students get to work in the school's (and Australia's first) science laboratory designed specifically for young children.They work with augmented reality, 3D printing and robotics.
Holy Family Primary School in the ACT has collaborated with the two local universities to develop key learning experiences which become the STEM units that the children work through. The outcomes of these are monitored and measured by the universities for the growth in ‘thinking’ generated by the activities. 
Woodend Primary School in Victoria has facilitated the training of two maths and science specialists who then mentored other teachers in the school. They provide a rich science program and run regular STEM days and a STEM club.
The newest primary school in QLD is near Caloundra and is set to open in 2018 and will have a robotics lab, recording studio, innovation hub and an indoor sports and performance centre.
IONA Presentation Primary School in WA has created a Makerspace which is equipped with resources to allow learning in coding and robotics, engineering and electronics. The school also has teams which participate in the Australia wide First Lego League robotics competition.
What sets these schools apart is a willingness to embrace the advice of experts and the direction given by government that STEM literacy is vitally important to the children of today. They have come up with not just a vision but a plan of how to realise that vision and they are implementing it. The students then reap the rewards! If your school is not Transforming STEM Teaching then there are extra-curricular activities you can do at a cost.
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Stuff in the news

Apple CEO Tim Cook: Learn to code, it’s more important than English as a second language - what I am saying is that this is a language that you can [use to] express yourself to 7 billion people in the world. An article from CNBC 12 October 2017
STEM enrolments show shift in gender equity - It’s gone widely unreported that the new data from the Department of Education and Training’s u-Cube stats shows rare good news in changing perceptions of STEM. An article from EducationHQ 16 October 2017
This is the one skill your child needs for the jobs of the future - The World Economic Forum has just released its Human Capital Report with the subtitle “Preparing People for the Future of Work”. An article from the World Economic Forum website 15 September 2017

Stuff to buy

Coding Books for Young Kids - The Tech Age Kids Blog has put together a list of coding related books for younger kids.
*At this point in time I earn no money from any product I list and I am not affiliated with any other company.

Stuff in education

How to Flatten Your Classroom and Encourage Authentic Writing Through Blogging - Blogging allows connections with others and can provide immediate feedback. It is one way to encurage kids to write. An article from Edsurge 7 December 2016.
We must get school leaders to see the value of investing time and money into Professional Development - Keeping up with the latest skills and technology is challenging, and many times, educators simply don’t know what technologies are available to help them in their classrooms. An article from Daily Edventures10 October 2017.
Twenty ideas for our schools and politicians in the new machine age - 20 ideas for how our schools, policies and mindsets need to change if Australia is to best prepare for the changes to come.An article from the Brisbane Times 20 October 2017

Stuff to do Australia Wide

Code Camp - Three day holiday program is now open for bookings.
RoboGals - Register to be the first to book for workshops on 15 and 16 December 2017.
5 Podcasts That Will Change The Way Your Kids See The World (and that you’ll enjoy too) - A list of five podcasts that will entertain your kids and they will learn something along the way!
Give a Child the Gift of Science - A great collection of activities you can do at home
CSIRO CREST Program - CREativity in Science and Technology. Engage your students with open-ended science investigations and technology projects through the CREST program.
- - -
Young Engineers Australia - Provides an engaging, hands-on learning platform using LEGO® and K’nex® assembly kits
CoderDojo - A volunteer run programming club
Code Club Australia - A global network of coding clubs for kids aged 9 to 11.

Stuff to do in Brisbane

Brainiac Live - Join the Brainiacs for an actioned-packed hour of incredible experiments and explosive high energy entertainment. 9-13 January 2018.
- - -
SLQ Digital Futures - Each year the State Library of Queensland presents a theme of interest to the Queensland community. Throughout 2017, they invite you to join in exploring Digital Futures.
STEM in a Box has ongoing coding, robotics and 3D printing activities
Brisbane Library Service has purchased the very flash NAO Robot and is showing it off in various libraries.
The Cube at QUT has a number of changing programs. 
Brisbane Planetarium - Features entertaining and informative shows for adults and children
STEAMPUNX - Not to be confused with the organisation above! Offers in-school and out of school workshop programs
Flying Fox Studios - A studio offering programs in the arts, music and construction areas from babies to teenagers in Brisbane
It's Rocket Science School Incursions - Educational and fully interactive project based rocket science incursions for primary and secondary schools in a safe and empowering learning environment.

Saturday, 4 November 2017

3D Printing. What's that about?

3D Printing. What's that about?

You have probably heard about 3D printing but maybe don't know how it works and what it is used for. So firstly let's do a quick explanation of the most common technology. 3D printing is a form of additive manufacturing whereby the object is built up in layers. Each layer is about 1/10th of a millimetre thick. The printer takes material (usually a type of plastic), melts it and then forces it through a tiny nozzle before  laying it down on the print bed. A quick 2 minute video showing this in action is here.
Before the printer can do any of this the object has to be modelled in 3D Computer Aided Design (CAD) software. There are free packages available to do this. I use TinkerCad but there are many others. If you aren't that skilled at this (like me!) then you can look at communities like Thingiverse where others put their creations online for you to download and then print at home.
Once you have the file from the CAD program (usually a STL file) then you upload that into your printer's software which will slice the object into thin layers and add weak supporting columns to any overhanging parts. The supporting material has to be broken off carefully by you after the print is completed. Finally the printer can start but it is a fairly slow process. Something the size of your pinkie would take around 1 hour.
So why do schools get these? Some might because they think it is a cool new gadget but as with all things I have been talking about the first thing to do before getting a 3D printer is to do some planning. The 3D print can be the final outcome of a project or it can be just a component of a larger project. Regardless, the 3D print is a means to an end so it is the end that needs to be focused upon. 
So what have schools done with them? Often schools do a geography project where the school is mapped out and then drawn on paper or created with craft materials. Schools with a 3D printer can create scale models of the buildings and put together a replica of the whole school. Another school has done a pollution project and 3D printed their design solution to the problem
So absolutely 3D printers can value add to the curriculum but it needs to be part of a broader plan to meet the Australian Government's goal to restore the focus on STEM. It will require upfront funding for (most importantly) teacher training and the printer (may need multiple due to the printing speed) and then some ongoing funding for consumables and maintenance.
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Stuff in the news

Kids have a fear of it': Teachers leading national shift in how maths is taught- About 300 teachers are leading a change in the way maths is taught as part of a bid to arrest Australian students' declining or stagnating numeracy results and reverse the drop in students choosing to study maths after year 10. An article from the Brisbane Times 8 October 2017.
Dalby, Chinchilla students to tackle drones, 3D printing - Year 8 students from Dalby and Chinchilla will enter the world of digital technology tomorrow when they learn not only how to fly drones, but also how to print 3D parts and build them. An article from the North Queensland Register 10 October 2017.
Fareed Zakaria: STEM Education Is Important, But Not Everything - Fareed Zakaria discusses tech's effect on global events and preparing kids for an increasingly technical world. An article from PC Magazine 26 August 2017.

Stuff to buy

Coding and Computing Books for Children 8+ - The Tech Age Kids blog has put together a list of the newest coding books to hit the market. 
*At this point in time I earn no money from any product I list and I am not affiliated with any other company.

Stuff in education

All Canberra secondary public school students to get Chromebook in 2018 - The ACT continues to roll out Chromebooks in all its schools. Chromebooks provide a cost effective yet fully capable IT solution. An article from the Canberra Times 30 October 2017.
Early Learning STEM Australia (ELSA) - A play-based digital learning program for children in preschool to explore science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). One hundred preschools across Australia have been selected to take part in the ELSA Pilot.
Malaysian educators head to space academy to boost STEM teaching - For one week, 15 Malaysians trained like they were going to be the next Neil Armstrong – simulating space missions, coding, survival training, learning flight dynamics – at a space academy in the United States. An article from Study International 10 August 2017.

Stuff to do Australia Wide

Contemporary practices in STEM education - This will be a live streamed event of interest to teachers and parents. It is part of Monash University's "Engaging STEM Education. Keeping Teachers at the Cutting Edge" series. 9 November 2017
5 Podcasts That Will Change The Way Your Kids See The World (and that you’ll enjoy too) - A list of five podcasts that will entertain your kids and they will learn something along the way!
Give a Child the Gift of Science - A great collection of activities you can do at home
CSIRO CREST Program - CREativity in Science and Technology. Engage your students with open-ended science investigations and technology projects through the CREST program.
- - -
Young Engineers Australia - Provides an engaging, hands-on learning platform using LEGO® and K’nex® assembly kits
CoderDojo - A volunteer run programming club
Code Club Australia - A global network of coding clubs for kids aged 9 to 11.

Stuff to do in Brisbane

Brainiac Live - Join the Brainiacs for an actioned-packed hour of incredible experiments and explosive high energy entertainment. 9-13 January 2018.
- - -
SLQ Digital Futures - Each year the State Library of Queensland presents a theme of interest to the Queensland community. Throughout 2017, they invite you to join in exploring Digital Futures.
STEM in a Box has ongoing coding, robotics and 3D printing activities
Brisbane Library Service has purchased the very flash NAO Robot and is showing it off in various libraries.
The Cube at QUT has a number of changing programs. 
Brisbane Planetarium - Features entertaining and informative shows for adults and children
STEAMPUNX - Not to be confused with the organisation above! Offers in-school and out of school workshop programs
Flying Fox Studios - A studio offering programs in the arts, music and construction areas from babies to teenagers in Brisbane
It's Rocket Science School Incursions - Educational and fully interactive project based rocket science incursions for primary and secondary schools in a safe and empowering learning environment.