BGOL Parents/Education: STEM & Core Curriculum Info...

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Science, Technology, Engineering and Math:
Education for Global Leadership


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"... Leadership tomorrow depends on how we educate our students today—especially in science, technology, engineering and math."

— President Barack Obama, September 16, 2010

The United States has become a global leader, in large part, through the genius and hard work of its scientists, engineers and innovators. Yet today, that position is threatened as comparatively few American students pursue expertise in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)—and by an inadequate pipeline of teachers skilled in those subjects. President Obama has set a priority of increasing the number of students and teachers who are proficient in these vital fields.

stem-infographic.jpg

The need

Only 16 percent of American high school seniors are proficient in mathematics and interested in a STEM career. [expand/collapse]
The goals

President Obama has articulated a clear priority for STEM education: within a decade, American students must "move from the middle to the top of the pack in science and math." [expand/collapse]
The plan

The Committee on STEM Education (CoSTEM), comprised of 13 partner agencies—including all of the mission science agencies and the Department of Education—will facilitate a cohesive national strategy, with new and repurposed funds, to reorganize STEM education programs and increase the impact of federal investments in five areas: P-12 STEM instruction; increasing and sustaining public and youth engagement with STEM; improving the STEM experience of undergraduate students; better serving groups historically underrepresented in STEM fields; and designing graduate education for tomorrow's STEM workforce. [expand/collapse]
The President's Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Proposal

Included in the fiscal year 2015 budget are several investments designed to improve teaching and learning in STEM subjects for teachers and students in our nation's schools. Key elements of the President's proposal include:

STEM Innovation Proposal: This proposal includes $170 million in new funding that will help to train the next generation of innovators. Key activities include:
STEM Innovation Networks ($110 million): This program will award grants to school districts in partnership with colleges, and other regional partners to transform STEM teaching and learning by accelerating the adoption of practices in P-12 education that help to increase the number students who seek out and are well-prepared for postsecondary education and careers in STEM fields.
STEM Teacher Pathways ($40 million): To support President Obama's goal of preparing 100,000 effective STEM teachers, this program will provide competitive awards to high-quality programs that recruit and train talented STEM educators for high-need schools.
National STEM Master Teacher Corps ($20 million): This program will identify, refine and share models to help America's best and brightest math and science teachers to make the transition from excellent teachers to school and community leaders and advocates for STEM education. The program will enlist, recognize and reward a national corps of outstanding STEM educators to help improve STEM teaching and learning in their schools and communities.

Together, these programs will identify and implement effective approaches for improving STEM teaching and learning; facilitate the dissemination and adoption of effective STEM instructional practices nationwide; and promote STEM education experiences that prioritize hands-on learning to increase student engagement, interest, and achievement in the STEM fields.

http://www.ed.gov/stem
 
Translating STEM: From Curriculum to Career
A look at how to improve the quality and experience of STEM education in the U.S.


STEM_3.jpg


You’ve probably heard the dire news: American kids are falling behind the rest of the world in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) education. STEM jobs are going unfilled because there aren’t enough qualified applicants. The U.S. has a STEM shortage; a STEM problem.

But what does it all mean, in real terms, for your child’s education? What is a STEM job, where is the shortage; and how does the need for these workers trickle down to the curriculum taught in your own school?

To begin with, what exactly are these jobs we keep hearing about?
STEM jobs today and tomorrow

A spokesperson for the National Institutes of Health says that for the NIH to accomplish its mission it must either hire or support through grants “a surprising variety of STEM specialties.” The NIH “uses all of the scientific specialties you might imagine being involved in medical research (doctors, nurses, microbiologists, geneticists, etc.) and also many specialties you might not imagine (mathematicians, physicists, computer scientists, medical artists).”

“If a biologist gets a job in a cancer lab, I’d say that’s a STEM job, even though that person may not spend much time doing mathematics or engineering,” says Raymond Johnson, a doctoral student in mathematics education at the University of Colorado in Boulder. “Likewise, someone who studies ergonomic design might be doing a STEM job, even thought there might be no chemistry involved.” Looking at STEM as its own field, “the intersection of a set of activities and skills that we previously considered as distinct,” instead of relying on our historical understanding of specific jobs and disciplines, “is where STEM education gets exciting,” he says.

“Just about every career, from law enforcement to health care, includes a lot more STEM than before,” says Mark Grayson, executive director of STEM learning at Six Red Marbles, an educational publishing and learning design company based in Baltimore.

Emphasizing the need for early, excellent STEM education, he reiterates the point that it’s not about drilling kids in facts. By the time kids start working, Grayson says they’ll need to use their education to “solve a problem that didn’t exist when they went to school. Some of the fastest-growing (and best-paying) careers in the next few decades are expected to be in fields like biomedical engineering, software development and medical technology.”

Linda P. Rosen, CEO of Change the Equation (CTEq), an organization dedicated to translating STEM needs into educational action, whose members include major corporations like 3M, Microsoft, and Xerox, says that the organization’s definition of a STEM-specific job includes computer, architecture, engineering, and physical science occupations, but also “healthcare and management occupations that require strong STEM skills,” such as information systems managers or healthcare practitioners.

“The fastest-growing fields,” she notes, “are also the fields reporting the greatest shortages. Many CTEq companies report a shortage of engineers, often those with specialized training. Companies that require security clearance — which at a minimum requires U.S. citizenship — report STEM shortages at all education levels.”

With the U.S. ranked 52nd in STEM education, and Americans losing interest in pursuing these fields, it really does look like our kids’ education is not preparing them for the future.
Bridging the gap

Answering the question of why American kids aren’t ending up in STEM fields is more complex than you might think.

“First, most schools do nothing with the technology and engineering parts of STEM,” says Mark Grayson. “Second, the learning model is very passive and based on regurgitation of facts.” This is opposed to what he calls a more active model, which emphasizes critical thinking and “the ability to figure out what you need to teach yourself to solve a real-world problem.” Learning passively also “gives math and science an undeserved reputation of being boring and hard.”

It’s not only poor curricula in individual subjects, says Raymond Johnson, but the lack of hands-on experience and a failure to integrate individual STEM disciplines, which would require different models both of teacher preparation and how schools are structured. The best model he’s seen, he says, is the Nature, Life, Technology (NLT) curriculum from the Netherlands. “The samples I’ve seen are fascinating, integrating physics, mathematics, earth science, chemistry, and other disciplines. But most high schools and middle schools in the U.S. don’t have that kind of schedule flexibility, nor do we have teachers with expertise across STEM disciplines.”

Mark Grayson agrees, bringing up compartmentalization as a problem in the current school model.

“Math instruction is over here in this room with this teacher, science is handled over there with that teacher, and rarely do the two meet. Even within science, biology is one thing and physics is another.”

Maria Zacharias of the National Science Foundation points to the work of Robert Tai at the University of Virginia, whose extensive research in K-12 STEM education highlights the importance of early exposure to science. Tai’s best-known longitudinal study tracked students from eighth grade through graduate school and found that, in many STEM fields, students’ early interest in science led them to careers or graduate work in those fields. “If they form interest [by eighth grade],” says Zacharias, “they are more likely to be scientists. If not, it’s hard to get them back.”
Building skills and momentum

The other side of the equation is the lack of in-depth knowledge and training, what some call rigorous learning.

“A good learning experience should make you think, and teach you something you’ll remember and use again,” says Grayson. “The word ‘rigor’ sums this up.”

But rigor is not the only way to describe the quality of educational activities, says Raymond Johnson. ‘Authentic"might be a better choice. “When students do laboratory work to test their own understanding about how something works, and to refine their knowledge, then we’re more closely resembling the work of professional scientists.”

Another way to gauge quality is to think about “cognitive level” or “cognitive demand,” which requires students to “do the mental ‘heavy lifting’ of evaluating a problem and choosing their own solution strategy.”

Giving students a deep bedrock of scientific experience is crucial because early interest, even passion, isn’t always enough. What very few people are willing to admit is that actual scientific work can be tedious and boring.

The onus is on educators and parents to ensure enthusiasm and deep engagement so that later, repetitive work won’t deter students from pursuing STEM fields.
Engineering a working curriculum

How does all of this translate to the classroom?

“At the elementary age,” says Grayson, “a great thing to do is to link engineering with play. Who can build a bridge out of blocks that will hold the most weight? Who can make the paper airplane that flies the fastest or the highest or the farthest? Who can explain why that bridge or airplane worked? Who can figure out how to make one that’s even better?”

Penny Dowdy, a curriculum specialist at Six Red Marbles, demonstrates the kind of deep learning that can happen through just one fourth-grade Common Core mathematics standard.

“A teacher could provide local bus schedules and have students calculate how long it would take to get between destinations, time of arrival, what time they should leave one location to make a transfer, distance traveled, etc. This would hit the ‘use operations to solve word problems involving distances, intervals of time …’ The teacher could provide specific word problems to solve, and then he or she could have students develop their own problems by planning bus trips to destinations that interest them.”

Crucially, Dowdy says, “the activity itself gives students a reason to use math in a practical, real-world way so students aren’t wondering when they would ever use these skills.”

At older ages, the question becomes how to maintain momentum in these areas, and provide a solid foundation for scientific practice and methods.

“By high school,” says Mark Grayson, “a project can involve solving science and engineering challenges in the community using hand-held data recorders. This allows for the learning to link to social studies and other fields as well. Examples include testing local watersheds, monitoring migrating butterflies, identifying acoustic ‘dead spots’ in the auditorium, or analyzing the hot and cold spots in a building.”

The STEM School (recently renamed the Nikola Tesla STEM High School ) in Redmond’s Lake Washington school district has taken this kind of learning to heart, enrolling its students in internships to “tackle real-world problems.” One group recently presented work on a solar light tower project they completed with the guidance of engineers from Genie, a company that manufactures equipment for the construction industry.

Raymond Johnson also sees that some of the solutions to our STEM problems might be found in skills and practices that have been devalued over the last few decades. When he worked as a teacher, he taught at one school “with a very successful construction program in which, each year, the students would build a house.” The sale of the house paid for the program, plus the graduates were prepared for employment in construction work.

“The STEM skills and occupations of the future may look different, but I think we can learn from these kinds of apprenticeship models of education that have worked well with skilled trades.”

The future of STEM education will ideally bring together all of these practices, crossing curricular boundaries to tap into young students’ thirst for exploration, allowing plenty of time for in-depth learning, and creating opportunities for increased hands-on practice. In that space we’ll find our future engineers, mathematicians, biologists, programmers, inventors, and so much more.
Learn more

There is a dizzying array of programs all over the country dedicated to improving both the quality and experience of U.S. STEM education.

The NIH’s Science Education Partnerships (SEPA) grant program currently supports 67 active projects nationwide, such as Seattle-based BioQuest, which offers half-day programs and internships for high-schoolers interested in learning about global health or medical research. The SEPA website allows you to easily search for programs by state.

The NIH also provides curriculum supplements for teachers on a wide array of subjects.

Change the Equation’s STEMworks programs seek to encourage active, hands-on learning at all grade levels.

Washington STEM drives innovation and improvement in STEM education by investing in teacher training, building networks of STEM professionals and educators and advocating for important policy changes.


October 23, 2014
https://www.parentmap.com/article/t...peaking+STEM&utm_campaign=10-22-14+digital+EE
 
Good stuff.

My daughters schools are getting real heavy into the whole STEM area, and I love it!!!
 
Translating STEM: From Curriculum to Career

A look at how to improve the quality and experience of STEM education in the U.S.

STEM_3.jpg


You’ve probably heard the dire news: American kids are falling behind the rest of the world in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) education. STEM jobs are going unfilled because there aren’t enough qualified applicants. The U.S. has a STEM shortage; a STEM problem.

But what does it all mean, in real terms, for your child’s education? What is a STEM job, where is the shortage; and how does the need for these workers trickle down to the curriculum taught in your own school?

To begin with, what exactly are these jobs we keep hearing about?

STEM jobs today and tomorrow
A spokesperson for the National Institutes of Health says that for the NIH to accomplish its mission it must either hire or support through grants “a surprising variety of STEM specialties.” The NIH “uses all of the scientific specialties you might imagine being involved in medical research (doctors, nurses, microbiologists, geneticists, etc.) and also many specialties you might not imagine (mathematicians, physicists, computer scientists, medical artists).”

“If a biologist gets a job in a cancer lab, I’d say that’s a STEM job, even though that person may not spend much time doing mathematics or engineering,” says Raymond Johnson, a doctoral student in mathematics education at the University of Colorado in Boulder. “Likewise, someone who studies ergonomic design might be doing a STEM job, even thought there might be no chemistry involved.” Looking at STEM as its own field, “the intersection of a set of activities and skills that we previously considered as distinct,” instead of relying on our historical understanding of specific jobs and disciplines, “is where STEM education gets exciting,” he says.

“Just about every career, from law enforcement to health care, includes a lot more STEM than before,” says Mark Grayson, executive director of STEM learning at Six Red Marbles, an educational publishing and learning design company based in Baltimore.

Emphasizing the need for early, excellent STEM education, he reiterates the point that it’s not about drilling kids in facts. By the time kids start working, Grayson says they’ll need to use their education to “solve a problem that didn’t exist when they went to school. Some of the fastest-growing (and best-paying) careers in the next few decades are expected to be in fields like biomedical engineering, software development and medical technology.”

Linda P. Rosen, CEO of Change the Equation (CTEq), an organization dedicated to translating STEM needs into educational action, whose members include major corporations like 3M, Microsoft, and Xerox, says that the organization’s definition of a STEM-specific job includes computer, architecture, engineering, and physical science occupations, but also “healthcare and management occupations that require strong STEM skills,” such as information systems managers or healthcare practitioners.

“The fastest-growing fields,” she notes, “are also the fields reporting the greatest shortages. Many CTEq companies report a shortage of engineers, often those with specialized training. Companies that require security clearance — which at a minimum requires U.S. citizenship — report STEM shortages at all education levels.”

With the U.S. ranked 52nd in STEM education, and Americans losing interest in pursuing these fields, it really does look like our kids’ education is not preparing them for the future.

Bridging the gap
Answering the question of why American kids aren’t ending up in STEM fields is more complex than you might think.

“First, most schools do nothing with the technology and engineering parts of STEM,” says Mark Grayson. “Second, the learning model is very passive and based on regurgitation of facts.” This is opposed to what he calls a more active model, which emphasizes critical thinking and “the ability to figure out what you need to teach yourself to solve a real-world problem.” Learning passively also “gives math and science an undeserved reputation of being boring and hard.”

It’s not only poor curricula in individual subjects, says Raymond Johnson, but the lack of hands-on experience and a failure to integrate individual STEM disciplines, which would require different models both of teacher preparation and how schools are structured. The best model he’s seen, he says, is the Nature, Life, Technology (NLT) curriculum from the Netherlands. “The samples I’ve seen are fascinating, integrating physics, mathematics, earth science, chemistry, and other disciplines. But most high schools and middle schools in the U.S. don’t have that kind of schedule flexibility, nor do we have teachers with expertise across STEM disciplines.”

Mark Grayson agrees, bringing up compartmentalization as a problem in the current school model.

“Math instruction is over here in this room with this teacher, science is handled over there with that teacher, and rarely do the two meet. Even within science, biology is one thing and physics is another.”

Maria Zacharias of the National Science Foundation points to the work of Robert Tai at the University of Virginia, whose extensive research in K-12 STEM education highlights the importance of early exposure to science. Tai’s best-known longitudinal study tracked students from eighth grade through graduate school and found that, in many STEM fields, students’ early interest in science led them to careers or graduate work in those fields. “If they form interest [by eighth grade],” says Zacharias, “they are more likely to be scientists. If not, it’s hard to get them back.”

Building skills and momentum
The other side of the equation is the lack of in-depth knowledge and training, what some call rigorous learning.

“A good learning experience should make you think, and teach you something you’ll remember and use again,” says Grayson. “The word ‘rigor’ sums this up.”

But rigor is not the only way to describe the quality of educational activities, says Raymond Johnson. ‘Authentic"might be a better choice. “When students do laboratory work to test their own understanding about how something works, and to refine their knowledge, then we’re more closely resembling the work of professional scientists.”

Another way to gauge quality is to think about “cognitive level” or “cognitive demand,” which requires students to “do the mental ‘heavy lifting’ of evaluating a problem and choosing their own solution strategy.”

Giving students a deep bedrock of scientific experience is crucial because early interest, even passion, isn’t always enough. What very few people are willing to admit is that actual scientific work can be tedious and boring.

The onus is on educators and parents to ensure enthusiasm and deep engagement so that later, repetitive work won’t deter students from pursuing STEM fields.

Engineering a working curriculum
How does all of this translate to the classroom?

“At the elementary age,” says Grayson, “a great thing to do is to link engineering with play. Who can build a bridge out of blocks that will hold the most weight? Who can make the paper airplane that flies the fastest or the highest or the farthest? Who can explain why that bridge or airplane worked? Who can figure out how to make one that’s even better?”

Penny Dowdy, a curriculum specialist at Six Red Marbles, demonstrates the kind of deep learning that can happen through just one fourth-grade Common Core mathematics standard.

“A teacher could provide local bus schedules and have students calculate how long it would take to get between destinations, time of arrival, what time they should leave one location to make a transfer, distance traveled, etc. This would hit the ‘use operations to solve word problems involving distances, intervals of time …’ The teacher could provide specific word problems to solve, and then he or she could have students develop their own problems by planning bus trips to destinations that interest them.”

Crucially, Dowdy says, “the activity itself gives students a reason to use math in a practical, real-world way so students aren’t wondering when they would ever use these skills.”

At older ages, the question becomes how to maintain momentum in these areas, and provide a solid foundation for scientific practice and methods.

“By high school,” says Mark Grayson, “a project can involve solving science and engineering challenges in the community using hand-held data recorders. This allows for the learning to link to social studies and other fields as well. Examples include testing local watersheds, monitoring migrating butterflies, identifying acoustic ‘dead spots’ in the auditorium, or analyzing the hot and cold spots in a building.”

The STEM School (recently renamed the Nikola Tesla STEM High School ) in Redmond’s Lake Washington school district has taken this kind of learning to heart, enrolling its students in internships to “tackle real-world problems.” One group recently presented work on a solar light tower project they completed with the guidance of engineers from Genie, a company that manufactures equipment for the construction industry.

Raymond Johnson also sees that some of the solutions to our STEM problems might be found in skills and practices that have been devalued over the last few decades. When he worked as a teacher, he taught at one school “with a very successful construction program in which, each year, the students would build a house.” The sale of the house paid for the program, plus the graduates were prepared for employment in construction work.

“The STEM skills and occupations of the future may look different, but I think we can learn from these kinds of apprenticeship models of education that have worked well with skilled trades.”

The future of STEM education will ideally bring together all of these practices, crossing curricular boundaries to tap into young students’ thirst for exploration, allowing plenty of time for in-depth learning, and creating opportunities for increased hands-on practice. In that space we’ll find our future engineers, mathematicians, biologists, programmers, inventors, and so much more.

Learn more
There is a dizzying array of programs all over the country dedicated to improving both the quality and experience of U.S. STEM education.

The NIH’s Science Education Partnerships (SEPA) grant program currently supports 67 active projects nationwide, such as Seattle-based BioQuest, which offers half-day programs and internships for high-schoolers interested in learning about global health or medical research. The SEPA website allows you to easily search for programs by state.

The NIH also provides curriculum supplements for teachers on a wide array of subjects.

Change the Equation’s STEMworks programs seek to encourage active, hands-on learning at all grade levels.

Washington STEM drives innovation and improvement in STEM education by investing in teacher training, building networks of STEM professionals and educators and advocating for important policy changes.



October 23, 2014

https://www.parentmap.com/article/translating-stem
 
some recommended learning materials...

Kid K'NEX Models That Move-Price: $99.00

Kid K'NEX Classroom Collection-Price: $80.00

Discovery Mighty Magnets Construction Kit (Magnetic Balls and Rods) Price: $59.95

Gateway SX2110G-UW308 Small Form Factor Desktop PC with AMD E1-1200 Processor, 4GB Memory, 21.5" Monitor, 500GB Hard Drive and Windows 8-Price: $398.00 each

CALIFONE INTERNATIONAL Kids Computer Peripheral Package- Package includes: Kids Keyboard (KB1), Headphone (2800-RD), and Mouse (KM100). Kids Keyboard (KB1) features: Color-coded keys help identify and locate function (green), consonants (yellow), vowels (orange), and numbers (red) Price: $46.55 each
 
The 10 Best STEM Resources
Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics Resources for preK-12

Curriculum Resources

Exploratorium
Provides interactives, web features, activities, programs, and events for K-12. Saturday and Summer professional development workshops are available through the Teacher Institute.

NASA — Educators
Lesson plans, teacher guides, classroom activities, video clips, games, posters, and more for teachers and students in grades K-4, 5-8, 9-12, and higher education.

eGFI: Dream Up the Future
Promotes engineering education with K-5, 6-8, 9-12 lesson plans, activities, outreach programs, and links to web resources. Teachers and students can download the first three issues of eGFI magazine.

Kinetic City
Science games for students in grades 3-5. One activity asks students to replace the body systems of a character who sounds like Arnold Schwarzenegger. The website requires free registration.

National STEM Video Game Challenge
Middle school (5-8), high school students (9-12), and educators are invited to design games that incorporate STEM content or STEM themes in innovative and engaging ways. Home schoolers are eligible to enter as well. Sign up to be notified about the 2013 competition.

Master Tools
Eight interactive math and science tools and simulations for students in grades 6-12. All simulations and curriculum materials meet the new National Science Education Standards and National Math Education Standards.

Engineer your Life
This guide introduces girls in grades 9-12 to young women engineers and highlights careers. A section for parent and counselors furnishes background in engineering to better advise students. The site has a link to a companion site for girls in grades 5-8.

Professional Development

STEM Education Resource Center
Provides nearly 4,000 science, technology, engineering and math resources for PreK-5, 6-12 as well as free, self-paced modules for teachers teaching global climate change to middle school and high school students.

NASA ePDN - Electronic Professional Development Network
NASA offers free online professional development certificate programs for K-12 teachers in robotics, statistics, project-based inquiry learning, and technology integration and self-directed courses in astrobiology, microgravity, and outer space environment.

A Compendium of Best Practice K-12 STEM Education Programs (PDF icon PDF, 6.2 MB, 106 pgs.)

http://eie.org/sites/default/files/bayer_compendium.pdf

All 38 K-12 STEM programs included in this report provide challenging content/curriculum, an inquiry-learning environment, defined outcomes/assessment, and sustained commitment/community support. Each program entry gives an overview, defines target population and learning environment, and presents highlights of results. Contact information is provided.

Bonus

STEM Educator Materials
Download posters, educator guides with activities and age-appropriate career information for your students. All activities meet national education standards of learning for math, science and technical literacy. Registration is required but free.

http://www.nea.org/tools/lessons/stem-resources.html
 
NYDI teaches kids creativity, teamwork, collaboration, science, critical thinking, engineering, communication, service, the arts and improvisation – important 21st Century Skills – all in the context of a fun and engaging after-school youth program in which teams solve amazing challenges and present them at tournaments.

https://www.nydi.org/?gclid=CLvEpISk88MCFWdo7AodAm4AOw
 
Girlstart's mission is to increase girls’ interest and engagement in STEM through innovative, nationally-recognized informal STEM education programs.

Girlstart aspires to be the national leader in designing and implementing innovative, high quality informal STEM education programs that inspire girls to transform our world.

Through its comprehensive programming, Girlstart provides a year-round, intensive suite of STEM education programs for K-12 girls. Girlstart’s core programs foster STEM skills development, an understanding of the importance of STEM as a way to solve the world’s major problems, as well as an interest in STEM electives, majors, and careers:


http://www.girlstart.org/?gclid=CJL9n4ak88MCFUJk7Aodv2gAqA
 
The Ultimate STEM Guide for Kids: 239 Cool Sites About Science, Technology, Engineering and Math

Look, I could go on and on about science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) careers. How job openings are predicted to soar to over one million by 2020. How the U.S. government is freaking out that students aren’t prepared.

But I won’t. Because, frankly, this guide to STEM opportunities is for you, not for your parents or your teachers or politicians frothing at the mouth. For you.

You’re going to take the first step on Mars.
You’re going to plant farms on skyscrapers.
You’re going to discover a cure for cancer.

Nuclear fusion. Virtual reality. Clean water for all. With the world facing 14 Grand Challenges for Engineering, your interest in math and science is set to pay off—big time.

You’ll be the one using your problem-solving skills to find answers to impossible challenges.
You’ll be the scientist leading an exploration of the Mariana Trench or the engineer building a next-generation robot.
You’ll be the graduate finding a great job and earning a hefty salary.

It’s your life. Know that amazing things are possible.

I’ve listed some excellent K-12 links below and arranged dozens more by age and interest. From games and apps to summer camps, contests and career advice, you’ll find everything you need to spark your imagination and plan your future.

Don’t miss some of the incredible stuff in:

STEM Fun for Elementary School Kids
STEM Fun for Middle School Kids
STEM Fun for High School Kids
STEM Fun for Girls

And, if you’re still on the fence about a STEM career, check out these infographics from Kelly Scientific. Our country (truly!) needs you:

http://www.mastersindatascience.org...bout-science-technology-engineering-and-math/
 
Discovery Launches Free STEM Summer Camp Materials

Discovery Communications is formalizing its programs related to science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) under an umbrella initiative called "Connect the Dots," intended to help young people make the link between STEM and their everyday lives. One new program under Connect the Dots is a bundle of free digital resources that can be used to put on STEM after school sessions or summer camps.

STEM Camp consists of a series of standards-aligned curricula available at no cost to schools, districts, non-profit organizations, and parents for use as part of educational events. The materials combine hands-on and virtual labs, engineering challenges, digital investigations, interactive videos, and career connections designed to engage students in STEM topics and connect them to specific careers. The program will track along with "grand challenges" identified by the National Academy of Engineers, encompassing STEM-related approaches to water, urban infrastructure, and energy. A webinar introducing the program will be held on May 7 at 7 p.m. Eastern time.

The water program, which is the first one available, provides five days of activities. Each day's resources include an overview, a presentation that walks facilitators through the activities including experiments and videos, a proposed schedule, and a list of materials needed. To access the site's resources, the user must register.

"Building STEM literacy among America's next generation of leaders is critical to meet the global challenges that lie ahead and prepare students for tomorrow's careers," said Discovery Education CEO Bill Goodwyn. "We know that learning doesn't stop when the class bell rings. After-school hours and summer months provide valuable opportunities to engage and excite students. Programs like Discovery Education STEM Camp maximize time spent outside traditional learning environments, keeping students inspired by learning and providing them with the tools they need today to compete for the jobs of tomorrow."

The media company produces nonfiction brands such as Discovery Education, the Science Channel, Mythbusters, Animal Planet, and HowStuffWorks. Connect the Dots adds to that list with the launch of a new science-focused series, The Big Brain Theory: Pure Genius. This show pits teams of "geniuses" to solve "seemingly impossible engineering challenges."

http://thejournal.com/articles/2013/05/06/discovery-launches-free-stem-summer-camp-materials.aspx
 
* for the teachers or those looking to go into education...

STEM Readiness[Enter Course]
Overview:

The STEM Readiness course provides a refresher of core skills related to STEM careers. The core skills covered are Mathematics from arithmetic to beginning algebra, Workplace Communications and Professionalism. The topics of the course are presented through workplace scenarios to show learners how these skills apply to their potential careers. In reviewing these core skills students will be better prepared to be successful in post-secondary STEM related technical programs and ultimately in STEM related careers.


http://oli.cmu.edu/courses/free-open/stem-readiness/
 
Nurturing STEM Skills in Young Learners, PreK–3

THE PROBLEM

Young children are avid STEM investigators, eager to explore and invent. Spend five minutes with a 3- to 8-year-old and you will field an astounding array of questions, as their own natural curiosity leads them towards STEM inquiry. “How can we all get a fair share of these cookies?” “How can I make my block skyscraper real tall—but not fall over?” “How can that log float on top of the lake? Isn’t it heavy?” Young children are also the earliest adopters of technology, grabbing for cameras, smart phones, and other tools as soon as they are able.

Supporting and guiding this natural desire to explore STEM ideas and phenomena can have lasting benefits. As noted in the National Research Council’s A Framework for K–12 Science Education Practices, “… before they even enter school, children have developed their own ideas about the physical, biological, and social worlds and how they work. By listening to and taking these ideas seriously, educators can build on what children already know and can do.”1 Yet current data on school readiness and early mathematics and science achievement—data on the “T and E” of early STEM learning is not available—indicate that we are not giving young children the support they need to be “STEM Smart.”

Striking Statistics: Early Education under the Scope

Leading economists concur that high-quality early education makes dollars and sense2; an analysis of the economic impact of the Perry Preschool program showed a 7% to 10% per year return on investment based on increased school and career achievement.3
Researchers have found that effective early mathematics education can enhance later learning and narrow achievement gaps.4,5,6,7,8
Approximately 40% of U.S. children are not ready for kindergarten,9 and too many children reach Grade 4 lacking key science and math skills and knowledge.10
Only 34% of Grade 4 students achieved a score of “At or Above Proficient” on the science portion of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).11
Only 40% of Grade 4 students achieved a score of “At or Above Proficient” on the mathematics portion of the NAEP.12


EY RESEARCH

A wide array of factors, some related to the complex PreK–3 learning landscape, diminishes the powerful, positive effect that early STEM learning can have. PreK education has been referred to as a “crazy quilt”—composed of child care centers, Head Start, school PreK programs, family child care—funded through a plethora of sources, with different standards, of inconsistent quality, and with scant focus on fostering early STEM learning. At the early elementary level, schools also vary widely in their resources, quality, effectiveness, and time spent on instruction in the disciplines related to STEM education—particularly science, technology, and engineering.

Challenges in three critical areas of the early learning landscape may bar the way to the successful STEM learning of children ages 3 to 8:

Curriculum and Instruction
Educator Development
Standards

It’s key to focus on these challenges across the PreK–3 span of the learning continuum. At ages 5 to 8, children can have more in common developmentally with younger peers than with students in Grade 4.13 PreK–3 educators will need to join forces to tackle these challenges, ease transitions between grades, and ensure positive STEM learning outcomes.

Curriculum and Instruction
The “most effective” way to foster young children’s STEM learning is a hot topic of debate that has entangled the field in a false dichotomy: play “vs.” learning. As long as the focus remains on the needs and developmental stage of each child, nurturing early STEM learning need not be an “either/or” proposition. As researcher Kyle Snow suggests, there should be “a place for both direct instruction and play.”14 Increasingly, a synthesis of instructional approaches is being viewed as key to successful early STEM learning.

Play-based curriculum is widely acknowledged to be a key dimension of effective early learning.15,16,17 Play segues smoothly into learning when teachers intentionally plan STEM experiences—focused on key concepts and skills—let children take the lead in exploring, and ask open-ended questions that cause children to reflect, form theories, ask questions, and explore more. Although experts view this type of learning as crucial for PreK children, K–3 children also benefit from this approach. Karen Worth, Chair of the Elementary Education Department at Wheelock College and science advisor for Peep and the Big Wide World observes, “For young children, science is about active, focused exploration of objects, materials, and events around them.”

Curricula that features direct instruction is also key to building PreK–3 children’s STEM skills and knowledge.18,19 Douglas Clements, Executive Director of the Marsico Institute of Early Learning and Literacy at the University of Denver’s Morgridge College of Education notes that research-based learning trajectories20 embedded in curricula are a particularly important facet of effective early STEM education. Clements notes, “STEM learning trajectories start with a goal and involve a developmental progression—students’ successive levels of thinking related to the goal. Based on their understanding of students’ thinking, teachers fine-tune activities to help students move along the developmental progression to achieve the goal.”

All approaches to nurturing PreK–3 children’s STEM skills and knowledge should reflect the following eight indicators of effective PreK–3 curriculum, as identified by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and the National Association of Early Childhood Specialists in State Departments of Education (NAECS/SDE):21

Children are active and engaged
Goals are clear and shared by all
Curriculum is evidence-based
Valued content is learned through investigation, play, and focused, intentional teaching
Curriculum builds on prior learning and experiences
Curriculum is comprehensive
Professional standards validate the curriculum’s subject-matter content
Research and other evidence indicates that the curriculum, if implemented as intended, will likely have beneficial effects

All approaches to nurturing PreK–3 children’s STEM skills and knowledge can also give teachers opportunities to build, and help children apply, executive function skills.22 These skills include organizing information, staying focused, strategizing, planning, and exercising self-control.23 Although experts view executive function skills as key to school readiness and success,24 a high percentage of PreK–3 teachers do not know or understand their role in early learning and need tools and training to help them foster children’s skills.25

Susan Carey, Henry A. Morss Jr. and Elizabeth W. Morss Professor of Psychology at Harvard University, says that executive function (EF) skills play a pivotal role in children’s early and later STEM learning. “In math and science class, children learn theories and have to be able to make sense of abstract representations,” she notes. “They have to connect how they understand things now to the new theory they learn—requiring them to make conceptual changes. Children who score higher on EF tasks make those conceptual changes faster.” Although children can strengthen EF skills throughout their lives, the early years present an especially important time to acquire these skills. “EFs are part of the specialization of the pre-frontal cortex,” Carey says, “This part of the brain is massively developing between infancy and ages 6 to 7.”

Regardless of the combination of effective approaches used, it is essential to devote adequate time to nurturing PreK–3 children’s early STEM learning. Currently, that is not happening. At the PreK level, the emphasis has traditionally been on cultivating young children’s language and literacy development, with a bit of math. “Comprehensive” PreK curricula said to cover math may not necessarily do so; one study of such a curriculum found that just 58 seconds of a 360-minute day were spent on math.26 PreK teachers seldom teach science, and exploring engineering ideas is rarely part of PreK learning. In fact, the Committee on K–12 Engineering Education identified the NSF-funded PreK–1 Young Scientist Series as the only preschool curriculum of relevance in its report on the state of U.S. engineering education.27

K–3 teachers spend more time on mathematics instruction. Yet science, technology, and engineering continue to receive short shrift. In part, this might stem from the current testing environment and a strong focus on testing mathematics knowledge and skills. A Horizon Research study found that “...in Grades K–3, reading/language arts and math combined for a total of 143 minutes of the school day on average, while science accounted for 19 minutes of that same day.”28 According to the Committee on K–12 Engineering Education, elementary and secondary school engineering education is “still very much a work in progress.”29

At both the PreK and K–3 level, early technology learning remains a murky area. Concerns linger about how to effectively draw upon technology to enhance learning—best types of technology tools, how much time children should spend exploring technology, uneven access to technology—as well as teachers’ “digital literacy.”30 However, 2013 findings from the Ready to Learn PreKindergarten Transmedia Mathematics Study highlight the positive role that judicious use of technology can play in early math learning and teaching and offer useful implications for the effective integration of technology into early STEM instruction.31

Educator Development
Teachers are the key ingredient in effective PreK–3 STEM learning. They must be prepared to adeptly draw upon strategies to promote children’s learning and tailor curriculum to meet the needs of each child.32, 33,34 Yet recent reports indicate that current systems of PreK–3 teacher preparation, licensure, and hiring are often inadequate, and that young children’s educators do not have the training they need to support children’s learning.35,36 Focusing on STEM, there are strong indications that, across the PreK–3 continuum, teachers need more support to successfully nurture children’s STEM learning.37

There is evidence that many PreK teachers do not—and do not know how to—effectively promote young children’s early math and science learning.38,39 For decades, the PreK workforce has grappled with complex challenges—insufficient pre-service preparation, different licensing criteria, extremely low pay for long hours, high turnover—that undermine its ability to fully support children’s learning. Kimberlee Kiehl, Executive Director of the Smithsonian Early Enrichment Center, reflects: “When you talk about the PreK world, teachers often come into the job having had no coursework in STEM at all. They're not prepared for it, and there’s very little professional development out there for them.” One survey of hundreds of PreK educators found that 94% were interested in participating in professional development in mathematics.40

At the early elementary school level, recent reports highlight the need to improve the preparation and professional development of mathematics and science teachers.41,42 A Horizon Research study found that only 39% of elementary school science teachers “feel very well prepared to teach science.”43 Slowly, some states are making progress in strengthening their systems of PreK–3 teacher preparation. For example, Georgia requires PreK–3 teachers to complete several courses that deepen their understanding of mathematics and how to support children’s early math learning; prospective PreK–3 teachers attending the University of Central Florida must complete a course, “Teaching Science and Technology to Young Children,” that prepares them to promote children’s STEM learning.44

Innovative professional development work is also underway. In Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, PreK teachers have completed Foundations of Science Literacy, a 6-month, credit-bearing, college-level course that combines face-to-face instruction with mentoring and performance-based assignments.45 The course draws upon The Young Scientist Series PreK–1 curriculum and has been found to improve teachers’ inquiry-based science instruction, lead to gains in teachers’ science content knowledge and pedagogical content knowledge, and increase children’s ability to solve scientific challenges.

Standards
Standards-based reform has brought challenges and opportunities to PreK–3 STEM education. These standards and guidelines spotlight what young children need to know and be able to do at different ages—and have the potential to help PreK–3 teachers enhance STEM education. Yet concerns and caveats accompany the standards.

At the PreK level, there are concerns that the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) might create pressure for children to tackle Kindergarten-level STEM content and skills before they are ready to do so, in ways they do not learn best, and to the diminishment of other kinds of support (e.g., social-emotional). Concerns have also arisen regarding how states are implementing and assessing early learning standards—and how well state early learning standards align with the CCSS and NGSS.

At the K–3 level, there are concerns that a narrow focus on the CCSS and NGSS, high stakes testing, and ensuring that children “test well” might take center stage—at the expense of fostering students’ deep STEM investigations and understanding.

NAEYC’s and NAECS/SDE’s elements of effective early learning standards46 might be useful for the field to consider as it moves forward to implement new K–3 STEM-related standards, as well as to continue to implement PreK early learning standards:

Emphasize significant, developmentally appropriate content and outcomes—by NAEYC’s definition, this entails knowing what is typical at each stage of early development based on research; understanding and addressing each child’s interests, abilities, and progress; and ensuring that standards are implemented in ways that are meaningful, relevant, and respectful for each child and family
Implement and assess standards in ways that support all young children’s development—this includes maintaining methods of instruction that include a range of approaches, including the use of play and both small- and large-group instruction
Provide support to early childhood programs and professionals—including tools and professional development—and to families in understanding the standards and how they can support their children’s learning

PROMISING PROGRAMS

The National Science Foundation supports a wide range of STEM programs—both promising and proven to have positive outcomes—for early learners. Here are four examples.

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CONCLUSIONS

Ensuring every child has a high-quality early STEM education is one of the best investments our country can make. Tomorrow’s engineers are building bridges in the block corner today. Tomorrow’s scientists are doing “field work” at recess, inspecting the structure of a fallen leaf.

To keep them exploring and ensure their positive outcomes, the full array of early childhood stakeholders must come together to create a strong, smooth continuum of PreK–3 STEM learning that features:

Teachers who have received high-quality pre-service and in-service training focused on STEM disciplines, effective instruction and curriculum, and how to draw upon standards and assessment to enhance each child’s STEM learning
Teachers who have received high-quality pre-service and in-service training focused on the executive function, self-control, and social skills necessary for successful learning in any subject, including STEM subjects
Sufficient time spent on STEM learning, every step of the way from PreK–3 and beyond
Research-based STEM curricula that makes use of learning trajectories to progressively build children’s skills and knowledge
STEM-focused play and hands-on learning in formal and informal settings that gives children free rein to explore STEM, guided by knowledgeable educators
Collaboration among PreK programs, schools, informal learning environments, and families focused on enhancing children’s STEM learning

Creating such a continuum will require significant commitment and coordination, yet will yield astronomical pay-offs—a STEM-capable workforce and citizenry—in the future.

http://successfulstemeducation.org/resources/nurturing-stem-skills-young-learners-prek–3
 
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