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Available for download at www.deepwater.org/nia-stem

Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

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Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula. Available for download at www.deepwater.org/nia-stem. Overview. Starting Points Our educational goals What is Integrative STEM? How integrating STEM helps reach our goals Strategies for integrating STEM How to learn more. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Available for download at • www.deepwater.org/nia-stem

Page 2: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Starting Points• Our educational goals• What is Integrative

STEM?• How integrating

STEM helps reach our goals

• Strategies for integrating STEM

• How to learn more

Page 3: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

•You’re already integrating STEM;

•Integration provides synergies;

•Integrated teaching is beneficial for everyone;

•Innovation is at the intersections of disciplines;

•Innovation is messy; and

•There’s lots of help out there.

Page 4: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Realize aspirations• Live to learn• Live to contribute• Live for challenge• Live to gain wisdom• Live to make a difference• Live to touch lives• Live to have fun!

Page 5: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Science is a process by which we answer questions and solve problems, and the body of knowledge resulting from that process.

• SCIENCE is the application of

human intelligence to figuring out how the natural world around us works. Inquiry is the method used to establish scientific understanding.

Page 6: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• MATHEMATICS is the science of patterns and relationships among real and non-real objects. It is key to understanding and communicating most of science and engineering.

Logic is the method by which mathematical knowledge is created.

Page 7: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• TECHNOLOGY is the modification of the world to meet human needs and wants. Design is the method for developing new and useful products and processes.

Page 8: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• ENGINEERING is also the modification of the natural world to meet human needs and wants, but it differs from technology in that it is more analytic and based strongly on scientific knowledge. Design and redesign are the modes of understanding and doing.

Page 9: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

STEM education focuses on understanding broad concepts which, when integrated allows students to focus on problems and solutions without concerns about crossing over into separate subject areas. Indeed one can almost make the analogy that this is the way a classical liberal arts education is designed.

STEM education means that students use the design process to understand concepts and then apply the concepts to the novel situation or problem that needs to be resolved.

Page 10: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Systematic• Rigorous• Relevant• Cultural

Page 11: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Part of unit planning• Constructivism and a continuum of

learning• Collaboration with other teachers• Coordination with higher education

Page 12: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Where does your course fit?

Sciences Math

Technology

Engineering

Page 13: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Consider your course connections to:

• Biology• Chemistry• Physics• Earth and Space Science• Algebra• Geometry• Trigonometry• Statistics• Calculus• Multi-Variable Calculus• Technology / Engineering• CTE courses

Page 14: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Entrepreneurship Motivational for

students Business

partnerships for schools, teachers and students

Page 15: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Invest in student-focused pedagogies Gardner, Dewey, Vygotsky, Piaget and

Duckworth

• Connect with students as individuals Tap motivational and emotional curiosity

• Consider Developmental Factors Understand brain research

• Learning environment Recognize environmental and cultural

preferences

Page 16: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Pedagogical content knowledge is an understanding of how particular topics, problems or issues are organized, represented, and adapted to the diverse interests and abilities of learners, and presented for instruction.

Dewey

Piaget

Page 17: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Zone of Zone of Proximal Proximal DevelopmentDevelopmentA difference exists between what a child can do on his/her own and what the child can do with help.

Vygotskians call this difference the zone of proximal development.

Page 18: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Backwards Planning5-E’s InquiryProject-Based LearningProblem-Based LearningDesign Briefs

Page 19: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Understanding by Design (Wiggins &

McTyghe, 1998, 2005) is a form of Backwards Design

• Consider an Agenda Builder• Resources online at www.hbwbiology.net/math-

science/unit-plans Backwards Design Template NortelLearniT Agenda Builder

Page 20: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Begins with students' questions and their prior knowledge and experience.

• By seeking answers to their questions, students may discover new, related questions and a sense of wonderment to continue the process.

• This usually involves experimentation or research; in either case, the student is responsible for designing the investigation.

Page 21: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Preparation of the provided textual materials

• Representation of the ideas in the form of new analogies and metaphors 

• Instructional selections  from among an array of teaching methods and models

• Classroom environment includes layout, culture, etc.

Page 22: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Adaptation of student materials and activities to reflect the characteristics of student learning style

• Tailoring the adaptations to the specific students in the classrooms

Page 23: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Engage• Explore

(Experiment)• Explain• Elaborate• Evaluate• Extend

Page 24: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Initiate the task• Connect past and present learning• Stimulate interest and curiosity• Uncover current knowledge (pre-

assessment)

Page 25: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Your own stories• Demos – free cameras!

• Videos Google and YouTube –

www.zamzar.com Firefox VideoDownloader Add-on TeacherTube - http://teachertube.com/

Page 26: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Opportunities for creative thinking and skills development

• Test predictions and form new predictions and hypotheses

• Record observations and ideas

Page 27: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Students demonstrate conceptual understanding, skills, and behaviors

• Students list critically to others’ explanations

• Students develop vocabulary through application of concepts

• Students learn to apply evidence

Page 28: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Challenge and extend students’ conceptual understanding and skills

• Students use previous information to ask questions, propose solutions or make decisions

• Students apply concepts and skills to new situations

Page 29: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Students demonstrate understanding of a concept or skill

Page 30: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Implications for further exploration and new understandings.

Page 31: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Student design• Problem-solving• Experiences• Autonomy• Teamwork• Cooperative

learning• Authentic content• Authentic

assessment

Reduced teacher role

Experiential learning

Self-assessment

ConstructivistAdult skillsCommunity

involvementCognitive use

of technologyRelevance

Page 32: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Develop hands-on STEM projects that teach life skills and have utility beyond the student’s or class needs.

Page 33: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Involve students in STEM projects that improve an existing solution to a problem.

Page 34: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Promote STEM projects that solve community problems or promote new ideas.

Page 35: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Facilitate STEM projects that model community-based decision-making.

Page 36: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Coordinate STEM projects that monitor a community’s resources.

Page 37: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Identify STEM extensions to social studies.

Page 38: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Exploring STEM extensions in Fine Arts.

Page 39: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

1. Project-based learning projects are central, not peripheral to the curriculum.

2. Project-based learning projects are focused on questions or problems that drive students to encounter and struggle with the central concepts and principles of a discipline.

3. Projects involve students in a constructivist investigation.

4. Projects are student-driven to some significant degree.

5. Projects are realistic, not school-like.

Page 40: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Projects are student-driven to some significant degree.

• Varies with grade level• Safety concerns• Ethical concerns

Page 41: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Comparison to Project-Based Learning1. Project-based learning projects are central,

not peripheral to the curriculum.2. Project-based learning projects are focused

on questions or problems that drive students to encounter and struggle with the central concepts and principles of a discipline.

3. Projects involve students in a constructivist investigation.

4. Projects are student-driven to some significant degree.

5. Projects are realistic, not school-like.

Page 42: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

TutorialsKnown / Unknown solutionsPreferred methodsParametersCompetition

Page 43: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Projects are realistic, not school-like.

• Real problems!• Community partners?

Page 44: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• For every winner, multiple losers• Reflective strategies

“Good ideas” Second attempts Design, build, test, re-design, rebuild

Page 45: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Teachers’ limited understandings of inquiry

• Teachers’ lack of experience with research

• Teachers’ misperceptions of rigor • Lack of a “community of practice” to

engaged in.

Page 46: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Doors begin opening when we reflect on ourselves, and then become willing to explore the darkness. Try new things!

• Many are more comfortable with the certainty of misery than the misery of uncertainty.

Page 47: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

You will come to a place where the streets are not marked. Some windows are lighted but mostly they’re darked. A place you could sprain both your elbow and chin! Do you dare stay out? Do you dare go in? How much can you lose? How much can you win?

Oh, the Places You’ll Go!

Page 48: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Motivation affects:• The time students will spend

learning content• Probability that assignments will be

completed• Attendance rates• Students’ attention while in class• Amount students’ learn• Course Grades• Satisfaction with the course

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• Presentation• Demonstration• Tutorial• Discovery

Page 50: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Use of an integrated learning system in a subject

• Encouraging students to use word processing and presentation software in reports and displays.

• Using presentation software and projection technology for teacher presentations

• Using computer for on-line testing and research

• Use of digital data collection devices• Handheld devices, cameras

Page 51: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• No one expects any teacher to make these transformations on their own.

• More and more resources are on the way

• Filters and portals too!

Page 52: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Virginia Tech’s Integrative STEM courses are no available online. STEM Education Pedagogy STEM Education Foundations STEM Education Research STEM Education Trends & Issues STEM Education Field Study

• Discounted tuition for teachers.

Page 53: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

Degree Programs• Certificate in Integrative STEM Ed. – 12

hours• Master’s in Integrative STEM Ed. – 30

hours• Ed.S. in Integrative STEM Ed. – 30 hours• Ed.D / Ph.D Integrative STEM Ed.

60 hours of coursework (including Masters); plus

30 hours (Ed.D) or 36 hours (Ph.D) dissertation.

Discounted tuition for teachers!

Page 54: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Action Research• Descriptive Research• Case studies• Auto-ethnography

Jim Egenrieder – [email protected] Scott – [email protected]

Page 55: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Pam Brott, Career Counseling, [email protected]; 703-538-8347• John Burton, Research and Outreach, [email protected]; 540-231-5587• Norma Day-Vines, Multicultural Counseling, [email protected]; 703-538-8479• Jim Egenrieder, Science Education, [email protected]; 703-538-8492• John Eller, Education Leadership, [email protected]; 703-538-8496• Bill Glenn, Data Resources and Decisions, [email protected]; 703-538-8493• Rosary Lalik, Content Area Literacies, [email protected]; 703-538-8482• Simone Lambert, Community Counseling, [email protected]; 703-538-8483• Sue Magliaro, Director, School of Education, [email protected]; 540-231-1802• Mark Sanders, Technology Ed/STEM Ed, [email protected]; 540-231-8173• Cathy Scott, Math Education, [email protected]; 703-538-3752• John Wells, Technology Ed/STEM Ed, [email protected]; 540-231-8471

Page 56: Integrating STEM in standards-based curricula

• Jim Egenrieder• 7054 Haycock Road, Falls Church

[email protected] or [email protected] 703-599-3643 (cell or text)304-492-4292http://www.nvc.vt.edu/education/mathscience/