Thursday, June 24, 2021

Make Education Forum

Make (the people of Make magazine, Maker Faire, Maker Camp...and others) are holding a virtual Education Forum August 3rd - 5th, from 10 am- 2 pm PST. Registration is $175.


(from their website)

Among the how-to sessions:

  • Incorporate making into existing learning frameworks and subject matter
  • Explore resources and opportunities for educational makerspaces
  • Technical making skill tutorials and trainings
  • Help students find and scope local problems that they can work on
  • Produce a School Maker Faire
  • Low-budget, low-tech making
  • Incorporating and fostering the maker mindset in your school community
  • Expand your libraries engagement with making activities and programs

 

What is included:

  • Three half-day summer virtual gathering to explore topics, share ideas, exchange tips and tricks and learn from one another
  • One year membership in MAKE: Community/member that includes monthly conversations, access to discussion forums, and a print and digital subscription to Make: magazine
  • Make: exclusive promotions and savings


Wednesday, June 23, 2021

VirtualMathConference

Math is a part of everything, we all know that.
Conferences are a great way to learn from each other.
Conferences are expensive.

Howie Hua is organizing a free Virtual Math Conference, July 10-11.

Here are the sessions that people will be sharing via Zoom. 

Links to presenters Zoom will be shared to those who sign up to "attend"

#VirtualMath21


Monday, June 7, 2021

ProcessOverProduct

 MakerEd / MakerSpace / MakerCenteredLearning is not about the end product as much as it is about the process and the discussions you can have during the process. Let us chat about some “English classroom” ideas. Students could use a vinyl cutter / Cricut / Cameo, iron-on vinyl and a heat press or iron to put their own poetry on a t-shirt. They could use a laser cutter to engrave it on a cutting board or plaque. They could use ____ to make _____… The product is just the entry step. The conversations that you can have while they are doing this are the more important journey.

Font choice? 

Dimensions & measuring? 

Design & layout?  

Word choice so it fits better?

Color scheme? 

Is it the best vehicle for publishing? 

What is a better one? 

How did poets & authors publish in the past? 

What could partner with the poem to help get the meaning or feeling across?

Is there a similar poem from other authors?


By posing these questions/discussions, seemingly unrelated to content, learners feel that they can ask any type of question. I think that often students don’t know what questions to ask or what questions that they can ask in content areas. “I dont know enough to ask a question without looking foolish.” Questions are what drive learning. It is then up to the “expert” to weave the content ideas in with the answers or show the connections. Those “experts” can be young or old. That is a great happenstance of MakerEd, distributed teaching and learning - everyone is a teacher and everyone is a learner. Sometimes questions have no relation to the topics at hand. And that is okay.


This works with any maker centered project in any subject area. It also helps to break down the silos of those areas. And think of all the “life skills” that are being practiced.


Some other English ideas :

- Design, make, build something to represent the theme of a novel/story

- Create an object from a novel and explain its significance to the story. Like the Capulets crest. Be the Prop Department for a movie

- hack a poem with makey-makey (make it come to life with sounds and lights and motion)

- design an obstacle course/maze with plot points as key locations. Code robot (the character) to go through it

- design a theme park based on story

- make a mobile based on things in the story

- green screen video a short piece of the story

- create a miniature version of a “set” for part of the story, by drawing, painting, cardboard construction…

- create a “tik tok feed” for a main character


Again, with all of these, it is the conversations that you can have around them, the explanations that the learners give, the questions that they ask and answer, that are most important. 


{ idea help from Emily Burk @tech_edu_burk ; Elizabeth Lloyd @lloydcrew ; Nicole F @mzfawstah ; Sandy Roberts @KaleidoscopeSci ; Dr. Kelly Jurkowski @kellyjurkowski ; and others}





Saturday, June 5, 2021

MakerEdTheWhy

There are a myriad of reasons to implement
                    Maker Centered Learning - MakerEd - MakerSpaces.
Different reasons speak to different people.
Here are some...though I might need a part 2.

It is not a new thing that you are going to add to what you are currently doing. It is a shift in how you are doing things. It is an approach to learning, with making at the focus and lots of discussions around it. These discussions allow the student to come at it from their perspective, so it is naturally student centered. It allows them opportunities for voice & choice, since there are so many materials and tools that can be utilized and integrated. Making and the discussions around it help us get to know each other better, our passions and talents and wishes.

It also easily lends itself to PBL and being trans-curricular, a mashing up of the disciplines so you dont know where one starts and the other leaves off (we need to get rid of silos). It very easily weaves ideas together in real life context. Measurement never really means much until you have to build something that has to go/stay together or fit somewhere. When they master something, they want to share that new found skill. In a Maker Centered environment, everyone is a learner and everyone is a teacher. Kids love creating things to help others and make the world better. 

MakerEd is a mashup of ideas from some education icons :
-Montessori : Child-centered, Individualized learning, Integrated curriculum, Hands on learning, Multi age groupings
-Dewey : classroom democracy, learning relevant to lives , learning by doing, practical life skills
-Vygotsky : collaborative nature of learning, social interaction
-Papert : using computers (technology/tools) as instruments for learning and for enhancing creativity and innovation , constructionist theories
-Piaget : children build their own knowledge, mistakes are used by children to discover errors and self correct


And skills that we want kids to have to thrive in life...Maker Centered Learning helps those :

Curiosity

Critical thinking

Collaboration

Communication

Creativity

Community

Innovation

Entrepreneurship

Persistence in problem solving

Personal Agency

Flexibility & Adaptability

Productivity & Accountability


We are all born makers.



Thursday, June 3, 2021

MakerLearningEcosystemCohort

Digital Promise wants to help K12's and community organizations form a tighter Maker Learning Ecosystem. They are starting a 6-month collaborative learning and regional development experience in order to create and support opportunities for maker educators and learners 

https://digitalpromise.org/initiative/maker-learning/establishing-maker-learning-ecosystems-cohort/ 

Application deadline is June 30th.

Virtual Information Session is Wednesday June 16 form 7-8 pm EDT. 

FabPlay21

FabPlay is back in person for 2021. 
https://sites.google.com/view/fab-play-institute 

FabPlay is a Northeast Ohio Maker Educator workshop/conference/networking opportunity.
It is 4 days of expanding ideas about Maker Centered Learning and FabLabs/MakerSpaces.
There will be many opportunities for hands on making with the whole gamut of tools and materials.
There will be lots of networking and social time.
And food, there will be food

It will be held at Hawken Schools in Gates Mills from August 3rd through the 6th.

The cost is $400.