Thursday, March 21, 2019

Thing 30 Maker Spaces

The middle school librarian has a very successful makerspace program that has been going on for at least five years.  We have collaborated and for a couple of years once a month we would have a program in the elementary school and she and some of her students would come over and help facilitate them.  This collaboration was successful but it wasn't part of my schedule and I didn't like how I had to change people around to make it happen.  It also was purely by project and there was not a designated area or materials for a makerspace. 

We have something at our school called an IDEA grant.  The art teacher and I put in for money for a makerspace.  We received $8000.00 and a commitment from the PTO to donate $500.00 a year towards the program.   Unfortunately, the art teacher's schedule did not allow for her to participate.  I forged ahead mainly because I finally figured out a way that I could do a makerspace with  my schedule of 34 classes per week and no aid.  I participated in our summer PD on Schoology and designed a class in Schoology that is, for the most part, student managed.  Frankly, what I wanted to avoid the most was managing more STUFF.  So, with that priority in mind, I designed the class by belts and each belt is a kind of activity and is organized with the belt on it for a student to clearly see.  


Each belt represents a different activity that students do.  For example, the white belt represents a desire to begin the study of STEM.  Students must familiarize themselves with the STEM process through a variety of activities and learn how to post a video of him/herself.  To earn each belt, students must submit a video that shows what they did and how they applied the STEM process. The video submission prompts the teacher/facilitator to review the video and award that belt color.  Other belts are: yellow belt = puzzles; orange belt = building fundamentals; green = sewing, origami and more; blue = circuits; purple = 3d pens; red = coding; and black is make your own project/activity to add to a belt OR go into a class and teach one of the STEM activities to younger children.

Linda and I have spent a great deal of time discussing how do you assess STEM? I feel that you have to have something and finally came up with the video where kids talk about what they did and how they applied the STEM process. I have a little guide to help them form their thoughts about it before they do the video.

I had all of the fourth grade students participate in the white belt during a library class and I have some core students who come weekly. I am still working on the best way for kids to access the materials and the class. Right now I have fourth grade teachers sending 5 kids per class once a week at a certain time. I usually only have two teachers participate, which is fine. I know that if I offered to take the whole class (without the teacher, of course) I would have more participation but I am not willing to do that. I want students who are interested in being there. I have one student who has progressed to the purple belt and will be done with all of them by the end of the year. I plan to have an award for this at the fourth grade awards ceremony in June.

The nice thing about Schoology is it is easy to revise and improve each year or time you use that activity. I have joined a couple of maker space facebook groups and they have been excellent in terms of suggestions of what to buy. I also submitted this program to ISTE and it was accepted as a poster project. I hope to have this makerspace in the shape I want it to be by the time I retire, which is not that far away!



Wednesday, March 20, 2019

On Note Taking Thing 27



For the past ten years or so, I have been doing a common core research project with fourth graders.  The project has taken different forms and each year I try to improve it. The last couple of years I have used Schoology as  the platform. Students choose from a list of people that was created by myself and a fourth grade teacher. The famous person has to have entries in a book, Pebble Go and an encyclopedia.  Each card that goes with the source is a different color and they are guided notes. Fourth graders need guided notes. Next year, I will tweak the cards so that pebble go is just one side of a note and then they will find quotes by the famous person from the general internet. I will also have them work in teams from the beginning as the project dragged on longer than necessary.

I looked at the information on note taking.  I especially liked the first article, Note Taking A Research Roundup by Jennifer Gonzalez.  It reinforced what I have noticed, that kids, especially young ones who are new to typing and writing, are more efficient note takers on paper.  I looked at the other articles and may refer back to them at another time, but in the elementary school, on-line note taking is not practical.

 I always meet with the fourth grade teachers and we discuss what worked and what did not from the previous year.  This year’s conversation resulted in a change of the famous people and the teachers shared how difficult it is to get the kids to write.  Consequently, I added to my Schoology page and made a five paragraph essay writing template with notes from me in text as well as a Screencastfy they can access by clicking on the title. I also gave them a sample writing piece and rubric. Hopefully, they will use the material. Frankly, I couldn't do this project without using Schoology as otherwise it is just too many students to manage, but so far I have not been able to entice the fourth grade teachers to use it.

First students took a quiz to find out who they knew about and who they selected. Next they made a google slide with three pictures and three clues about their famous person. They then watched a brainpop about note taking and responded to me in the discussion forum of Schoology telling me one thing they learned about note taking from they video. They then took notes from a book, a database, and an encyclopedia. They then graded themselves and did a video in the discussion part of Schoology answering the question of who cares? I added the who cares part this year because I had found in previous years that after taking all of the notes, some kids still had no idea about what was so great about what their famous person did.

Grade Yourself - I respond using the same rubric in schoology