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3 Must-Haves When Hosting a STEM Career Day in Elementary Schools [ep. 143]

3 Must-Haves When Hosting a STEM Career Day in Elementary Schools [ep.143]

career day in elementary schools

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Episode Summary

Have you been thinking about a STEM career day for your students? Although It's a fun and exciting event, it can be a lot of work. In today's episode, I'm sharing the top 3 things every STEM teacher should know when hosting a STEM career day in elementary schools.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • 3 things to be considered when hosting a STEM career day in elementary schools
  • My experience with hosting a STEM career day with 500 K-5 students and 15 guest speakers
  • The importance of having guest speakers for a STEM career day in elementary schools

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith [00:00:00]:

Ready to set up a STEM career day for your elementary students? Setting up an event like this is so exciting, but it can be quite a bit of work to make sure that the day goes along smoothly. But I will be sharing with you 3 main things that you should consider when hosting a STEM career day that is super successful at your school. Take it from me, when I was a K-5 STEM teacher, I hosted a successful STEM career day for my K-5 elementary students for over 500 students in 15 presenters, and it went along beautifully. How did the STEM career day do so well? Let's jump into the episode. 


Naomi Meredith [00:01:19]:

I know how important it is to bring guest speakers into your elementary space. Guest speakers are able to provide something that you, as a teacher, can't always give them, and this isn't a bad thing. Saying this is just the reality of it. These guest speakers are able to bring in multiple perspectives for your students, share that industry experience that they have, and even talk about things that they are super passionate about, which in turn might be things that your students are passionate about too or things that they never knew that they would be passionate about and want to learn more. It is so important for kids to see other people like them who are doing amazing and great things for our world, especially in the STEM space. I remember my 1st career day experience that I got to attend as a student. I was in middle school, and we rotated throughout the school to learn from different people and all of their super cool jobs.


Naomi Meredith [00:02:38]:

At this point in middle school, I was in 8th grade, so almost in high school, I already knew what I wanted to be when I grew up. I knew I wanted to be a teacher, and truly, I have wanted to be a teacher ever since kindergarten. So the STEM career day was super cool and really awesome to learn about these different jobs, but I already knew what I wanted to be when I grew up anyway, so it didn't change my mind. Now, I might be an anomaly. You probably have students like this already, but having a STEM career day in the elementary space isn't too young. We often hear about these events in middle school, high school, and even college. We can do this in elementary school. A lot of times at those kindergarten graduations, we even ask them, what do you wanna be when you grow up? Well, let's give them different options to think about. There are so many jobs that even I, as an adult, have never heard of, and most likely, your students haven't either, so let's bring them that experience with a STEM career day.


Naomi Meredith [00:03:43]:

Now I know it's a lot of work getting this set up, and we're gonna talk about those top 3 tips. And when I did this for my school. I kept you in mind the entire time. Yes. I kept the event in mind, but I kept you in mind while I was planning this, and I saved every single template and every schedule and every video that I used to prep this day because I knew there were other teachers like you who would wanna do an event like this, but maybe all of that planning and prep work behind the scenes, is actually holding you back. Now think about this, if you're listening to this episode live when it comes out or whenever you're listening to it. Do you think it's actually crazy that if you were given all of the things to help you be successful, the templates, the way to schedule, how to set up your guest speakers? If you had all of that for you now, would it be so crazy to say, oh, I could actually get this set up to have an event in the next month or 2? I don't think that's crazy at all.


Naomi Meredith [00:04:54]:

And if you don't think that's crazy at all, I have it all ready for you in my newest workshop, my STEM career day workshop, where everything is laid out, and I walk you through the whole process from behind the scenes, from start to finish, and after where this event will be a piece of cake and a breeze. To get all of that info, it'll be linked in the show notes, but you can also get started with this workshop if you head on over to naomimeredith.com/stremcareerdayworkshop. It will be this audio workshop format for you where I will walk you through everything you need to know and help you for success. I did a poll over on my Instagram at Naomi Meredith underscore, and 83% of you said that you have never done a STEM career day before. So let's change that perspective. When I ask again in a year, have you ever done a STEM career day? Let's have that percentage, that 83%, be a yes instead of a no, and I am here to help you out along the way. The first thing to do when you are setting up your STEM career day is to think about the guests that you are having and have a variety of guests who are going to speak and formats. This kind of evolved on its own. I had an idea in my head of having different throughout this day, and I did provide different options for the parents while I was emailing and getting interest for this event.


Naomi Meredith [00:06:27]:

I was giving ideas to the parents right off the bat in my emails. You could do something hands-on. It can be a presentation or anything else you can think of because I did want the day to have a lot of different things where students can experience these careers in their own unique way. Instead of just having a parent stand up there, just talking to the kids, hello, here is my job and what I do. These parents brought in the coolest things and the coolest ideas to make this day come to life. I had 15 parent volunteers, and they were so gracious enough to be with us on the higher school day for K-5. They did so many different cool things with our students. And what was really awesome too is a lot of them at their jobs, they said that their bosses didn't either make them take the day as a personal day or some of their companies even have volunteer days and really encourage them to go do events like this.


Naomi Meredith [00:07:36]:

So, if you are scared even to get people to come into your building, these parents were more than willing to come in. And I had others who were interested, and they just had things going on that day. And so if you can get at least 10 parents to come in and do an event like this, you're gonna have a really successful day. Here were some of the types of jobs, some of the 15 that I had Khan speak to our students, and it was super, super cool. We had a systems engineer for Lockheed Martin, and they work on a lot of different things that get sent up into space. We had a clinical pharmacist, we had a husband and wife couple who are founders of an Art Academy, so you could even call this a steam day, and they had a really fun presentation. The kids really liked theirs. There was a hacking engineer, so showing the students how things are packaged before they get shipped and how they are packaged in specific ways to really help save room and cut down on cost.


Naomi Meredith [00:08:43]:

We also had a mechanical project designer. And like I said, these are only a few of the amazing people who came in to speak with our students. Some of you might be wondering how much you paid them. How much did this event cost? This day was absolutely free, 100% free. These parents volunteered their time. It happened during the school day, so I wanted my students to be able to experience all of these careers and not be limited by, oh, my mom and dad won't bring me in. No. Everybody, if you were at school that day and making good choices, you got to come to STEM career day, which was absolutely amazing.


Naomi Meredith [00:09:27]:

I did host in the morning as parents were coming in. We had some leeway leeway time. I did host some coffee and donuts for the parents. My PTO actually did not have fun with that. I personally paid for the coffee and donuts for the parents for their time had that little station available. It was the least that I could do for their time. But otherwise, the event was absolutely free, which is so important and so amazing that all the students got to experience this day. When it came to the actual presentations, there were a variety of things that were presented.


Naomi Meredith [00:10:05]:

Some parents had presentations up on the screen where they had pictures of them working in their jobs, and some had presentations even provided by their companies where, again, they encouraged them to do some community outreach and have those resources already available for them. One of the parents, who is a financial planner, had a whole comic book and video that went along with what they were talking about provided by their company, which was so amazing. There were also some hands-on stations where kids actually got to feel and touch things or look at things up close. 1 parent had actual computers that were taken apart, and students loved seeing the inside of electronics. They absolutely love that. 1 parent had a connection with their old company where they had a real working Enigma machine from World World War 2, which is a cipher that decoded messages from different places and things in World War 2, and the kids actually were allowed to touch it. So that machine was definitely built to last. It was absolutely amazing that they were touching history.


Naomi Meredith [00:11:20]:

There was also a station where a parent at their company had an intern who designed and illustrated a children's book to share more about that career and what they do in that career, and then the parent had the book and read it to the students, which was so cool. So like I said, I gave some options for parents of what they could present, but they really took off with it and had a lot of fun with this. And the kids absolutely loved the variety of different things that they got to experience in each of these stations. The second thing to do when setting up a successful STEM career day is to have a set schedule. Events like this definitely need to have clear cut times and locations of where everything is happening. If you don't plan this beforehand, that can be an absolute disaster. And so I worked with our PE teacher, who had an indoor field day schedule. And if you don't do indoor field day, ours was a backup day where the Colorado weather is very up and down, and we always needed a backup option to do field day inside.


Naomi Meredith [00:12:38]:

She had already created a schedule that worked with the lunch schedules we already had, and so I worked with her when it came to the scheduling piece because it was already done and how students would rotate in the building. So I had that set time schedule of where every class would be at which time and at which station, and then we also had a map of the locations of where they would visit each speaker. The sessions were only 10 minutes long, and it was interesting hearing from the speakers because they were the same people all day. In the morning, they had the older students, 3rd through 5th grade, and in the afternoon, they had kindergarten through 2nd grade. They all said the same thing where they felt like the 10 minutes was too short for the older students and they felt the 10 minutes in the afternoon was too long. And that is the transition time built within that 10 minutes, so I thought that was really interesting. So when you're planning this event, maybe consider that point of it where, if you want to, the students have a smaller amount of time. I kept it the same because the way the rotations worked, the teachers still had their planned time during this event, and the kids actually didn't have specials that day.


Naomi Meredith [00:14:00]:

And the kids and the teachers were like, oh, I'm so sad about it. Why aren't we having specials? I want to experience everything. Well, you don't have to go to your planned time, you get to experience most of the stations, but you actually get more time away from teaching than you do with actual specials anyway. And the same for the kids, you're getting more time doing something fun than you do in special. So it's one day out of the year. I don't think it's a big deal. I was a classroom teacher, but you might have some teachers like that, so just keep that in mind. For the fun stuff, you know, I like to add a little bit of flare.


Naomi Meredith [00:14:44]:

I also made signs with each of the parents' pictures on them and their job descriptions, and those were hanging in the locations where they would be. This was really helpful when students were traveling to the different classrooms and also for the parents to know where other people were and all of that. So that was actually a really nice touch, and the parents could keep their poster as a souvenir if they wanted to. Along with printing all of the schedules and the maps for the teachers, I also made class sets of a thank you card template that I created for them. We had 3rd through 5th grade go in the morning and k through 2 in the afternoon, as I said. So, for half of the day, the other grade levels were not participating in some career days in terms of the stations. This was a great opportunity for them to write a thank you note about their day if they wanted to do this during that time. I also collected all of those thank you notes back, and then me and the substitute I had covering my station for the day.


Naomi Meredith [00:15:53]:

I had a sub cover my stations, so I could be running around and help troubleshoot or anything like that. But we sorted all of the thank you notes based on the presenters if there were specific ones. Then, we just sorted the ones that were more generic out evenly. And so by the end of the week, the parents were given a stack of thank you notes to thank them for their time. I did read every single one, and I actually took pictures of the ones that were really amazing and powerful. They really made me tear up because I knew that this day was going to be really successful and really powerful for the students, but hearing their perspective talk about STEM career day was so powerful to me. Here are a few of the thank you notes that they said, and they were so cute. 1 student said, thank you for helping us learn, and this is to the presenters, not to me.


Naomi Meredith [00:16:53]:

But they said thank you for helping us learn. I can't wait to tell my family all about it. Another student said, thank you for sharing such cool stuff with us. This is one of the most fun events we ever had at school, which I'm all, oh, compared to field day, I'll take that. And then this one was really, really sweet, and they had a picture of a rocket in the bottom. Really, really good handwriting. And they said to one of the parents, thank you so much for taking time off work to come teach us about your job and how it uses STEM. I learned a lot about rockets and all their parts.


Naomi Meredith [00:17:31]:

I really liked how you let us touch some of the parts of the rocket and showed us a timeline video of the rocket being made. Thank you for teaching me and my class here. I think when I'm older, I want to be a systems engineer like you. How amazing is that? And knowing this student, I never actually would have guessed that might be something that they would be really passionate about, so that was really, really cool. The last thing that you definitely wanna do when setting up a successful Strum career day for your school is build hype and promote it. You are setting up an event, and just like any event, you want to build up that hype. I did this for my own wedding. You do this for events. I am that kind of person.


Naomi Meredith [00:18:23]:

If I am passionate about something and there is a project that I'm working on, first of all, I won't start a project unless I am passionate about it. You betcha. I'm gonna build hype about it because I want everybody to have an amazing experience and really be into what we are doing. And you wanna do this for STEM career day. It's not just 1 little email. Hey, guys. We're gonna do STEM career day on April 5th. I hope you have a good time. No. You are building this up.


Naomi Meredith [00:18:54]:

If you're not hyped up about it, nobody else is gonna be hyped up about it. When at first glance, it actually might sound boring. Hey, you're gonna hear parents talk about their jobs. No, you need to make this a whole thing. You wanna build that hype. And I did save everything I did for this, and so inside of that workshop, you get all the templates and all the things to help you hype up your day, so you don't have to think about all the words. I was putting a bug in people's ears, like talking to some of the teachers. What do you think about this idea? They're like, oh my gosh, that's amazing. I'm thinking about doing a STEM career day. What do you think about that? So, putting a bug in the air like months before this was actually gonna happen.


Naomi Meredith [00:19:41]:

Talking to our admin. Hey. I wanna put on this event. I will plan the whole event. It'll be during the day. It'll be educational. It'll be amazing. And just getting those dates confirmed, putting it in parent newsletters and classroom newsletters, and getting interest.


Naomi Meredith [00:20:00]:

Once I had that interest from parents, then I could collect more information. Here's how you can present that day. So, really building that hype. Also, as a teacher, I always talked about this with kids. And once I kinda knew the people who would be presenting and it was connecting what we were learning, I was like, oh my gosh, you guys. We have somebody, somebody's parent, who's actually going to talk about their job that relates to this project that we are doing. Isn't that amazing? And they're like, oh my gosh, that's so good. So you definitely wanna hype this up.


Naomi Meredith [00:20:35]:

Another huge thing, too, when it comes to events and hyping up is I promoted this all the time on our school-wide video news. And if you're interested in how to do this, I have a workshop about this, too, which we will link in the show notes. So, if you wanna know how to do a school-wide news team, I will show you every single thing in there. All the templates are in there as well. As I said, I kept you guys in mind when I set all of these events up. But anyway, I made videos for the news. I would say, hey, guys, here is the session that I am presenting on. I did have a backup session just in case anything were to happen, but I put that on the news.


Naomi Meredith [00:21:15]:

I even had parents who were presenting. They made videos that went on the news, and the kids went insane when they saw their parents on their screen in their classroom talking about their jobs. How cool is that? So, really building up this hype, sending those email reminders, having all the materials prepared for teachers. So it's like you get you don't have to teach for 2 hours this day. A little side note, I actually plan mine. It worked out perfectly. We had our STEM career day on Pi Day, so 3.14, pi, the mathematical pi, you know. We had it on that day.


Naomi Meredith [00:21:53]:

It's also Star Wars Day, so that was pretty cool. And the next day was a teacher workday, and that was just such a lovely treat for the teachers. So, even the timing of STEM career day was hype in itself. So, really building this up to be an amazing event and why this is so important will even help it go a lot quicker because the kids know, oh, Miss Meredith is so excited about this. We should be excited about this too, and we should really behave and do a good job because this is a very special event. So, really build up that hype. It does make a difference. It really, really does.


Naomi Meredith [00:22:33]:

Get pumped, and everyone will get pumped about it and support you on this amazing day. As a recap, here are those 3 main things that you should keep in mind when setting up a successful STEM career day for your elementary students. First, have a variety of guests and formats. 2nd, have a set schedule. And 3rd, don't forget about this part, build hype about your event and promote it. If you are so pumped up, just like I am, to get started and set up a STEM career day in no time at all and not have to think about all the details and how all of this works and how did it all go, how do you collect this information. I have every single template and everything laid out for you where I will walk you through this step by step in this workshop this is an audio workshop, so it is really special and different from other workshops I've done in the past where each little thing will be broken up into a segment that you can listen on the go, where you will have all of those digital templates and all the things need to get set up, but you will hear me and listen to me while you are on the go, and I will talk you through the whole process. You don't need to join me live.


Naomi Meredith [00:23:50]:

I know you are busy, and you all have different schedules of when you would set this up, so I kept this in mind where this is ready to go for you to get into this special day and set it up for your students and feel confident that it is going to work. You can grab all of that information in the show notes or check it out at naomimeredith.com/STEMcareerdayworkshop.

career day in elementary schools

 

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More About your host, Naomi Meredith

Naomi Meredith is a former classroom teacher turned current K-5 STEM teacher and coach. Her role not only includes teaching over 500 students in her school, but also leading professional development and co-teaching with teachers to help them integrate STEM & Technology.

With over a decade of experience along with a M.Ed. in STEM Leadership and STEM certificate, she helps teachers navigate the best practices, strategies and tools out there.

She truly believes that any teacher out there can learn how to use STEM & Technology in their classrooms effectively. She can’t wait to connect with you and be your guide!

More About The Elementary STEM Coach Podcast

Are you tired of scrolling online for your next great STEM lesson? Do you feel like there is no time to plan, research and test meaningful STEM lessons, so you throw together a hands-on activity and hope that it works? What systems and routines should you set in place to help students be creative, critically think, and collaborate? 

The Elementary STEM Coach is a podcast for K-5 STEM teachers, classroom teachers, GT specialists, and homeschool parents looking for actionable STEM solutions. Each week, Naomi Meredith will share tools, resources and lesson ideas that are actionable in your classroom and create highly engaging experiences with your students. You’ll learn systems and routines that will create control in the chaos and that will keep you organized all year long. 

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