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5 Robot Ideas for Winter Time [ep.44]

5 Robot Ideas for Winter Time [ep.44]

robot-ideas-for-winter-time

Check out the full episode on 5 Robot Ideas for Winter Time:  

 

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Episode Summary

Looking for some fun robot ideas for wintertime?

In this episode, I will be sharing with you five winter-themed robot lessons that you can teach in your classroom.

These are lessons that I have taught my students that they have absolutely loved, and I know that yours will too. 

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • 5 winter robot ideas
  • How to implement each of these ideas in your classroom
  • What the children learn during these activities

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

What are some fun robot ideas for wintertime? In this episode, I will be sharing with you five winter-themed robot lessons that you can teach in your classroom. These are lessons that I have taught my students that they have absolutely loved, and I know that yours will too. 


Naomi Meredith  00:48

Before we jump on in not a whole lot of announcements today, but I have one very exciting one. So in 2023, I'm going to be hosting live virtual workshops. I definitely don't want you to miss out on all the fun. So it will be a great time to learn and connect with other STEM teachers about various topics. Again, I don't want you to want to miss out on that. So you can join the waitlist here, and you'll be the first to know when they are open. You can join the waitlist at Naomimeredith.com/workshopwaitlist. 


Naomi Meredith  01:26

For all of the lessons that I'm going to be talking about in this episode, I use various specific robots and a variety of robots in my classroom. However, don't be so stuck on the robots that I'm going to be talking about for each of these lessons. You can definitely mix in whatever robots you have on hand. For example, if I'm talking about the Sphero robot for a specific lesson, you don't necessarily have to use it. So it can definitely work with whatever robots you have. Also, I'm just sharing with you a snapshot of how I taught these lessons. For second through fifth grade, I went through the whole Engineering Design Process throughout the week, so this wasn't a one-day challenge. You could, of course, modify it to be a one-day challenge, but we really went through all the stages of the Engineering Design Process for each of these lessons, besides the Kindergarten and the first one that I will be sharing at the end, the one for Kindergarten and first grade was for a STEM station. So it was one of many activities that we did throughout the week. So just keep that in mind when you're hearing about these lessons. They're way more involved than what I'm really talking about. I just wanted to give you an idea for winter theme robotics lessons that you can use Well, of course, during the wintertime, and help spark creativity with all of these fun, different themes. 


Naomi Meredith  02:48

The first robot idea for wintertime is Sphero sleds. As I said, don't get too caught up in the type of robot that I used. For this lesson. I was inspired by the Iditarod, and I'm not quite sure why I got inspired by it. But I was inspired by the Iditarod, and I'm so glad I picked this topic for this lesson because where I'm at in Colorado, most kids actually don't know what the Iditarod is. Now once I started talking more about it, they had a little bit of background based on maybe some movies that they had seen. But overall, most kids had no idea what the Iditarod was. In general, if you can pick very obscure topics, that's going to really help with the engagement. So not only were the kids engaged in the topic of the Iditarod but they were also excited to code and integrate some engineering challenges as well. So a whole lot of things to be engaged in. So basically, the Iditarod is a dog sled race, a very famous one that takes place in Alaska in March. That's a basic snapshot for you to look up, but the kids are super into it. Of course, if they love animals and dogs like me, like my little dog, Frederick, he could definitely not do a dog sled race, that would not be happening. He doesn't even like going outside when it's sprinkling water outside. He will avoid sprinklers when we go on a walk so he would not be an Iditarod dog. But the kids love seeing videos of this. There are a whole lot of great things out there. 


Naomi Meredith  04:24

The Iditarod website is awesome for research. They can research a musher and learn more about that and their sled race, all of that. So students will research and learn about the Iditarod, and then they will design a sled for the robot to pull through the race. So depending on the type of robot, this could definitely vary your materials. When I did this in my class was Sphero. I had red solo cups or similarly shaped cups that they could cut and manipulate plastic straws, paper, and tape, and that was actually it. Those were all the supplies that students had to work with, so they really had to be creative. This actually helped that the weight of the sled wasn't too heavy so that the robot could pull it while it was being coded. Then students would have to code their robot through the Iditarod race. So I have a race track that has all of the checkpoints that are actually listed in the actual race. Students can learn about that pathway and how treacherous it is, and how there are so many different angles to go through. It's really fun, too, because depending on their sled design, it really changes how the robot moves and how it affects the race track. This is a really fun challenge. The kids are super engaged and super excited. Then they get to learn about something that they may not have heard about before. 


Naomi Meredith  05:46

The second robot idea for wintertime is Sphero snowflakes. Again, use whatever robot you want. I did this lesson with the fourth grade. Students learn about different types of angles, lines, and symmetry. This is really well represented in snowflakes. There are some awesome videos out there when it comes to the math behind snowflakes and how they have all these different things. It really helps students build on that vocabulary when it comes to lines and angles and even how to measure angles. Depending on the type of robot that you have. You can even code the robot to go in certain angles, which is really helpful as well because we know this is a very hard math concept for students to grasp. So why not implement it within your STEM classroom? After students learn about the math behind snowflakes, they will create their own snowflakes that will be taped onto the floor. In my classroom, I have tiled floors, so I actually have pulled out the sidewalk chalk, and the students will sketch out and measure their snowflake designs on the floor. They were going absolutely nuts that I let them draw on the floor like it's just chalk is totally fine. 


Naomi Meredith  06:57

So again, there's some engagement, but students would draw their snowflake design on the floor, and then they would cover it up using masking tape. It's so much fun too because it looks like Buddy the Elf decorated your classroom for Christmas or the holidays. So you have these fun snowflake designs for the week, and then students can pull them up when they are all finished. You could build your own snowflakes, but it's way more fun to have the kids build the snowflakes, and they get so creative with their designs. Now, if you get really strict with a snowflake design, where it's not just a free build, and you really have students measure using protractors and yardsticks, they can actually have a snowflake that is legit symmetrical. They can have parts of their code where they can actually loop the code because there are identical lines at angles. So this, again, is a great application of their math skills and putting it in a concrete way. So this was so much fun for the kids. It really differentiates itself based on its snowflake design and what they create. 


Naomi Meredith  08:41

The third robot idea for wintertime is Winter Games robot mapping. This is a lesson that I did with third grade, and we talked about the Winter Olympics and all the places that they have been located within a certain amount of time. We used Google Earth to explore all of these places and learn a little bit more about them and just some cool facts about the Winter Olympics in general. Students placed them on their maps. Likewise, we realized that the most current Winter Games are all located above the equator, and we talked about the reasoning behind that. So this was a cool integration to actually expose students to Google Earth. Noticing those tools and even practicing their mapping skills, and where things are located on a world map, from there students coded their Ozobots, their little tiny robots to travel to each of the places where the Winter Games were held in the order when they happened. When the robot landed on that location on the map, then it had to perform an action. So this also helped too, where they had to code in chronological order, and in some places, they had to go backward. So it really helped again, really notice the pattern of where things are located in the world. If you did this with larger robots, you could use the same map template that I used, and you could blow it up even bigger. If you Google ways to print a PDF on multiple pages, you could print the map and make it very ginormous. Then you could laminate it if you wanted to and then use larger robots. So don't feel limited if you can't use the Ozobots. I know at the time of this recording, those are actually hard to get your hands on. So you can use a variety of different things as well. So it was just a really cool connection to think about the Winter Games, what they are and where they're located in the world. 


Naomi Meredith  11:37

The fourth robot idea for wintertime is winter animal migration robots. This one was for second grade, and we did mapping in a different way. We talked about different animals, the reasons why they might migrate, and how there are a bunch of animals that decide to migrate during the wintertime. Students are given articles about specific animals that migrate during the winter time that I pre-researched and wrote articles for them, shared the articles in Seesaw, and recorded my voice. So they had all of that information for them. They chose an animal out of that selection that they were most passionate about. Then they had to code their animal with the migration path that it takes during the wintertime on a specific map. So I had all this created for them, they had the specific maps, and they had an idea of the locations of where the animal migrated to. But then they actually had to create the path and where it stopped at different locations. Again, the robot had to perform an action. So this was super engaging for them. We even made the little Ozobots be the animal that was migrating. So I have little pictures that they could tape to the robot, and it was super fun for them to even record the robot in action on Seesaw, I didn't mention this with the other ones. But I actually have students record a video of their robots in action with Seesaw, which you could do with Flipgrid or whatever you use. But this is a great way for students, I have air quotations, to take their work home because sometimes it's hard for kids to really talk about what they did in STEM class because we use such obscure things. So I highly recommend taking photos and videos of their work. So then it feels like they are taking the work home, I say you're taking the work home by taking a picture, it doesn't always have to be a physical object. So it's just super fun for this winter animal migration project and all the other projects for them to share the learning with their families. 


Naomi Meredith  13:38

The final robot idea for wintertime is build a snowman robot coding. This was part of a STEM station rotation out of all the different winter-themed STEM challenges that I did throughout the week with the younger students. So this was one of many where we didn't go through the full Engineering Design Process. Students were given different images of fun snow people and characters that had different accessories on them, they had a full image of that character, and the cards that they were given had all the different parts that would make that specific snowman. From there, students had to code their robots. I use Beebots but again, definitely up to you what robots you would like to use. But students would code their robot to collect the pieces to build that snowman character in the order of how they thought it should be built. So this even included the round ball at the bottom of the snowman, the middle, if there was a middle, would you put the eyes on first before the glasses or would you not so it really helped them with that sequential order of how things are being built. So it's almost like that reverse engineering where it actually is taken apart for them, and they have to think of what order would it be to build that snowman character. So it was super fun for them. They could definitely take turns, they can take the cards off the grid as soon as they collect them. You can even add in more snowman stories if you would like. But this was a really fun and engaging STEM station. It was quick, it was engaging, but there was plenty for the students to interact with. 


Naomi Meredith  15:16

As a recap, here are the five robot ideas for wintertime that you can implement in your STEM classroom. First, we had Sphero sleds. Next are the Sphero snowflakes. Third are the Winter Games mapping, which I used Ozobots. Fourth, the winter animal migration, again with Ozobots. And fifth, build a snowman coding. I hope you enjoyed all of these different fun winter-themed robotic lessons. Of course, mix in the robots that work best for you, what you have on hand and the age level of your students. If you're interested in grabbing all these lessons and getting them in full detail, I have them all packaged together nicely in a bundle in my TPT shop. Or you can even purchase the lessons individually based on the students and the needs that you have. But that way, it will save you some time, and then you can see the engagement in your classroom that I saw and mine.

 

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robot-ideas-for-winter-time

 

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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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

hour of code ideas

Hour of Code Ideas for Elementary STEM [ep.38]

Hour of Code Ideas for Elementary STEM [ep.38]

hour of code ideas

Check out the full episode on Hour of Code Ideas for Elementary STEM:  

 

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

Are you looking for Hour of Code ideas for elementary STEM?

There is an abundance of free resources available, but it can be overwhelming navigating them all and finding what will work best for your classroom.

In today’s episode, I break down how to navigate Hour of Code resources for K through five, review devices you can use and options for unplugged coding, and provide instructions on how you can set up the Hour of Code in your classroom. 

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How to navigate the Hour of Code resource
  • Examples of device-based coding and unplugged coding and how to implement each
  • Tips for structuring your time with station rotations, whole group exploration, or a mixture of both
  • How to utilize extra resources on the Hour of Code

Resources Mentioned:

Some items are linked to my Amazon Affiliate account. When you purchase through my link, there is no added cost to you, but I receive a small commission in return.

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

Looking for Hour of Code ideas for elementary STEM? While there is an abundance of free resources out there, it can be overwhelming navigating them all and finding what will work best for your classroom. In this episode, I will break down how to navigate the resources for K through five, what devices you can use or not use, and instructions on how you can set up the Hour of Code in your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  00:55

Before we jump right into this episode, I have created a freebie for you to help capture all the learning that you're going to have throughout this episode, and all of the resources and how to get that all organized for K through five STEM. So you can download that free resource at Naomimeredith.com/tpthourofcode. This will also be linked in the show notes, so you don't have to memorize this. I love the Hour of Code. This is an excellent unit to implement into your K through five STEM classroom. Or, if you are a classroom teacher who's interested in STEM, you can definitely jump right in because most of the resources I'm going to be talking about are absolutely free. To get me in the mood for this episode, I am wearing my create with code shirt that I got from Target a little while back. So it's super fun. You all know by now I love a good theme. So, of course, I have a coding shirt or two in my closet that I pulled out during this time. I will say that the Hour of Code is one of the few units that I actually don't write or create everything from scratch. This is because there are so many great resources out there that I personally know I don't have as much experience as the people who are creating them. And it's always changing. I want to make sure that my students are exposed to these materials. That is why I have that free guide for you that helps you sift through all that information. But again, these are things that I'm not always creating from scratch because there are so many coding languages out there, even for kids. I want to make sure, again, that kids have access to those. 


Naomi Meredith  02:32

Now, if you have never heard of the Hour of Code, that is okay. I am so glad that you are here! The Hour of Code started in 2013, and it was a way to get kids exposed to the world of coding at a young age. It was initially to be an hour in your school and to get kids pumped up and excited about computer science. It is also hosted in conjunction with computer science week, which they have its own website as well. The official Computer Science Week for 2022 is from December 5 through the 11th. and the Hour of Code is usually hosted around this time. But you can do coding at any time of the year. So don't feel like you have to do it this week. The first time that I was exposed to the Hour of Code was in 2013, my first year teaching third grade as a classroom teacher. I remember it was just so amazing seeing my students code the Angry Birds to get the little piggies. I had never seen anything like this, and this was my first real exposure as a teacher to seeing children coding. In hindsight, this could have been one of the many sparks that I had to get me into K through five STEM now. But at the time, I thought it was so amazing, and I still think that it's amazing to see kids being able to write a language using blocks to control what is happening on the screen. This was way more problem-solving than just clicking arrows and playing a video game passively. The students were collaborating and problem-solving. I loved the excitement that they had when they completed each of these challenges. 


Naomi Meredith  04:13

If you haven't done the Hour of Code, either, you're gonna see the same excitement in your students. It is just so much fun. Because there are so many different options out there where students can explore again, a lot of different coding languages that work best for their grade level. At the time, my students, they had the Hour of Code as an actual hour where we went into our computer lab, and they got to play around with the different coding languages that were available at the time. So you could still do this as a school-wide promotion. You could do this as a week-long STEM unit. You could start it in your STEM classroom and then keep promoting it within the classrooms or at home. There are so many different possibilities. So don't feel like you have to limit yourself to one hour or one unit. There are just so many different ways that you can do coding and the Hour of Code throughout the year. 


Naomi Meredith  05:03

So first, let's talk about navigating the Hour of Code website. This is going to be your hub for finding the different coding activities that will work best for your classroom. As I said, this can be overwhelming at first, and over the years, they have been making the navigation of the website so much easier. The first thing you're going to want to do is to sign up to host your Hour of Code event. This is absolutely free. I feel like this is a way for them to keep track of how many kids are participating. They will also send you some free resources or things to get you excited leading up to the official Hour of Code week. So make sure you sign up, put in a little bit of information, and then you are on your way to navigating the Hour of Code website. You're going to see that there are different types of coding activities that are organized by grade level, which are the main types of navigation. Over on this side, you can get even more specific with the types of coding activities you would like to have your students exposed to. Some of these categories that are listed are the types of devices that you have. There's even an option if you have slow internet. You could filter out the activities that would work best for that on the devices. If you're an iPad-only school or vice versa, a laptop-only school, you can click on that filter, and then you can search through the activities that way. If you don't have access to devices at all, which we're going to talk about this in a bit, or you would like to have a station that is screen-free or unplugged coding, you can search for those options. 


Naomi Meredith  06:41

But it gets even better with these filters. You can filter by the length of the lesson if you do want it to last an hour or if you do want it to last for over a week. You can search through the different accessibility options. Play around with those filters. As I said, it can be overwhelming at first. I actually don't have students jump right into the Hour of Code website because they can get lost pretty easily. As a teacher, you want to pick through and play around with the things you think will work best developmentally. Then you can make a simple one-page choice board. I like to make mine in Google slides that are view only. Then there are clickable links for the students. Or you could just send the links along to students in whatever LMS system you like to use or even create QR codes that the kids can scan. Definitely try to play around with the devices that you have, and see what is going to work and not work. Then you can go from there. I like to share the website, the Hour of Code website, with students after we completed the unit, so they can play around and explore at home. But I always want them to jump right in and get to the task at hand. So that's why creating those very specific links for students is helpful. This helps prevent decision fatigue. Then you know that those specific links are going to use on the devices or, if you're not doing devices, the materials that you have students to use. 


Naomi Meredith  08:08

At the very top of the Hour of Code website, there's also a promote tab, so play around with that. There are some posters that you can print that have some diverse and even some famous people on there. My fiance's favorite is the Shakira poster. He loves Shakira. So he likes that Hour of Code posters on there. But there are some really cool posters and handouts that you can print and send home with families or teachers. There are some email templates, there's even a sticker template that you can print out, and students can proudly wear a sticker saying that they participated in the Hour of Code. There are also some really awesome videos that you can show your students where they are talking about the Hour of Code and the importance of coding. Again, some famous faces are in a lot of these videos. These are really awesome resources to check out and really dive in to get kids excited about computer science and coding. I mentioned this a little bit ago, but you have the option when you're doing any type of coding with kids, you can have device-based coding, which is what most of us are accustomed to when students are coding on the computer. Or you can do coding unplugged. Both have a lot of value. Even if your students have experience with computer coding, having the ability to code unplugged and being able to problem solve in that way can be very valuable. In fact, you are really working on computational thinking and having students be able to really think through those problems. They might not always have that instant gratification from what is on the screen, but it's going to help them slow down and really think through if the information that they are moving or writing down is correct. You can even pair unplugged coding with device-based coding and have students write down some of the things that they're hoping to do in the program, and then they can apply it to their learning. 


Naomi Meredith  10:08

Here are some of my favorite coding unplugged activities that can work for a variety of grade levels. One really fun one is to do binary beads. I'm pretty sure Hour of Code has a lesson related to this. You teach students about binary code, the language that computers use to talk with the zeros and the ones. Then there is a binary code alphabet. Students can have little pony beads, different colored beads to represent the different codes and the binary code chart, and then spell their name or a word that resonates with them. This is a really great one. Then students have a physical takeaway from the actual project.


Naomi Meredith  12:24

Another fun one that I did when I was teaching third grade for computer science training is we did cup coding. With this activity, there are different pictures of combinations of cups that are stacked in a lot of different combinations. The goal of this is you have a programmer, and then you have the robot. So the goal of the programmer is to write the code out using the language of this cup coding program. So up means to hold up the cup one cup length to a turn would be flipping the cup over at 90 degrees. A down would be putting the cup down at a cup length and so on. There's a cup coding language for this activity. As the programmer, you are writing the code that will match the picture of what the robot needs to complete, then the robot has to read your code with the arrows and the turns. And hopefully, they are able to complete the picture without seeing the picture and only reading the code. Again, this is a great computational thinking lesson and a great problem solving challenge. 


Naomi Meredith  13:36

Another one that is very similar and really popular with younger students is to do human-robot coding. You can have different cards that have arrows that have different meanings, forwards and backward. You can add in a jump, or a spin, whatever you would like. I have this all created for you in my TPT shop. Again, you have a programmer and a robot, and the programmer writes the code using the cards, and then the human-robot actually has to perform the action. This is so much fun, and the kids like to have control of each other. But it really does get their body moving. It helps those younger students with directional coding and understanding left and right, and forwards and backward, which they can apply to a lot of the computer-based programs or even when you do robotic coding. 


Naomi Meredith  14:24

Another coding unplugged option that I like to do is having a paper grid or even a digital grid. There are different markers in the grid that students need to collect using a code. They can write down the code again using arrows, or you can have your own coding language written out, like block-based coding. Block-based coding is when you see the blocks with the words written inside, and then you drag the blocks over. Usually, read it from the top to the bottom, and the robot or the program will read it from top to bottom with those different blocks. So this is like the in-between of more complicated typing programs. Anyway, with this coding unplugged option, students can write the code using arrows, or they can write using their own language of block-based coding to collect the different tasks on the paper. Again, I have a lesson created for this already, it's all about donuts. There is a lot of fun and different challenges within this that are all completely device free. You can have students complete it together. There's even a fun one where students have to complete it like battleship. So that is a goodie, but an oldie, and it's fun. It's all donut themed. 


Naomi Meredith  15:33

When thinking about adding other devices to your Hour of Code time, a fun tool that you might have in your classroom, or you can invest in Makey Makey. These are really cool because they connect to the very popular program, scratch, and students can explore conductive and not conductive materials. Basically, how the Makey Makey works is you have different clamps with wired connections that go into this hub, and the hub is connected to the computer. On the computer, you have the coding program, Scratch, open, and then you play around with the Makey Makey options. Then you can connect the clamps that are connected to that hub to different things that are conductive. When those conductive things are touched, then it will trigger the code that is written for that actual connection. It sounds like a lot, but very simple when you see it in real life. Trust me, I saw something very similar in real life, and the STEM teacher in me got really excited. One year I went to Meow Wolf in New Mexico, and they have a part of the exhibit where it's this big mammoth with ribs showing. When you touch the ribs, it makes a sound. Well, in my mind, I knew exactly what was happening when it came to the coding and the connections because of the Makey Makey. It's like the raw version of it. So Hour of Code is a great time to implement those physical materials as well. 


Naomi Meredith  17:05

Another thing that is really fun to teach students during the Hour of Code is the difference between hardware and software, especially for those younger students, but older students will benefit too. Younger students really like to understand the difference between the two because there is a difference. With my younger students, I have created a paper tablet where they get to color and add in the different apps, the software. Then when they open up the tablet, there are different pieces of hardware, which is a very basic version. I knew that they would love it. They were literally obsessed with having their own paper tablet and just wanted to play with them. Definitely recommend a lesson like that talking about computer hardware and software because that's also valuable when it comes to coding and understanding how our computers work in our world. 


Naomi Meredith  17:51

When it comes to structuring your time, I mentioned some different options of how you can get your school involved or even classroom teachers, or you might even be the classroom teacher who's getting involved. When I first did our code, I had students three days a week. So I did station rotations and had a lot of different options when it came to coding unplugged and different websites that were appropriate for their grade level that I navigated from the Hour of Code website. Now I have students for five days. So again, I still like to implement those coding unplugged choices. But I also have the option where students are exploring different coding languages. They can try those out. I like to give them a variety, whether it is block-based coding or it is coding by typing or coding with arrows. I like to give them that choice and see what languages that they're really connecting with. I also like to start off my lessons, whether it's the station rotations or it is with whole group instruction, with different videos that are related to coding, which I'm going to talk about in a second because it's good for students to hear the explanation where I'm at. I'm not the ultimate expert when it comes to coding. I am a great facilitator when it comes to elementary STEM coding, but by no means am I an expert on this. I realize that not all students are going to be computer programmers, but you never know who's going to be. So I always want to expose kids to a lot of different things in general when it comes to my STEM class. So this is a really great time to do that. 


Naomi Meredith  19:23

Me personally, I do robotics as a whole separate unit. I don't really do a whole lot of robotics during my Hour of Code unit because I want to dive deeper when it comes to robotics. So for me, I like to start with Hour of Code. I do typically teach this around December or January. Then my unit immediately after is my separate robotics unit. That way, students have a background when it comes to different coding languages. Then they can really play around with those languages when it comes to the robots that we're using and see the output of what the robot's task is going to be. That is a personal preference. But what has worked well in my STEM classroom, it's definitely up to you. I know people also like to implement robots in their Hour of Code. So do what works best for you and the time that you have with the kids. As I said, in this Hour of Code unit, I don't create a whole lot for it because there are so many great things out there. This even includes a ton of video resources that I love to show my students when it comes to computer science and coding, BrainPOP and BrainPOP Jr have a lot of great videos. They have added a lot more over the years. When it comes to learning about computational thinking, different ways to code, such as looping, or even parts of a computer and coding in general, definitely check those out. 


Naomi Meredith  20:44

In the free guide, I even break up which videos I like to use with each grade level so you're not always repeating the same ones. You also know that I am a huge fan of SciShow Kids, which I talked about back in episode 17, where it's all of those different resources I like to use for imagining. SciShow Kids also has some great videos when it comes to teaching about robots and the parts of a computer. If you want to dive in even deeper when it comes to coding, some of you might even be a technology teacher and not necessarily STEM. Code.org, separate from Hour of Code, has more extensive materials, actual units, and a progression of learning when it comes to coding in your classroom. This is also great to look into if you're thinking about a different after-school opportunity. You don't need to go and create anything because there are so many things on there that you can just plug and play, especially for those kids who really are getting obsessed with coding. Again, another great after-school activity with very minimal prep. One of my favorites for after-school activities is the Google CS first curriculum. There is a whole theme and a different challenge that they have to create. They're always improving this curriculum and really making it self-guided, and kids can access the information at home. So definitely recommend checking out that resource. 


Naomi Meredith  22:03

As a recap, there is so much to do for Hour of code, but it is such a fun unit to implement. It should be your least stressful unit out of your entire year because most of it's already done for you. You just have to go in, explore and check out the free guide that I have for you because that's going to help you really wrap your head around all the different things that you can do during this time. We first talked about navigating that Hour of Code resource. So definitely play around with those filters that can help you with your experience. Then we talked about how you can have a mixture of device-based coding and coding unplugged or unplugged coding. Then also think about structuring your time if you want to do station rotations, a whole group exploring, or a mixture of both. Then really utilize those extra resources out there, especially when it comes to videos, where you can see coding that is relevant in their real lives. Again, make sure to check out the Hour of Code freebie that I have created for you to help you organize your time with your students. This will be linked in the show notes, and you can also grab it at Naomimeredith.com/tpthourofcode.

 

hour of code ideas

hour of code ideas

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

 

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

how to teach a STEM lesson

How to Teach a STEM Lesson [ep.35]

How to Teach a STEM Lesson [ep.35]

how to teach a STEM lesson

Check out the full episode on How to Teach a STEM LEsson:  

 

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

Struggling to find a structure and a flow when teaching your STEM lessons?

In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you how to teach all of my K through five STEM lessons.

This method has allowed me to get through the content. Students are able to have enough work time, and it even saves a little room for cleanup at the end.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How to teach a STEM lesson using the workshop model
  • What the workshop model is
  • Each stage of the workshop model

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

Struggling to find a structure and a flow when teaching your STEM lessons? In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you the exact format that I use to teach all of my K through five STEM lessons. 


Naomi Meredith  00:11

This method has been a game changer for me during the past five years as a STEM teacher, and it has allowed me to get through the content. Students are able to have enough work time, and it even saves a little room for cleanup at the end. Let's jump right in. 


Naomi Meredith  00:59

I originally taught in the classroom for six years before I landed my role in K through five STEM. I was in a brand new district with a brand new remodeled classroom, limited tools and zero curriculum. It was super overwhelming at first. But I knew that my time spent as a classroom teacher for six years before this role was definitely an asset. I even talked about this in episode 11 of the podcast, why classroom teachers make great STEM teachers. So go back and take a listen if this is a role that you have tumbled into, and you just don't know where to begin. Overall, this is why I created this podcast. This is something that I wish I had, so I am giving back to you. We know that time goes by super fast as a teacher, especially as a specialist teacher. I'm going to be sharing with you the exact model that I use to teach all of my lessons in my classroom. This is a structure that I didn't invent. You might be a little bit surprised by what I'm going to be sharing with you, and I'm ready to spill all the secrets. Do you want to hear what the model I use is? It's the workshop model, not new, but I use this structure in my K through five STEM space for all of my lessons. I'm going to break down for you exactly how I use the workshop model. 


Naomi Meredith  02:22

In my classroom, I use the workshop model when integrating the Engineering Design Process with my projects and with STEM stations. I know that you can too. It will definitely give you the structure that you are looking for, and you don't have to change it up every day. If you keep it the same every single day, students will know what to expect when they come into your classroom, and it will ease the stress of your teaching. It will definitely help you with time management with all of the things going on. Real quick, here's an overview of the workshop model. If you haven't used this method of teaching, think of the workshop model as a circle of a pie chart. So literally, your time is in a circle, you are going to break it up into a few different sections. I have my classes for 45 minutes, K through five. So depending on the time that you have with kids, you will adjust accordingly. I'm also not including the transition time that I have in between classes because that is separate from this workshop model. So keep that in mind as well. Within the workshop model, you have it broken up into three parts, but not three equal parts. You have a medium slice, a big slice of the pie, which is most of it and a tiny slice at the end. First, our medium slice is the mini lesson. For me my mini lessons are between five to eight minutes. After that you have the practice time. This is when students are collaborating, they're working independently, or maybe they're in station rotations. For me, my practice time is between 25 to 35 minutes. Finally, the tiniest slice of the pie that is between two to five minutes is your share, reflect and clean up. I structure all of my classes this way, and it just brings a ton of consistency. 


Naomi Meredith  04:12

But let's really talk about what each of those timeframes look like, depending on the lesson that I'm teaching. Throughout the year, my second grade students come into my classroom often with their classroom computers. I don't have a classroom set of computers in my room. So I have set this up from day one, that for 90% of the lessons that I'm going to teach students will carry their classroom computer with them to my classroom, we may or may not use it, but it's just great that they have it. I also like to connect the lessons to what they're doing within their class, even just by the simple fact of logging into their student computer. This gives them that extra practice. Yes, it might take longer sometimes, especially with the younger students, but I just want to set up the expectation that we will sometimes use tech now as a tool, not as a toy to help us with the lessons that we're teaching. When students come in with their computer, their role is computer on the table, sit on the floor. When they sit on the floor, they are in my group meeting area and they're ready to go for the lesson. If they don't have their computer or if they're younger students, they're only one step direction is sit on the floor. One hundred percent of the time, I've talked about this in past episodes, I don't have students sitting at the tables when I teach. My room is ginormous, and I don't talk very loud. I know the kids aren't listening to me when they are spread out along the room. Yes, K through five, my big kids do this as well. I don't feel bad because in PE and music, they don't have chairs either. They have to sit on the floor. So don't feel bad at all. They are okay. They're sitting on the floor in front of our group meeting area. That's where I have my TV and all the materials ready to go to teach the lesson. 


Naomi Meredith  05:55

Another great way to maximize your time is on the screen, have a warm up question related to the project that you're going to be working on. Or even have the slides that you will be teaching from ready to go have student examples, something related to the lesson that will pique their interest and get their mindset ready to go. I am very big on using every moment wisely. So even just the act of having something on the screen for students to look at and talk about with the people next to them is extremely valuable when I am teaching with the Engineering Design Process. All of my Engineering Design Process notebooks are digital. I actually don't create separate slides to teach from. I teach from the student slides that I assigned to them. I will typically assign them in Seesaw, sometimes in Google Classroom, but I will be physically logged in as a teacher opening up the slides within that class I am teaching from so they can see me interact with the slides just as if they were as well. It's great to connect the two together and the kids know they have access to everything that I am showing them. So nothing I am showing them is a surprise. If you are curious to hear more about the Engineering Design Process. I talked about this and a lot of my episodes, but more specifically in Episodes 15 and 17 through 21. So go back and take a listen. I break down each stage of the Engineering Design Process and how you can use this within your space. 


Naomi Meredith  07:28

When I am teaching the mini lesson, it is very short. It is a mini lesson and I am able to include everything I need to within the short amount of time. If you forget anything, you can pause the class during their practice and work time and remind them of the next steps. There is nothing wrong with that. The goal of this is when students are sitting down ready to learn, they are getting the bulk of the information from you. You are the teacher, you can keep teaching throughout the class time. When I'm teaching with the Engineering Design Process, the mini lesson is when I am introducing each step very specifically. Day one is when I would do the ask, imagine, and have students to start planning their designs. Day two is when students will be finishing up their designs and begin to create what they are hoping to design. Day three and four is all about more creation, experimenting, and improving. I might even introduce a modification checklist so the can see how to make their design better. All of my mini lessons are going to be really focused in on each of these stages. The final day is more experimenting, improving, and how students are going to share their work. 


Naomi Meredith  08:41

When I was a classroom teacher, I always taught with a workshop model anyway, and I am always teaching the next step. Some kids might not be ready for my lesson, but they know where they're going. They can look back in their digital Engineering Design Process notebook from the week and see what they missed and what they need to keep working on to get to where I am teaching for the day. Again, I'm always teaching the next step and I tell my students that it's okay if they're not there yet. I'm teaching them where they are headed so they can be successful and know what to work on. This is also a time where I will build a background and the science behind what we are doing. This can be day one, but I will also do this during the week as well because students can always modify and change their design. So there's nothing wrong with doing background information a little bit each day. This might be a related video that I found, a website, or an article. Again, these are all linked in their Engineering Design Process notebooks. I often have to show the class the videos at the same time because they are linked to YouTube and my district blocks YouTube. So that's the only way that we can watch them. The kids know that they even want to watch it at home. They have access to these links as well for more specific lessons during this mini lesson. 


Naomi Meredith  09:53

If I'm doing a Makerspace project, this is where I would talk about the Makerspace menu and money system. If I am doing a technology project, this is also when I would talk about very specific things on how to get connected to the technology. For example, if I am teaching robotics with a Sphero, or a Dash robot, this is where I will physically show them how to connect to that robot. I also have visual directions that I will post after my mini lesson. I will refer to them when I am teaching. So I will model how to get to that specific technology. But then that digital anchor chart will also be posted with visuals to remind students how to do the steps that I just talked about. I highly recommend making these anchor charts digital and not cluttering your walls with all of them. Unless you're using the same tool K through five, I don't have a whole lot of wall space. I'm very specific about the things that I hang up. I want everything to be purposeful in my classroom for all classes. That's why I will make a lot of these anchor charts digital, of course, they're linked to my TPT shop. But that way, I can pull up what I need. It's very specific for that class, and I don't have to print a million things. I don't have the time for that either.


Naomi Meredith  11:07

If I'm doing a station rotation, the mini lesson is also the time where I will build the background knowledge and have a related video about the topic. I will also show students how to complete each of the stations. I will do the same process for both days of stations. I do for station rotations, when I do stations with my younger students, I will have a station for each letter of STEM. They will complete two stations a day. Same process. I don't assume that they remember how to do the stations. Some will and some won't. Some kids are absent, some kids were new for the day. So I always will review those expectations for my classes who have a hard time with behavior. I will also, during this mini lesson, go over the specific ways of how they can earn their class incentive and refer to each of those expectations as well. This mini lesson is when I am the star of the show. Going over those very specific things I need them to do during their work time. I am not up there for very long. So I really have to get the most bang for my buck during this time. Because the majority of class time they are going to be working on their projects, whatever it is that we are doing for the week. I do realize that it can be tricky when you are using technology as one of your main sources of tools. Then you want to show them how to use the technology. Then you want to show them how it's going to connect to everything. When this happens, this is usually for me when we are doing a coding platform and Engineering Design Process notebook. 


Naomi Meredith  14:14

If that is digital or even logging into 3D printing, I will break up the mini lesson and the practice time that's student work time. Often I will get their excitement, build a little bit of background, then I will show students how to connect to the tool or how to log in how to get that all set up. So I tell them we're getting our materials ready first, and then I'm going to show you how to use that. I will show them those steps have the visual directions backup for them. They will go get their materials ready, leave them ready to go and then come back to the floor for students who need a lot more support. There's only one of you and a lot of them. I will show them all the steps and let's say it's a Engineering Design Process notebook I want them to get to, I will have the visual steps on one side and then the page I want them in their engineering notebook ready to go. I will tell them when everybody at your table has their screen matching mine, you will come to the floor, nothing in your hands. So that means that all the kids have to help each other at their table. They can't do it for them, they have to be the YouTube tutorial and show them how to do it by pointing. Then when everybody is ready to go, then they can come to the floor. This has really helped where students are being more independent and helpful when it comes to technology, and not always relying on me for every single troubleshooting issue. This also frees me up for the students who really are having problems that none of the kids can solve. I'm not running around fixing everything. There are usually at least a couple of kids at each table who can be successful and who are happy to help. 


Naomi Meredith  15:47

From there, I will finish off the mini lesson where the kids are on the floor, the materials are ready to go. I'll show them how to use it, how it relates to the lesson. Then we will move on to that practice time because everything is set up and ready to go. So this is a great way to break it up where the kids aren't sitting for 20 minutes. You're kind of merging that mini lesson and that work time together. Now we are officially moving on to that practice time when it comes to the workshop model. And of course, I have all the helpful tools posted up on my screen ready for kids to access. My favorite that I have mentioned before is classroomscreen.com, where you can upload images. There's timer widgets, there's a text box where you can type things, you can have everything displayed all nicely in one place. You don't have to minimize your tabs and make them fit perfectly. Everything is all there for you and I highly recommend checking that out if you haven't used classroomscreen.com already. I will almost always have a timer up on my screen during the student work time. So students are aware of how much time they have to work in my class. During station rotations, I actually don't only because I do stations with Kindergarten and first grade. I kind of have to gauge what is going on in the classroom. I will typically set a timer on my watch, and I will use that as a guide noticing if groups are a little bit squirrely. Or if they need a little bit more time, they sometimes will ask me how much time they have left, I will always tell them. 


Naomi Meredith  17:21

But this actually worked well for station rotations just based on the class and their experience with station rotations and how they're feeling that day with the materials at hand. When students are working, they usually want to work with others when it's on station rotations. I allow them to work in groups of one, two or three. Our projects are usually really small. I'm really big about having small projects because they're easier to store. I tell them if you want to be a group of four, just do two and two, that way, you have more of a chance to work on everything. This has worked really well. I used to do bigger groups in the past, but I realized not all kids had a chance to participate, there wasn't enough for them to do. So keeping groups smaller really helps with the collaboration they had can have a voice during their work time and feel like that they are involved in the project. During this time, I will be roaming the room assisting as needed. I'm really big about ask three before me, especially when it comes to troubleshooting or what questions they have. Again, I am the guide on the side, I am not the star of the show during this work time. I am during the mini lesson, trust me, you should see me in action. But during this work time, it's all about them getting all the work done that they have at hand. 


Naomi Meredith  18:36

Finally, the last part of the workshop model that is the smallest and that is the share, reflect and I added in that clean up. For me this is about two to five minutes, it is quick, and I am able to get my classes to clean up very fast here and there. I will have a class who are very, very slow cleaning up, they might need more time. I keep that in mind and balance it all out. But for the most part, most classes can clean up in about five minutes. When it comes to station rotations, they will clean up before they rotate. So again, I'll have that mini lesson we have the video building background, I show them how to do the stations, they will work in their stations, then they will clean up and stand at their clean station. They're not allowed to go anywhere. They don't know where they're going. They have to be cleaned up before they're able to rotate. After all the stations are cleaned up, I will have them stand there I will go to that station, I will stay in there with them and show them how to point to their next station. When everybody's pointing to their next station, they will walk to the next one and work on what they have at hand. 


Naomi Meredith  19:39

Again, when the time is up, they will clean up they'll stand up their clean station and then they'll come and join me on the floor and we will learn and then we will reflect on the learning for the day. For an Engineering Design Process project we will clean up and then they will either sit at their tables or they'll all join me on the floor depending on where we're at with that cleanup. I like to use the same reflection questions that are in their  Engineering Design Process notebooks at the very end, what went well? What was the challenge for them? If they were to do this project again, what would they work on? I might even ask them what went well, what would you recommend? So for kids who are going to be on that next stage tomorrow, what advice would they give them. So questions like this are really helpful to talk about as a class, and to really close up everything that happened for the day, you can also make a digital check in a lot like what Jill mentioned in her guest interview and a past episode, but you could do a digital check in as to where they're at in the Engineering Design Process, or how they are feeling and that part of the process. You could create this in a Google slide or a Google jam board, and there is a little circle that has the kids classroom number, and they can move that little circle as to where they are feeling. A lot of different ways to reflect, you don't have to go overboard with this. But it's good to have some sort of closure, where it's not just clean up, run out the door. When we're all done for the day, I will let the class know if they earn their classic incentive, and then they will go line up in my green hallway so they are ready to go for the teacher. Again, I don't have them lineup in my classroom because if the teacher is late or if another class is early, then they are all in the hallway, and they're ready for that teacher. Then I can clean up any last things prepare any last materials before my next class comes for the day. 


Naomi Meredith  21:22

As a recap, here is how to teach a STEM lesson when using the workshop model. First, we talked about what the workshop model is, then you move on to the mini lesson to start it all off. The bulk of your work time is that practice time, then you piece it all together with the share, reflect and clean up time by creating a predictable structure for all of your lessons K through five, not only will this be helpful for you as a teacher, it'll create that consistency for the students. So when they step into your space, they will always know what is going on with the actual content, but the structure is always going to be the same. This is going to help with your classroom management, behavior management, and even help you get through all of the content, no matter how much time you have with kids, and how often that you see them.

how to teach a STEM lesson

how to teach a STEM lesson

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

SEL in elementary

Ideas for SEL in Elementary STEM with Jill Loesch [ep. 31]

Ideas for SEL in Elementary STEM with Jill Loesch [ep. 31]

SEL in Elementary

Check out the full episode on Ideas for SEL in Elementary STEM with Jill Loesch:  

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

SEL is quite a buzzword in the education community, but the overall concept isn't new. In fact, no matter what subject or grade level you teach, there's always room for integrating social-emotional learning, growth mindset, and developing soft skills in your everyday teaching.

Today, we have a special guest, Jill Loesch, from the Self Nurtured Teacher, and she is going to be talking about just that. She'll explain what SEL means to her, ways that you can embed it into your STEM and hands-on learning, and a variety of resources for teachers and students. This episode is packed full of actionable tips and resources.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • Jill’s definition of SEL
  • How to incorporate SEL into your elementary STEM classroom
  • SEL resources for teachers and students

 

Meet Jill Loesch, The Self Nurtured Teacher

Jill has been an Elementary teacher since 1997. She's taught PreK-2 classroom, K-6 literacy specialist, and PreK-6 instructional coach with a focus on differentiation, SEL, and mindset.

Jill specializes in creating and implementing systems and mindsets that integrate everyday SEL for students and teachers with little to no prep.

She is a certified life coach focused on redefining self care for overworked women. She has created SEL and self care specific card decks that are used by teachers and women looking for everyday self care. Jill runs a TPT store focused on K-2 SEL resources, coaches women through her Self Care Society, and owns a fitness studio with her husband.

Jill is also a mom to 2 adult kids, Max and Elliana.

In her free time she loves to lift weights, take walks around the lakes, go on scooter dates, and spend time with family and friends.

Connect with Jill: 

Follow Jill on Instagram: @theselfnurturedclassroom

Check out Jill’s Blog: selfnurturedteacher.com

Jill’s Free K-1 SEL Year Long Guide 

Jill’s TpT Shop and other SEL Freebies

Resources Mentioned:

Some items are linked to my Amazon Affiliate account. When you purchase through my link, there is no added cost to you, but I receive a small commission in return.

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

SEL is quite a buzzword in the education community, but the overall concept isn't new. In fact, no matter what subject or grade level you teach, there's always room for integrating social-emotional learning, growth mindset, and developing soft skills in your everyday teaching. Today, we have a special guest, Jill Loesch, from the Self Nurtured Teacher, and she is going to be talking about just that. She'll explain what SEL means to her, ways that you can embed it into your STEM and hands-on learning, and a variety of resources for teachers and students. This episode is packed full of actionable tips and resources. I know you're going to adore Jill and her thoughtfulness, her sweet soul, and a plethora of experiences. 


Naomi Meredith  01:18

Well, thank you so much, Jill, for being here. I am so glad that we connected through a mutual business friend of ours, Molly Wheatley.  I did a training in her group and then you were there and you were smiling. You were so excited about the topic, and then we messaged a bit. Then I said, “I think you would be really great on this podcast with your expertise.” I really liked the sound of your voice. So I'm so glad that you're here. I know our listeners are really going to benefit from what you have to share today, as it relates to SEL and STEM and hands on learning and all of those awesome things that are so important for our kids no matter what age level they are. So to help us get to know more about you tell us about yourself, your teaching background, and how you stepped into the role as the self nurtured teacher.


Jill Loesch  02:10

Thank you! I am so excited to be here and love making these online connections with other educators. I think for those people that are listening to this podcast and other education podcasts, we can feel so much in silos sometimes. It's kind of nice to be able to find people that align with us that don't necessarily geographically live by us. So thank you for having me. My education started really, as a child, both my parents are teachers. So I grew up around education. I just remember being in my dad's classroom, from really little on and then I had the amazing opportunity to attend the school that he taught at and had him for my fifth grade language arts teacher. I come from a long line of teachers, which is great. Along with that also come some of the things that many of us teachers struggle with, right, the all in the at all costs as it pertains even to our ourselves. Flash forward to my teaching career, which started in 1997. So I've been teaching for for a while. Mostly I'm an elementary teacher. I'm also licensed preschool. So in Minneapolis, where I live and taught in, I've taught classroom, pre K through second grade, but also was a literacy coach for K through five and an instructional coach for K through five teachers and students. I did a lot of parents things with that, too. 


Jill Loesch  03:49

So I think, the biggest shift for me, and what brought me to the Self Nurture Teacher, which is where you'll find my website. And that is me as a teacher to overworked women, not necessarily just teachers looking to create opportunities for everyday self care. Self care and SEL are very tied together and understanding that and when I was diagnosed with Addison's disease in 2017, that's a life threatening illness. I have no adrenal gland function. So it really it created a different shift that was necessary for me to be able to stay alive and teach. It really was taking the systems and the structures that I was so good at and putting into place with students, and the procedures and all that, those kinds of things, but into my own planning time, and energy expenditure. I realized that what I was doing at that time was really benefiting my colleagues that I was working with and received all kinds of feedback and thanks like, “Wow, thank you for showing me this and allowing it to be okay to do my best but not put myself in harm's way as terms of health and mental health.” So that's where I am. That's how that's how I got here. The resources I create for teachers is like a little extension that's teacher specific. That is the self nurtured classroom. So it kind of embodies that idea of you nurturing yourself, your students, your energy, your environment, all the things that we have control over because there's many things that we do, but most things that we don't have control over.


Naomi Meredith  05:38

I appreciate your story, and just thank you for being vulnerable and sharing that like, that's a lot. I love how I can tell you're just a very positive person and just how, like you that's. I can't imagine how you've taken that as a positive experience and just have really been, ” Okay, I have this going on, but how can I help others.” You're just an amazing lady to be doing all of this and like you even just sharing your story. Who knows how you have helped someone. That's so amazing. Also, your passion for education, your experience is so valuable, like, I am so glad that you are here today. You are amazing. So when it comes to SEL, and how it relates to elementary, how would you describe that? What research do you use to refine your practice?


Jill Loesch  06:30

So for me, SEL is a 24/7 way of being human. So just kind of a back step of this, like, I started teaching prior to No Child Left Behind where SEL was just kind of best practice and what kids did in school, and then the large, like pendulum swing to the academic push. Don't get me wrong, like I'm all about taking these academics and taking the potential and moving them. But at what cost, right? So SEL is not new to me. It's just kind of how I've embodied my teaching. As a licensed early childhood educator, that's what we did. We looked at the whole child providing hands on experiences, and nurturing the confidence in students, just who they are as a person and where they are in their academics and where they can go. So I just like to, like preface that it's 24/7; it's not a 15 minute lesson. It's not something like “Oh, I'm doing SEL!” It's really how your day, your class if you're a classroom teacher, if you are a special teacher that are focusing on STEM, it's how you structure your entire time with those students. When it comes to the mindset, the way your class is organized, everything is set up for them. SEL in education for me is providing numerous real life experiences and opportunities for students and ourselves to practice within our space and to grow within that together to really become just a well rounded person and community member. I mean, that is the ultimate goal for me.


Naomi Meredith  08:25

I appreciate that, and that is so true. I feel like SEL can be a buzzword. I don't know if you would think that. But it isn't something new, and I actually taught preschool when I was in college. It was such a hard decision to choose between going into elementary or early childhood. You're so right, it is about the whole child, which we do that in elementary, but I feel like we're missing that sometimes. And it is so like this 15 minute lesson, but it really is 24/7. Do you have any specific resources or research that you've used or things that have helped you? I know your experiences are the best research of what you've done with kids.


Jill Loesch  09:06

I know that I have that listed down, like I had a write down. I'm like, Yeah, and that's like, Oh, yes. And then this and then this, because I think sometimes, you know, we think research and these articles, which that's a part of SEL, that's a part of everything. Then it's teaching there's the art and science of it. Being a human there's like the book smart paper on paper looks great. Then there's the reality and it's somewhere in the middle right is where the magic happens. So yes, I have over 25 years of hands on experience, trial and error of that, right, like, oh, and then each kid is different too. So it's understanding this strategy or that I would never do this strategy with this kid because that would just shut them down. Whereas you kind of have to navigate that you start with a base and then you can kind of see which way we can tap into the potential for each student. Most of my practice is really rooted in Responsive Classroom. I have level one and level two training, and I have had the great fortune of teaching alongside two national trainers. So we had all kinds of opportunities with that. 


Jill Loesch  10:19

So that can absolutely be brought into a STEM program for people that are teaching that as you know, a standalone content area, as well as if you're the one responsible. For me, in my classroom, we were responsible for our science and STEM. So if that's you listening to this, like, there are some really simple ways that you can tap into that. Responsive Classroom is a great way to just utilize that in just everyday structures without even necessarily a specific STEM lesson, so to speak. In addition to that, ENVoY, which is a nonverbal classroom communication management. I taught with a teammate that was a national trainer for ENVoY. So just really, you know, understanding how to tap into capturing engagement with kids. That wasn't just kind of some of the management, which is a part of SEL. I have two different trainings in IB PYP program. I'm not sure a lot of people recognize IB PYP from an high school standpoint, but the organization has an accredited elementary program, which is highly rooted in profiles and attitudes, which are directly correlated with SEL. 


Jill Loesch  11:46

Again, just being a human, being a risk taker having empathy being responsible. There's like 20 of them between the two, that paired with just growth mindset, Carol Dweck's work looking at a lot of that, and having training as an instructional coach. Minneapolis brought in trainers, and we had lots of training around that as it pertained to working with adults, and coaching adults through that to get students and then I personally did numerous things around that with parents. In the one school where I was the coach, I focused heavily on advanced differentiation. Many people might call it gifted and talented, we call it advanced differential differentiation. And so really looking at a preventative parent workshop to look at how do we approach with a growth mindset. Because when you have gifted or advanced learners, they tend to really fall into a fixed mindset, which is kind of hard for people to hear like, “Oh, they're so smart.” It's like, No, we don't want to be saying that to them. We want to really go into some depth and complexity. So I have lots of training around advanced differentiation. That was part of part of my my job. I will always be looking to Castle for what they say best practices around SEL.


Naomi Meredith  13:06

I think that's such a well balanced mix of things. So in my role, I teach all the kids in the school and you said what works for one kid might not work for another. And so just being any teacher, you have to be prepared for what comes your way. I see K through five, 500 Plus kids, a lot of stuff teachers do even if you're a classroom teacher, you have different kids every year. So just keep on refining your practice using these resources. Obviously, your experiences in training are gold, no one can take those away from you. But I think this is really helpful, especially when people are feeling stuck, or they need a refresher. I'm glad you mentioned growth mindset because I'm going to have an episode coming out real soon about that because it's so important. We see that, especially with the gifted kids, but even when it comes to STEM, it's so interesting. 


Naomi Meredith  13:59

I thought my first year kids would be all excited about building, which they are but they aren't if they are not given those experiences all the way. They're like, “Well show me what it's supposed to look like, and how am I supposed to do it? Oh, it didn't work. I give up.” Like lots of tears, lots of crying. But I've really had to work on growth mindset, year after year with all the grade levels and the kids are used to me by now and they're excited. They now know, if I failed, I have to try it a different way or here, look at this strategy I did or look what I did. But it's just taken a long time, literally years since I don't see them every single day, I see them five days a week for the month. All of those components that you mentioned are enormous in the STEM space or any hands on learning anything that when you're creating it's just such a vulnerable thing to create something, it's scary. Even this podcast can be scary. It's creating. I think that's super helpful. I wrote those all down so we'll link those on the show notes for people so if they're interested so they can check this out even further. So speaking of that, with the hands on learning, how do you see this relating with SEL? So how do you think STEM and hands on learning go together? We talked about growth mindset, but what connections and skills do you feel this helps build?


Jill Loesch  15:18

Yeah, so STEM activities, and the learning structures that come with with STEM are actually just a really natural opportunity to practice every day SEL, and those five Castle competencies which are self management, self awareness, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision making. So those are the five components that kind of embody SEL, from an individual level to even families and the community, everything is kind of connected with that. So when you're talking about STEM, for instance, like self awareness, really discovering, identifying and understanding of students emotions, and just their personal strength areas and their areas for growth is, I mean, think of all the all the things that happen there, right. Typically, then when it comes to self management, there's lots of different emotions, and the emotional roller coaster kind of how you just just talked about with growth mindset happens and are pretty high when students are faced with challenging situations. 


Jill Loesch  16:24

In STEM, and from just my inquiry background, because IB PYP is based on inquiry, it's very challenging, when you're just posing questions and kind of facilitating, when there's not just like, step one, step two, you know, and it can create those emotions. So giving, and having some different structures and systems in place for students to regulate those emotions to manage the stress and the impulses and the just shutting down. I mean, it's a process, right? So when you first do this, you're gonna feel like why and then it's about staying the course, right? It's kind of, like when you start working out, and like, I'm not seeing the results and like, just keep going, it will happen, it will happen. When it comes to self awareness, just two big components of self awareness are other people's perspectives, or just, you know, multiple perspectives in general, and then being able to empathize with other people. So being able to be aware of that, and a lot of STEM things happen in collaboration. It's not just an isolated thing all the time. 


Jill Loesch  17:30

So kind of understanding how that works. And that moves into the relationship skills is that in the classroom, and then if someone let's say, you know, they grow up, and they have a STEM job, teamwork is a big part of that, and so being able to communicate to listen, knowing how to handle conflicts is just really important. So that plays out in many STEM activities. Then the responsible or the, yes, responsible decision making that Engineering Design Process is just like an overall great guide to understand how your decisions can identify and solve problems and the consequences of doing this or this and then having to go back. And so I think, when it comes to a STEM lesson, but really, this is just a great process to to approach for just life, right? Like, oh, there's this problem, how can I solve it? Like what we did in my Kindergarten classroom, and like I said earlier with my fellow co-teacher, we did a pictorial input chart, which is a GLAAD strategy on the Engineering Design Process. And so really, like had the pictures up and walking through and doing some specific charts around that, because they were inventing something they were there was specific to the project and the unit we were doing, but also, we connected that then to oh, how does this connect with how we approach things in the classroom? 


Naomi Meredith  19:07

I am so glad you mentioned the Engineering Design Process. We've been talking about that so much on this show. I even had a whole mini series, and I broke down each step for teachers. So there's an episode about the ask, there's an episode about the imagine. So it's not something new. It's not new. And you were doing this in a Kindergarten classroom, not as a STEM teacher per se. It can be anywhere. And you just saw the importance and how they are building upon those soft skills. And I'm so glad you said like, oh my gosh, you're so great. This is awesome. Yeah, so definitely those soft skills. That is what STEM is all about. And I tell the kids that all the time, like it doesn't matter what tools that you're using. You're here to build on skills that you're going to use the rest of your life. The tools are just a way for me to help you practice these skills. They're going to change you're not going to have these robots when you're 25 But This skill is how you can collaborate and work together. and problem solve, you need to have those skills, whether you're in a STEM job or not, you need to be able to do these things. So I'm so glad you said that, because that is like a huge, that's like, probably the biggest why I am in STEM is like all that all those soft skills, you get to be creative, but you're really building up yourself as a human. That is like the whole goal of my class.


Jill Loesch  20:24

Well, you know, it was kind of eye opening, it's hard for me to say, because it's been already so long, since I started my IB PYP, like career. It's like, Ah, it just feels like yesterday, but it's not. But I just remember being very awestruck, in that time where it was, like, you know, no longer is education, the place where it used to be people come because that's where the knowledge was. But with just the technology advances and the information at people's fingertips, we need to create critical thinkers to understand processes and work together, because the kids that you're teaching right now, the jobs that they are going to have haven't even been created yet. I mean, even five years ago, would we have been like, Oh, someone can be a social media manager and make a really good income with that people would have been like, what that is ridiculous. And so we don't even know what they're gonna end up doing. So we really want to prepare them to handle challenges and be prepared for those really unknown situations.


Naomi Meredith  21:29

Oh, I didn't know I was gonna be a STEM teacher, I didn't originally go to college for this. I knew I wanted to be a teacher, I went to school to be Elementary Ed. And then through experiment, like kind of like the kids like, Oh, I was really like hands on. I've always loved hands on learning in science, let's be real. I've always loved that. But then STEM was coming up. I'm like, I think I can do this. And now I have a master's in that and went back to school and everything. But even for just teaching there's so many new roles out there. And even having a teaching podcast, like who knows, like, you have no idea what is going to be out there. So if we as adults can figure it out, then like, hey, we can totally get our kids to do it. We just have to be they're cheerleaders by giving them those skills to be successful. You mentioned the pictures for the Engineering Design Process, which I think that's amazing. That's awesome. Are there any other ways teachers can easily implement SEL into their instruction like top ways you're like, “Oh, definitely do this, or this has worked really well?” No matter what they're teaching, what would you recommend? 


Jill Loesch  22:35

Well, I have lots of ideas because just like students, teachers are on their own path, and not everyone's going to be in the same place or not everything's going to feel comfortable. Before I give the ideas, I would just say, really, think about your own growth mindset, it's really hard to have students tap into that. And they can smell it if you aren't tapping into that. So getting out of your comfort zone and starting with the next small thing that feels doable. So when I say that, um, you know, just think about your own schedule where you are, because really, I am all about using the schedule, you already have to determine where would be some appropriate times and good fits to implement aspects of the five Castle competencies. For example, I love Responsive Classroom, morning meeting as a part of that. If you are in the classroom, you can kind of bring in some STEM things if you're teaching STEM. I was in the classroom, if you are like you, Naomi, and you're doing that you can take maybe just five minutes, like a real condensed and one part of a morning meeting to start building the community. Because here's the thing, your learners in order to be risk takers in these things need to feel safe in that space. That's not going to happen day one, it's not going to happen day seven, it's not maybe going to happen for some students until maybe the end of the year. 


Jill Loesch  24:14

So really recognizing that risk factor and providing low risk opportunities as you start. So for instance, at the start of the year, it may be simple like, “Hey, I'm going to introduce you to my to my friends,” and the teacher says everyone's name and getting to know everyone's name and then maybe doing a name game and then maybe having a would you rather that's really revolved around the unit that you're doing, you know, would you rather X or Y and then y and then starting to get them comfortable with really using their voice because if you don't do that, the rest of your amazing lessons and everything you have on paper, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. Good on paper means nothing if you cannot implement it in a way that brings kids to the ultimate objective, because the lessons you're creating are not about you. They're about the students. And if the students aren't in a space where they can feel heard, valued, vulnerable, they're not going to explore those challenging things. And they need to know that it's okay to do that. So I would start with that. After that, really, there's so many so many ideas, differentiation is key, you're gonna have kids, just as when Naomi and I were talking like a big range sometimes, and understanding where those kids, those kids that can do it, they need your support just as much as the kids that are really struggling. And that can be tricky. But what I like to use are the prompts of depth and complexity, those are really great entry point. Their icons, you teach them to the whole class. 


Jill Loesch  25:49

But let's say you have a group that's gone ahead in the unit or a project you're doing, you can say, “Oh, okay, now, I want you to look for patterns in your findings, “or whatever, and just have that up there. And it's a really easy way for you to differentiate without planning. The idea isn't that you're planning all different lessons, you're teaching to the same standard, with the same kind of idea. It's just getting kids that need to go deeper, going deeper into it. So that's a really great way. I kind of addressed this already, but really scaffold your year and your units from that low risk to high risk. And don't assume like, well, it's January, we've gotten to know each other, and it's a really challenging unit, don't assume that they're just going to jump in with like, Whoa, yeah, I'm really ready to fail, like, don't assume that just start low, low risk. And you can use engaging text to support thinking or concepts. Really, there's so many amazing texts out there. 


Jill Loesch  26:50

I wrote some books down, like my class LOVE THE MOST MAGNIFICENT THING. The Andrea Beatty books. There's one that I just recently came across. I've not used this in the classroom, but there's three, maybe you know, about these, Naomi, what would you do with an idea? What do you do with the problem? What do you do with the chance? They're really good? Yeah. So I mean, just really utilizing that and taking a step back, like go slow to go fast. So what if you take the first day of a new unit to look at a book that has concepts that they're going to be encountering, or mindset ideas that, you know, like, hey, they're going to really struggle with, you know, this emotion, perhaps when they're going through this. So I'm going to start with a book that's going to address that. And I would say, do a beginning of the unit SEL questionnaire about the content and subject, find out where the kids are in their feelings about it, that will give you so much information, and that they're feeling validated. 


Jill Loesch  27:51

Like it's okay to say that I'm scared about this, or I'm nervous. I don't know about this. Finding out where they're at, not just from a content standpoint, but from where they are in terms of how they feel they're going to do with it. And then having some exit slips that include a self evaluation or reflection. And you can do that after certain lessons or at the end, especially. And that will give you good information. Every class and every year is different. But you can take some common things to like, “Oh, I think I want to tweak this for the next time.” I have not done this, but I thought about this, when I was doing this, I think I'm going to put this in, I'm going to make this for my TPT store. But I would have an Emoji check in system before, during, and then the completion of the projects. And there's lots of different ways you can have that you can literally have them printed out. And you can just go with like kind of three or four basic kinds of emotions. And even while they're working, they could just, you know, put like, I'm confused. And if they put that there as you're walking around, or whatever. It's just a real easy way that's low risk. They're not having to be like I don't know, and then a way for you to check in with either that individual or group. Then even creating just some posters of strategies, of course that you go over of how to deal with your feelings when you feel like you're out of control or confused or you want to just give up.


Naomi Meredith  29:27

Every single thing you talked about, I've talked about. Yes, you know, you're a great coach. I wrote all of these down for people. So we'll link all of this, all the books that you mentioned. Teachers can do all these things that you're mentioning. You're like, oh, or maybe they're like, I already do that. Or oh, that's a cool way to do it. So those are just like you said, you can implement it in your teaching everyday no matter what you teach, even if you do teach all the kids in the school. I want to go back to when you were saying where you really need to create a space where students are feeling safe and they are filling welcomed, that is so true. It's so hard when you're a specialist, and that's a big thing. Going from classroom teacher to specials, I feel like is you have your same kids, when you're a classroom teacher and you see them every day, you know them, you can tell when they're in the best mood or the worst mood. You just really know who they are. I used to do The Five Love Languages quiz for kids when I was a classroom teacher, and it was so eye opening and interesting to see how they felt the most loved. One of my most neediest class, their love language was primarily quality time, which made sense. They always wanted lunch with a teacher for a prize. But as a specialist teacher, that was huge and was probably one of the hardest things going into this role is I don't have them all day. And so I'm here year five, and I know them pretty well. But it's just taken a long time for them to get to know me and I get to know them. Also, creating a space where they do feel safe, that they want to take risks, they want to have those challenges, they are feeling comfortable communicating, collaborating, and it's so different too. I don't know what they do with their classroom teachers, like some are really strong about these strategies. Sometimes STEM is there only a time of the school year where they get to work together. So it's just so interesting with those classroom dynamics and just being in this role. But no matter what you're teaching, these are just all important things, for sure. So I feel like people are gonna walk away with so much knowledge from this episode. And I'm so, again, so grateful that you are here. Are there anything, freebies or anything you want to let teachers know about? And how can they find you and connect with you?


Jill Loesch  31:44

Yes, so if you go to my Instagram, my handle is the self nurtured classroom. I have a link there for a year-long SEL guide. Right now it's just K through one, but I'll be adding to that. I'm adding things to it all the time and updating, but it includes book lists, and questions that are aligned to the five Castle competencies. Some of those in there, again, may not be directly STEM related. But when you're building that, like just what you said, you know, prior to this, I would venture to say, and it's hard because there's pressures from different ways. I would rather take the first six weeks of school and that's less time when you're not seeing everyone every day all the time to build those relationships because your return on that time investment is going to be like 100 fold, it can feel like oh, I should be doing this content right now. But if you don't get those relationships in that space, you're going to be battling that all year. But if you just take the time in the beginning, then it's amazing. It's amazing how that goes. So you can grab that for free. For more adult SEL, again, not teacher specific, although I do have many teachers that you know do this, my website is selfnurturedteacher.com. So there are some free things there for adults, and you can just kind of check it out.


Naomi Meredith  33:21

Awesome, well, thank you so much again for your time. And I know that this is such an important episode. Very timeless, it can last forever. And this is a year-long evergreen thing that we always need. It's just such a great refresher. And I learned so much! You should definitely see my desk right now with all of my notes. I learned a lot here, and I'm excited to implement a lot of the strategies you talked about. So thank you so much again, Jill, and hopefully, we can have you back another time. You're great.


Jill Loesch  33:50

Yeah. Thank you. I would love that.

SEL in Elementary

SEL in elementary

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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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

first year teaching STEM

My First Year Teaching STEM: What Surprised Me the Most [ep. 30]

My First Year Teaching STEM: What Surprised Me the Most [ep. 30]

first year teaching STEM

Check out the full episode on My First Year Teaching STEM: What Surprised Me the Most:  

 

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

While there are a lot of similarities between the general education classroom and the STEM classroom, there are a handful of things that surprised me during my first year teaching STEM. 

Whether you are currently a STEM teacher and this is your first year, or maybe you've been doing it for a while, or you're a classroom teacher who's trying to implement STEM, or maybe you're even a classroom teacher who is thinking about stepping into a STEM role, you will relate to many of the topics discussed in today’s episode. 

In this episode, I’m keeping it real and showing you the behind-the-scenes and the not so pretty behind-the-scenes of my first year of teaching STEM.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn four things that surprised me the most my first year of teaching STEM:

  • Sense of time and how it’s structured is different compared to teaching general education
  • Teaching STEM helps you grow your teaching abilities
  • You are an island, and it can be lonely
  • STEM is impactful but still very new, meaning there are limited resources and supports

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

I originally didn't go to college to become a STEM teacher. In fact, my major is in elementary education. Through my six years of teaching in the classroom, my experiences and passions led me to my K through five STEM teaching and coaching position. I eventually did go back and get my Master's in STEM Leadership and a STEM certificate while always continuing to refine my practice and learn more about this field. While there are a lot of similarities between the general education classroom and the STEM classroom, there are a handful of things that surprised me during my first year teaching STEM, which I will be sharing in today's episode. 


Naomi Meredith  00:40

Whether you are currently a STEM teacher and this is your first year, or maybe you've been doing it for a while, or you're a classroom teacher who's trying to implement STEM, or maybe you're even a classroom teacher who is thinking about stepping into a STEM role, I think you're gonna find a lot of things in this episode that will be relatable to you. I am definitely keeping it real and showing you the behind-the-scenes, not so pretty behind-the-scenes of my first year of teaching STEM. Also, in the end, you'll be hearing from other teachers who listen to this podcast, and they will be sharing how this show has been helpful to them. Make sure to listen all the way to the end for this special bonus. 


Naomi Meredith  01:53

What I realized right away during my first year teaching STEM is a sense of time is different. We always talk about as teachers how we never have enough time to do anything. Well, the same is true as a STEM teacher, just the way that time is structured, it's completely different. I remember my first few weeks and how fast the time went. I didn't get any lessons done. Let's be real, I had a hard time getting things done with my classes. What was really tricky is I only had kids three days out of the week, and it was the same kids three days in a row. But time went by so fast. The luxury of being a classroom teacher is you do have the same kids all day. The downfall is you do have the same kids all day. But you do have the same kids all day as a classroom teacher, and if you don't finish something in the morning, you can revisit it in the afternoon. As a STEM teacher, you typically don't have that luxury. You only have that short amount of time with them. Sometimes kids will even forget that even to this day. I still have kids who are confused about why we are cleaning up, and I can't let them build all day. I let them know, “I have three more classes who are coming to me, you have to put it away. I am so sorry. I'm so glad you're having a good time, but we have to clean up.” 


Naomi Meredith  03:15

Time goes by so fast in a different way. Even that time in between classes, you sometimes get a moment to catch your breath, but not all the time, and you have to gear yourself up for the next lesson. I'm always so sweaty at the end of the day. I used to wear super cute outfits and fancier shoes when I was a classroom teacher. Not to say I look terrible every day, but I pull out a lot more teacher tees and skirts and comfortable pants these days because I am up and down on the floor with K through five years running around all over the place. I even tell people teaching STEM is a lot like hosting a birthday party six times. You have to have the same amount of energy for all six classes and make the experience special and meaningful for every single one. So I am like the cool aunt who hosts special birthday parties all day, every day. 


Naomi Meredith  04:11

Something else when it comes to time, I was always stressed out about materials and making sure that everything was prepped and ready to go for every single class. I still get that sometimes when I am implementing brand new lessons or brand new tools that I have never tried before. I have really tried to develop systems and routines, which you hear about in all my other episodes, on how I can get kids to be independent when it comes to gathering their supplies while also being collaborative. I have moved things around in my room constantly to make sure they are at kid height, kid accessible, and that they can do the bulk of gathering materials, being successful during work time, and also putting them away independently. This has given me a little bit more breathing room in between classes. I definitely didn't have this figured out during my first year teaching STEM. So if you're feeling it, that's okay, you will get there. This is just part of the whole process of building your systems and routines. 


Naomi Meredith  05:12

Another big thing that I learned during my first year teaching STEM is that it helps you grow your teaching abilities. If you can teach K through five all day and have differentiated lessons for all of them while teaching, think about it, every single kid in the school, I really feel like you can teach anything. It's funny because when I first got into teaching, when I was deciding on my major, I was really in between elementary education and also early childhood. Well, you know, I went the Early Childhood route, but I really love the littles. I really see their creativity and all of their amazing ideas each and every day. Now, when I was a classroom teacher, I only taught second and third grade. When I got my third-grade role, I actually didn't apply for that job. I really wanted the Kindergarten job. Funny enough, when I walked into the interview room, I actually knew one of the girls in my interview completely by accident. That's actually not why I got the interview. I knew her, and she was on that third-grade team. So when it came down to it, she really wanted to work with me. I thought, “Okay, why not, I will take a risk. I need to change.” I ended up loving third grade and taught it for four years. 


Naomi Meredith  06:29

However, I still do love the littles. I also really appreciate the older students as well, and how deep we can go in the concepts. I really do love the variety of having all the grade levels and seeing that progression of learning, especially year after year. This has been really eye-opening. It really has been testing my differentiation skills when it comes to particular grades, but also being able to meet the needs of all of my students literally on the fly. Sometimes I will think of ideas right then and there, and it ends up working. Sometimes it doesn't. But being able to teach all the grades really tests and grows you as a teacher. If you are in a rut and you're thinking about getting into STEM, it is really hard at first. But also, it's really exciting because it is so different throughout the day when you have all of those different kids. The cool thing, too, that you don't always get as a classroom teacher is you do get the same kids every single year. Unless you are looping with your students, which I know some teachers do or some schools are really big on that, as a specials teacher, you do get the same kids year after year. I am in year five of knowing my fifth graders, so I have known them since first grade. They forget they have known me that long. I've basically been their only STEM teacher, so it's really cool to see all of the amazing things we have done together and how much deeper we can get into the projects. 


Naomi Meredith  07:54

I really do know those students, even though it is 45 minutes for five days in a row once a month. But really, knowing them over five years, it's pretty cool to see all the amazing things that they do and know their passions and different things that they want to try. Also, when it comes to testing your teaching abilities, not only do you have to differentiate for their students' needs, but also adjust to different teaching styles. Now you're not always teaching with the classroom teachers unless that is the role that you have, which I have had that role before. Also, you may be pushing into the classrooms and helping teachers implement STEM and technology and innovative in meaningful ways. But when you have all the kids come into your classroom, you can definitely see the different styles of teaching that the kids are used to with their homeroom teacher. 


Naomi Meredith  08:46

Some are more laid back about things. Some have more strict behavior management. Some are all about collaboration and creativity. Some where kids have to be silent and listen to the teacher all day. It's very interesting to see how kids will respond to your style, which I am all about being the guide on the side, not the sage on the stage, which the kids think I'm a little bit funny, not too funny. They're a little more impressed that I have a YouTube channel if anything else, but I'm really all about giving them the information right away and letting them run with it and attack the problems. Not all teachers have the same style as me. I thrive in this controlled chaos. So it really does, again, test your teaching abilities, being able to adjust to different classes and what they're used to with their homeroom or general education classroom teacher. 


Naomi Meredith  09:38

Another big thing when stepping into the first year of STEM is that you really are an island. Now, this can definitely be based on the school. I do have a team of specials teachers who are very sweet. They teach PE, art, and music. We do eat together, and we're able to talk about kids, but we're not really planning together all the time. There are moments when the art teacher and I might collaborate on some special projects. But it's way different than being a classroom teacher, where you have a team and you can even divvy up the work where you can talk about the curriculum. You can talk about the units, or you might even be able to switch kids based on differentiation. As a STEM teacher, you really are an island. Now, this really helps you be a self-starter and problem solver when it comes to building your curriculum, which can be super overwhelming. 


Naomi Meredith  10:32

I stepped into a classroom that was brand new and remodeled and had zero curriculum. There were some tools in there, but nothing else. So I loved this challenge because I love writing lessons and trying new ideas, which you can see in my whole year-long plan at naomimeredith.com/yearlongplan, and even get every single lesson that I teach to my students all packaged up together. So you don't have to do all that planning. But it was super overwhelming because I didn't know the kids. I didn't know what tools I was supposed to be using. So you really want to find your community, whether it's other STEM teachers in the community or even neighboring districts, you can join online groups, find me on Instagram at NaomiMeredith_, or even if you find friends who are online, you can join Facebook groups. I have one as well, the Elementary STEM Coach Facebook group, which will be linked in the show notes. But finding our people can really help you collaborate and not feel so alone because it can get kind of lonely. Even though you see hundreds of kids a day, you really are by yourself, and you're not always sure if your ideas are really good or not. So being able to talk to other adults can be really impactful. I learned that pretty quickly and reached out and have my STEM teacher besties, which of course, we heard from one and our first guest interview Jen Sevy, and I'm gonna have some of my other STEM teacher friends on future podcast episodes because it's so important to find your people, especially in the education space. 


Naomi Meredith  12:07

The fourth big thing that I learned during my first year teaching STEM is that STEM is super impactful, but it is still very new in the elementary STEM space. There are various perceptions as to what STEM should look like in the elementary space and even in your own building. I realized this very quickly. First of all, the kids were excited to come to my class., but it was rebranded, as you would say. It also depends on if you've had a STEM teacher or a similar role before. Kids will bring in their biases as well. For my older students, in my first year, not all of them actually really liked to build and be creative. They were so used to past teachers in this role telling them exactly what to do, and it had to look the same. There was not much creativity within that. Then they did coding all the time. So they had a different experience when it came to STEM. It really took a long time to help build their trust and to create an environment where they wanted to create and try something new while also having a growth mindset. I had a lot more buy-in with my little kids because they didn't really have much experience with that past teacher. So it will take time to build up those things with your kids. 


Naomi Meredith  13:28

If you're not finding success that first year or if things are failing more often than succeeding, keep going. You are not a failure. It does take time, you're building a program. It's like as a classroom teacher, you build the thing the whole year, you were building that community for 180 plus days. As a STEM teacher or specials teacher, if you have a unique role, your time is a lot shorter, and it can take years to get to this high-level place that you have in your mind, and you know the kids can do. Keep trying, keep building that community keeps instilling a growth mindset, it is worth it, I promise you. There are also some biases from the teachers in my building as well. Before my classroom was remodeled, it was actually a legit computer lab. A lot of teachers kept calling my class computers tech, which I am not the computer lab teacher or the tech teacher. The kids kept calling me the tech teacher. I'm like, “Okay, so we really are learning what STEM means.” 


Naomi Meredith  14:34

One fun way that I did this is I created something called STEM style. So again, building my brand as the STEM teacher in my building. We really talked about what STEM is and like, okay, well, this is STEM. I am not your tech teacher. I'm not your computer lab teacher, but you do have a STEM teacher. Tech is one of those things in STEM. But here's what the other letters mean. Here's how we're going to be doing them in this lesson. I always try to point out those things even to this day, in my fifth year teaching STEM. I tell them, “Oh, there's a lot of m in STEM. Today, we're doing a lot of math when it comes to our Maker money. So I will point out those things, and then they're like, “Oh, okay!” Sometimes they get a little frustrated with the math, but that's part of STEM.  I did something called STEM style. So we always talked about what STEM means. If kids wore shirts that represented STEM, science, technology, engineering, or math, I would take a picture, and it would go on my digital picture frame. I have all the pictures from the past five years of being in this role. There are hundreds and hundreds of pictures, and kids think if they stand there, they might see themselves. If they do, they're super lucky, and they should go to Vegas. I know they're not old enough, but that could be a lucky charm. But they get so excited. 


Naomi Meredith  15:46

It's really helped them build their vocabulary of how there are so many different avenues when it comes to STEM. Then now they're finally calling my class STEM, and I'm not the computer teacher or the tech teacher. I'm legit, the STEM teacher. Also, when it comes to the admin, there might be a lot of support when it comes to STEM, or there might not be. It could be that there's a lot of support, and they have no idea what you're talking about. So when you're thinking about your evaluations, or who your admin are, and the different people you're dealing with higher up really showing, explaining the reason why you are doing things. That is why planning with standards and using the Engineering Design Process is important because you're really building the backbone of what your lessons mean and the why behind that. When you're thinking about that differentiation and creating your year-long plan while there is a progression of learning, admins understand that they might not understand what coding is, or robotics, but they understand those things. So if you are being more thoughtful in your lessons, you're gonna have more buy-in for your program. You can really explain the why behind you're doing things. Of course, that is just a snapshot. 


Naomi Meredith  16:58

There is a lot of work to be had in the elementary STEM space, and that is a big reason why I created this podcast because, as of right now, there's not a whole lot out there. We need more voices to help make a positive difference in this STEM space. Sometimes for me, it can be a little bit awkward just talking into a microphone, and I don't always know who is listening and how this podcast is even helping. So I put out a call to action for this special 30th episode, where you could leave me a message on how the elementary STEM coach podcast has been impactful to you. You all stepped it up with your messages. They really put a big smile on my face. It continued to instill the drive in me to make a big impact in STEM education when it comes to Elementary in a positive way. So I want you to take a listen and hear all of these awesome words that you all had to say.


17:59

I love how Naomi gives such actionable tips. She doesn't just give you the theory and the why. But she gives you something that you can take back into your classroom and really make it your own, which is so helpful. The elementary STEM coach podcast has been a phenomenal resource for me. This is my first year teaching STEM. And it has been my go to and listening and learning the ins and outs of STEM. I get super excited when I see that a new episode comes out. And I can't wait to hear more.


18:40

Your Blog revives me Just when I think I don't have any more ideas. What can I do? You send me a an idea. And I get revived I think the wheels start spinning and I think I can do this like it had. So it's a jolt of creativity when I don't feel I have any. Thanks so much for sharing.


19:03

Hi Naomi. My name is Amber Fraser and I'm a first year STEM educator at Maplewood Elementary School. I teach Kindergarten through sixth grade and I can honestly say that you have given this first year teacher all of the tools that I need to be able to change the lives of my students every day. I can confidently say that work does not feel like work because of people like you and the resources that you've given us. And the confidence that you instill in each of us with the things that you share. You have changed my life and the lives of all of my students. Thank you so Naomi for all the to do.


19:36

Hi Meredith. My name is peg Volek and I teach in paracasei, Pennsylvania. This is my 31st year of teaching. And after 27 years in the classroom, I took on a role of a STEM and gifted support teacher. Your podcast has helped me with management. Because even though I've taught for so long, managing kids once a week, is a little bit different. It's a whole different world. Thank you so much for keeping it real, giving me good ideas and how to look ahead how to look at the whole scope and sequence that has been really helpful. If you can have any tips on how to make 45 minutes last forever, that'd be great. Because I feel like they forget everything from week to week. The least that's how it seems. I love listening to your podcast because your troubles are the same as mine, and it makes me feel like it's okay. It is the ways that the STEM world works. Thank you so much for your podcast. Look forward to the next episode. Thanks.


20:38

Hi, Naomi. My name is Katie. And I just wanted to say thank you for sharing this podcast with all of us, I transition from being a classroom teacher. Over the last Gosh, I've been a teacher for 12 years, and I've taught in a lot of different fifth and sixth grade classrooms, from teaching math, to social studies to English all over, you know, running the gamut. But I made a big jump this year to become a STEAM specialist in a three to five elementary school and I wasn't sure how it would feel about everything if I could handle it all. And I have loved it. And I have loved turning to your podcast, to feel less alone and to get advice on where to move forward. Thank you so much.


21:22

Hi, my name is Donna and I love the STEM coach Podcast. I'm new to STEM this year because I have a stim club for the first time. Some of my favorite things about the podcast are the one day challenges, some tips for management, like the tape around the popsicle sticks. That's my favorite, and all the great ideas for planning and lessons. Thanks for all the great ideas keep them coming. 


Speaker 8  21:46

Hi, I am a 15 year experience high school science teacher who now moved into a new role this school year at a K to eight, school. And my position is to help integrate STEAM into the fabric of our school. Your podcast has been so helpful for me in getting real tangible ideas of things to do as students as K to five is definitely not my area of expertise. And I really appreciated the concrete examples that you give and the resources that you share. It has probably saved me countless hours. Thank you.


22:31

I enjoy the STEM podcast, because it helps me find lessons specific to elementary STEM, which is really hard to find. It gives me lesson plans and different ideas on how to teach STEM.


22:49

Hi Naomi. This is Megan from West Virginia. This is my second year teaching STEAM. I travel between the three elementary schools in the county that I serve. And I listen to your podcasts on the way to give me ideas and be able to keep my mind on new STEAM ideas while I travel between the schools. Thanks so much for all your ideas. You were one of the first people I found when I started this new job after changing over from being a second-grade teacher for multiple years.


Naomi Meredith  23:19

Thank you to all of you who took a moment to record these again. They mean the world to me, you can actually leave me a voice message anytime. Whether it's a question you have that you want me to answer on the show, something you're wondering, or if you want to say thank you, feel free to record me a message. It's super easy to do, you can just go to this link, Naomi meredith.com/voice. And it's also always linked in the show notes. Thank you so much and can't believe we made it to Episode 30. What an exciting celebration! I will talk to you soon.

first year teaching STEM

 

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

examples-of-student-learning-outcomes

What are examples of Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) in STEM? [ep. 29]

What are examples of Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) in STEM?[ep. 29]

examples-of-student-learning-outcomes

Check out the full episode on What are Examples of Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) in STEM?:  

 

 

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

Writing a student learning outcome or SLO can be a little bit tricky, especially when you teach all the grades in the school K through five STEM and beyond.

You may be wondering, “Where do I even begin?” I felt the same exact way when I first became a STEM teacher.

If you are looking for examples of student learning outcomes, in today’s episode, I share three SLOs that I have written over the years that you can use for any grade and the type of evidence you need to collect to gather the data.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • Using the Engineering Design Process as your base
  • Find ways that students can problem-solve and use resources
  • Use self-reflection as an assessment tool

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:54

Looking for ideas for student learning outcomes or SLOs in STEM? Based on my experience as an elementary STEM teacher, here are three examples of SLOs that have worked well in my classroom that you can use in yours. 


Naomi Meredith  01:39

This episode was inspired by common questions I was seeing in a Facebook group that I'm a part of. With that being said, I want to make sure that I am answering your specific questions and want to hear your voice, and literally, I want to hear your voice. I have set up a special message system where you can leave me an audio message, hit record, ask your question, and even have the chance to be featured on the podcast. I'll link this voice message system in the show notes for today and all future episodes. Can't wait to hear your messages and inspire future podcast episodes! Writing a student learning objective or SLO can be a little bit tricky, especially when you teach all the grades in the school K through five STEM and beyond. You may be wondering, “Where do I even begin?” I felt the same exact way. 


Naomi Meredith  02:32

Here are three SLOs that I have written over the years that you can use for any grade and the type of evidence that you need to collect so you can gather the data. Let's jump on in the first SLO that you can write. This SLO is all about the Engineering Design Process. If you've been listening to this podcast for a while now, there are quite a few episodes that go along with the Engineering Design Process. So those will all be linked in the show notes for you to go back and take a listen, so you can enhance this experience in your classroom and plan lessons that are designed around this process. There are even standards that go along with the Engineering Design Process for K through two and three through five. So this is a perfect connection when you are writing your SLO goals. 


Naomi Meredith  03:19

Here's how I wrote this SLO goal. Students will demonstrate growth when applying the Engineering Design Process by using self-assessment in a project. I created a self-assessment with my STEM PLC team. This was all wrapped around students being able to self-assess during each stage of the Engineering Design Process using a four-point scale. At the beginning of the project, they used this rubric to see where they were at in each stage of the Engineering Design Process. We did it in the middle of the project and also at the end. This same rubric was used for three different projects throughout the year so we could collect the growth on how they use the Engineering Design Process and how they applied it in a lot of different projects. This was also a great SLO goal to write because you really could use this for any grade level, and my PLC teammates and I didn't actually have the same projects going on. But we could compare similar data because we were using the same self-assessment and talking about how this was being applied and different types of projects. 


Naomi Meredith  04:28

Something that we noticed is that students' results were different based on the project. Some students were really strong at the Makerspace projects but oftentimes struggled when things were more digital, or vice versa. This was great evidence to see how we can improve our teaching, get better when using the Engineering Design Process, and the stages that we weren't hitting as well. This was a time when I actually started improving my planning stage because I would just say, “Okay, draw something.” So really refine my practice, and that has really been a great base for my teaching, understanding how students are able to understand the Engineering Design Process, how they're able to self-assess, and then, in turn, it really improved my teaching. If I wanted to, I could even use the same self-assessment on the teacher side, and students are rating themselves. Then on another sheet of paper, I could rate where I think they are at and then compare the data that way. Again, this would be a great start, especially K through five, and having it in a kid-friendly language would be very beneficial. It'd be really great to see that growth in how you use this process within your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  05:41

The second SLO goal that I have written over the years is about how students are problem-solving and using their resources. This is the SLO that I wrote in my fourth year of teaching STEM because I had known the kids since it was their fourth year of me knowing them, and I wanted to see how they were using the resources that I was providing them to be successful. Here's how I wrote that goal. Students will be able to problem-solve and be independent in their work by using available resources and strategies. Just like anything that you teach as a teacher, you are going to build up resources and strategies for ways to attack a problem. This is a lot like when I was teaching writing as a classroom teacher. There were a lot of different strategies that I taught the kids, including going back and checking their work and checking their spelling. I did the same thing for math and for reading. Likewise, this is also very helpful in the STEM space for students to have go-to strategies when they get stuck during any type of project, but also providing resources that they can rely on that are project specific. 


Naomi Meredith  06:53

For example, I have go-to troubleshooting techniques that students can use when they are faced with a technology problem. Things like refreshing the page, restarting the device, closing out the tabs, and reopening them. Those are things that they can use all the time, no matter what website tool we are using. When it comes to specific materials, I will have specific rules and also tips, and tricks to help them use that resource. One way I have done this is with my Sphero sleds robotics unit, where I teach students how to use the robot and how to connect to it. But I go a little further than that. There is an anchor chart to remind students of key things that they need to press. There are also videos that they can scan with a QR code that they can rewatch if they are a little bit stuck. Students even have the strategy of asking three before me so that they can really work on their communication skills and ask for what they need. Instead of following me around like a baby duck and asking me for help with every single issue. 


Naomi Meredith  07:57

For this SLO goal, I wanted to see what strategies students are using and how many. So at the beginning of a project, I asked students the question, “When you are faced with a problem in STEM if you don't know the answer, what strategies do you use?” There were some kids who said nothing. Some kids did say ask three before me, some said to ask the teacher. A lot of them were actually teacher based ask the teacher, ask the teacher. Throughout the week, we were talking, and I was very specific about these strategies that I'm teaching you to help you be independent and problem-solve with this project. In the middle of the week, I had a check-in, and they had to write down the strategies that they might use. Then I would count how many, and then we also did this at the end, a lot like the Engineering Design Process goal. This was something that we did for different projects throughout the year. Then I could track their progress and how they were applying similar or different strategies based on the project. This was a really great one. Again, this was my fifth-grade students. But I recommend doing this with third through fifth grades to see what strategies they have been learning with you, how they're applying them, and then also how you can improve your teaching. So students are using those strategies that you're teaching them, and they can be successful. 


Naomi Meredith  08:28

The third SLO goal that you can write for your classroom is all about self-reflection. You may have noticed all of these goals are centered around the student and how they can really have their metacognition or thinking about their thinking and really be reflective on their experience. I am there as their guide on the side. I'm not their sage on the stage. My goal is to help students build those soft skills in my classroom. It's really not about the cool tools. None of my goals are about how to use a robot. Some kids might be successful, some might not. But the goal is, “Are they problem-solving? Are they collaborating? Are they critical thinking?” So really think about how these goals that you're writing can work with multiple projects throughout the year so that they're really dealing with those soft skills. For this goal for self-reflection, I wrote it as students will be able to improve and reflect on their work by using self-assessment tools. The longer that I have been in this position, the more I realize sometimes students have a hard time going back and improving their work. They finish it, they are one and done, and they're ready to move on. But we, now as inventors, as engineers, as problem solvers, that we're always going to go back and improve, and everything can be improved. 


Naomi Meredith  09:45

Practice makes better, not perfect, perfect doesn't exist, is one of the growth mindset things that I tell kids. So it really is a practice to help kids self-reflect and be thoughtful when they are creating. Some ways that I can collect data on this goal is by using self-assessment checklists that are related specifically to the project, and peer feedback, so they can compare their answers to others based on the work that they have provided. I can even assess them using that same reflection checklist as well. Rubrics are another great way for students to self-assess if they are written in kid-friendly language. Back in episode 26, I talked about how I plan a STEM lesson, and there was a part where I talked about how I structured a rubric for students that are in kid-friendly language and how you can do that on a four-point scale that can be effective when you are grading and also when students are reflecting on the work. Another way that students can reflect is by having the same questions that are used throughout the year. So students are used to these types of questions since their questions will change. When you're collecting evidence, you can use evidence from all these rubrics, maybe you count up how many responses they get, especially if you have a rubric. This would be really helpful because you can base it on the number of points that they get or the overall score. 


Naomi Meredith  11:08

As a recap, here are the three different examples of SLO goals that you can write for your STEM classroom. First is using the Engineering Design Process as your base. Next, find ways that students can problem solve and use those resources. Third, using self-reflection as an assessment tool. I hope this helps you think about the lessons that you are teaching throughout the year so you can gather data no matter what project that you are using and you can see that growth in your students, even if you see them for a short amount of time. As a reminder, don't forget to leave me a voice message. I would love to hear your questions or comments and how I can best serve you on this podcast.

examples-of-student-learning-outcomes

 

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

 

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

teach-digital-citizenship-in-the-classroom

How Do You Teach Digital Citizenship in the Classroom? [ep. 28]

How Do You Teach Digital Citizenship in the Classroom? [ep. 28]

teach-digital-citizenship-in-the-classroom

Check out the full episode on How Do You Teach Digital Citizenship in the Classroom:  

 

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

Digital citizenship is an important topic to discuss with students of all ages, even in the elementary classroom.

With a world of technology constantly growing, we need to equip our students better to be able to adapt and respond online when different situations arise.

In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you how to teach digital citizenship in the classroom with a STEM twist. 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • Google’s Be Internet Awesome Resources
  • BrainPOP and BrainPOP Jr.
  • Common Sense Media digital citizenship lessons
  • Digital citizenship books
  • STEM challenges to highlight these concepts

Resources Mentioned:

Some items are linked to my Amazon Affiliate account. When you purchase through my link, there is no added cost to you, but I receive a small commission in return.

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

Digital citizenship is an important topic to discuss with students of all ages, even in the elementary classroom. With a world of technology constantly growing, we need to better equip our students to be able to adapt and respond online when different situations arise. In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you how to teach digital citizenship in the classroom with a STEM twist. 


Naomi Meredith  00:25

During the month of October, there is an official digital citizenship week. If you are listening or watching this in real-time, this week is October 17-21, 2022. This episode is coming out just in time for that. Likewise, I want to make sure that you download the free guide I put together for you when organizing all of your digital citizenship resources. This is a breakdown of how I use the resources in my K through five STEM classes throughout the week that I'll be talking about in this episode. You can grab the free download at naomimeredith.com/digitalcitizenguide. 


Naomi Meredith  01:06

Yes, there is a digital citizenship week. This is a topic that should be talked about year after year and throughout the entire school year. Some of my students come in, and they're all, “why are we talking about digital citizenship again?” Well, I tell them the same thing I just told you. This is something that is not going away, how to interact online. We need to be prepared for those situations and not be blindsided when something happens. We know how to be prepared upfront during the situation and even after. So let's dive into those resources that you can implement in your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  01:45

The first one is Google’s Be Internet Awesome Resources and Interland. Over the past five years, these resources have really blown up. You can see why once you go and check out this free resource for teachers. It is geared towards grades third through middle school. It is an amazing resource that adds gamification to the lessons that you'll teach in your classroom. This is an awesome addition that they've added to these lessons within the past couple of years, as they have created Pear Decks to make the slides interactive with your students. Not only are the slides created, but they have specific questions where students can collaborate and respond and share the responses. I am so glad for this update because when I first used these lessons, when I first started teaching STEM, I was trying to make them interactive in my own way and creating Google forums for all the different discussion questions and scenarios that they have for each of the topics. Now it is so much easier with these Google Slides and Pear Decks that you can bring this experience to life within your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  02:54

During the pandemic, I used these slides online, and it was perfect because students were at home and they were able to interact with me using these slides. I know some of you still teach online, do I definitely recommend this resource if you teach those grades that I mentioned. Something that I also like to do when I use this resource and the other ones that I'm talking about is I will supplement with other videos that are related to the topics that they're talking about. For example, one of the lessons is about sharing information, and they talk about AI-Artificial Intelligence. I found a video on YouTube that is quick and to the point and helps students understand the very basics of what AI is and how we use it in our everyday lives. Also, the biggest draw to this Google the internet awesome is Interland. My students are absolutely obsessed with playing this. Since I've had the kids now in my fifth year of STEM, the little kids are, oh, I've seen my siblings play this at home, which is awesome. I am so glad that they are practicing their digital citizenship at home through the games that are on this platform. This game doesn't require a login or anything for you to set up. Students' scores won't be saved after they play, so something to keep in mind when you're using this tool in your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  04:17

The second resource that I love to use when teaching digital citizenship in the classroom are the videos and resources on BrainPOP and BrainPOP Jr. Some of the videos offered are free, and hopefully, your school purchases this subscription for you because there's a lot of great content for all subjects. BrainPOP is constantly researching and improving its videos to make sure that they are relevant to what we're teaching our students, and they have definitely stepped up the game when it comes to digital citizenship resources to share with your students. A lot of these videos I will pair with the Google Be Internet Awesome lessons and the other ones that I'm going to talk about in just a bit. Not only are the videos engaging and amazing, as we know that BrainPOP is, but I definitely recommend checking out on the side of the videos all of the activities and resources that you can do as a whole class, or you can even assign to students. This is a great way for students to reinforce those skills in an interactive way, and it's already done for you. Definitely check those out with any BrainPOP video because it's worth your time, and they really try to make these engaging for your kids. 


Naomi Meredith  05:32

The third great resource to use in your classroom and teaching digital citizenship is the Common Sense Media  Digital Citizenship lessons. These are always being researched and constantly updated to make sure that they are relevant, especially the lessons for primary students. They had things before where it was grouped K-5, but now, in the past few years, they've broken down these lessons where it's specifically for Kinder, specifically for first, and so on. This is an amazing resource, and you can use all of these things. Like I said in that free guide, I have all of this organized for you. In the free guide, you can see a breakdown of my week, how I teach digital citizenship, and my K-five STEM space. So make sure to grab that free guide because this will help you make sense of all of this cool stuff. In the Common Sense Media lessons, there's way more than you can get through throughout the week. So if you are a classroom teacher, dive into these and go through them with your students because they have great lessons that you can talk about all year long. 


Naomi Meredith  06:40

For my K through two students, their absolute favorite is these little guys called the digital citizens. They are these little characters who have different physical features that are exaggerated to help students remember of the lessons that they're learning. For example, one of the characters' names is legs, and it has really, really long legs to help students remember to stand up to bullies online. There's another character who is literally a giant head with feet, and its name is head, as you guessed. Head's job is to help students remember to think about the lessons that they learned and be smart when they're online. A lot of the lessons that are linked for each grade level have different videos and songs that the kids can sing along with, and they absolutely love them. Secretly, I love them too. I start dancing along and singing because, as you know, as a special teacher, you teach things a lot. You start memorizing some of the stuff, so I start singing and dancing, and I get weird looks or laughs, or both. So definitely check those out. 


Naomi Meredith  07:48

They also have slides ready to go for your lessons and worksheets that you can pair with the lessons. For many of those worksheets, instead of printing them out, I put them in Seesaw for my students. I might even add in some interactive pieces so students can respond digitally, and I don't have to print out a ton of paper for them. This is especially helpful again if you teach all the students in your school that they have this right at their fingertips, unlimited colors, and they might be a little bit more engaged in the lesson. A little side tip about these lessons, they have some older videos that relate to digital citizens on their YouTube channel. So go and search on YouTube Digital Citizens Common Sense Media, and you will see some older videos that are still really awesome. You can fit them into what you're teaching for the week and all year long. 


Naomi Meredith  08:39

The fourth resource to use when teaching digital citizenship in your classroom is to check out some digital citizenship books. There are a lot more books being made about this topic to make this not as overwhelming for students but age-appropriate, and we know students K through five love hearing a good read-aloud. I talked about this in a past episode, but I highly recommend pre-recording yourself reading any picture books to your class, doing a screencast, or reading it on the computer. Bonus points if you do this at home and you have your little pets. But this will actually help you save time when you have limited time with your students. They can still see your face, and you can set up any materials that are needed for the lesson. There is a whole bunch of digital citizenship books out there, but here are the top ones that I love to use in my class that relate to the lessons that I am teaching that week for each grade level. These will all be linked in the show notes with all of their full titles and author names, so you don't have to pause and write these down. All of that work is going to be done for you. 


Naomi Meredith  09:46

For media balance, these books are really great: Good Night iPad Tek. It's spelled t-e-k, and the book is actually shaped like a giant tablet, which is super cute; If You Give a Mouse an iPad. This book is not written by the same author who wrote If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, but it has a similar style, and it is a little bit funnier too. For online privacy and sharing private and personal information, I really like reading Chicken Clicking and #Goldilocks: A Hashtag Cautionary Tale, or Being Kind and Sharing Information Online Nerdy Birdie is a great one, especially for those older students. There's a little bird and a vulture who are friends, and they like to tweet, literally tweet like tweeting birds, but also tweeting. So it's a cute little story. So definitely mix up these books throughout the week. But from there, I use these books, along with all the lessons that I'm talking to you about, for some STEM challenges that I created that go along with all of these lessons to make it more hands-on. If you're a specialist teacher, you're hoping that in the classrooms, they're talking about digital citizenship, and it's okay that you overlap some, but you also want to give the lessons your own STEM twist and do something that you know they're not doing in their homeroom classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  11:07

Here are the lessons that I like to use for K-five that integrate all of these topics and make it more hands-on and engaging in a different way. In Kindergarten, we talk about media balance. Students create their own balance using some simple supplies, including a clothing hanger, pipe cleaners, and small cups. We discuss what the word balance means. After they create their balance, they put different items in their balance to see which side weighs more than the other and test different materials to see how their balance will work. They also have a sort that I can do digital or paper, and they have different items that are screen-free or screen related. They have to sort the items to make sure that their paper and digital balance is well balanced. It also has different activities that they can refer to. For first grade, we talk about different types of websites that are out there because the internet is a huge, scary place. There are things that are green means go websites for a first-grade age, yellow means slow down for things that are meant for bigger kids, and red means stop which is for things that are meant for adults. We talk about these different kinds of websites. We even explore a few like the NASA kids website or the San Diego Zoo kids' live animal cameras. Then students create their own internet traffic light using construction paper or small cups. Then they have different types of websites or apps that are explained. We color each of those things together, and then they sort them on the internet traffic light using green, yellow, and red. 


Naomi Meredith  12:50

For second grade, we talk more about the information that is safe and not safe to share online, the private information that we need to keep to ourselves, and personal information that can be general and pretty much be true about anyone and that is generally safe for kids to share. We talk about different examples of those, and students will create their own paper laptop that shares their personal information that is safe to share. The ultimate goal for this little laptop is for the information to spin around, so it looks like the screen is actually changing. You get some really cute and interesting designs for what they think computers look like. Many of the kids like to draw the little keyboard, and they always write it in ABC order, which is so funny because keyboards aren't in ABC order, but they come up with some really cool designs. 


Naomi Meredith  13:42

For third grade, we talk about private and personal information in more detail. Students create a coding unplugged game where they have all of the safe personal information as game pieces and the general topics when it comes to private information that needs to be kept to themselves. They have a game board with different game variations that they can play to collect information before they get to the end. For fifth grade, I do the same project, but they have a different topic that they need to relate their creation too. They are taking on the role of a Digital Designer, and they create a sticker that will be shared with other kids their age to help remind them of the lessons that they learned about during the week. 


Naomi Meredith  14:25

For fourth grade, their sticker is for talking about ways that they can be kind online, and I make sure that my students' stickers don't say Be Kind online. Instead, I have them put what they can do to be kind online. Likewise, the fifth-grade stickers are about online privacy and safety, and the different types of things they should look for and not fall for. I have students create their stickers digitally using Google drawings. You could use a similar platform, but they have that one-page digital sheet in Google drawings where they create their digital sticker, and it can be shared digitally. Or if you have a machine that can cut out items, like a Cricut machine, I have students share their design with me in a Google forum that has all the different colors of sticker paper, their name, and what color sticker paper they would like. I end up actually cutting out their sticker design that is from that Google drawing in the Cricut platform. I have found having students create this way instead of creating within the Cricut program has been a great way to integrate this lower cost tool in the classroom because that way, I don't have to create a Cricut account for all of my students. They also get the benefit of learning how to use Google tools when it comes to digital design. You can use similar platforms like Adobe Spark, Canva, or PowerPoint. My students have Google accounts, so that's what has worked best in my classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  15:50

As a recap, here are ways to teach digital citizenship in your classroom. First is Google's Be Internet Awesome resources. Next are BrainPOP and BrainPOP, Jr. Third are the Common Sense Media digital citizenship lessons. Fourth, integrate digital citizenship books, and the fifth, STEM challenges to highlight those concepts. I know that this seems like a lot, and it's a lot of great resources to tackle. That's why I have that free guide for you that you can download to see how I structure my week integrating all of these resources within my K through five STEM spaces. You can grab that free download in the show notes, or you can also grab it using this direct link naomimeredith.com/digitalcitizenguide

teach-digital-citizenship-in-the-classroom

teach-digital-citizenship-in-the-classroom

 

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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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how to write a STEM lesson plan

How to Write a STEM Lesson Plan [ep. 26]

How to Write a STEM Lesson Plan [ep. 26]

how to write a STEM lesson plan

Check out the full episode on How to Write a STEM Lesson Plan:  

 

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Episode Summary

When writing a sound lesson plan, there are a lot of components you want to make sure you include, such as the standards, resources, and what students will be creating.

There is a lot to think about.

In this episode, I give you a behind-the-scenes look into how to write your STEM lesson plan from start to finish and help you improve the experiences in your classroom.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How to thoughtfully plan lesson plans
  • How to create lesson plans rooted in the standards
  • My process for planning multi-day lessons

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

When writing a sound lesson plan, there are a lot of components you want to make sure you include, such as the standards, resources, and what students will be creating. There is a lot to think about. In this episode, I will be giving you a behind-the-scenes look into how to write your STEM lesson plan from start to finish and help you improve the experiences in your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  00:55

Okay, I have a confession to make. One of my biggest pet peeves when it comes to STEM lessons is when teachers just throw out their robots, Legos, coding, or whatever STEM tool without any real purpose in mind. Yes, the kids are having a good time, but just using STEM tools doesn't necessarily mean that it is a STEM lesson. Don't get me wrong, STEM is supposed to be fun and engaging. But if we want to level up these lessons and have students use higher level thinking skills, the four C's using standards-based learning, we really have to be more thoughtful with our planning. Likewise, if we are creating or teaching well-thought-out lessons, then there will be a change in perception among teachers in your building and teachers in general as to what STEM education means in the elementary space. In turn, people who are not in education are also going to have a different perception as well. Yes, kids are purposely playing, but what is the real goal that you have in mind? So really take a step back and think about those lessons that you're teaching and how those are creating authentic, real-world connections. 


Naomi Meredith  02:19

If you're curious to learn more about what I believe STEM education means and the elementary space, go back all the way to episode two, and you can hear my thoughts about this and help you build up your perception and beliefs of what STEM means as well. Okay, off my soapbox. Let's dive into this episode and how we can really help you thoughtfully plan those lessons so that there are deeper connections. They are rooted in standards and really help students make those authentic, real-world connections. Throughout this episode, I will be breaking down the process that I use when planning a multi-day lesson. Knowing the structure is important if you see kids all five days in a row. If you're a classroom teacher or a STEM teacher and see kids once a week, this structure can definitely be modified for when you see kids and how to have these meaningful lessons in your classroom. To help you bring this planning process to life, I will be pairing it with a real-life lesson that I teach my third graders. 


Naomi Meredith  03:27

In this lesson, students are taking on the role of paleontologists and telling the story of a living thing that is now fossilized based on the evidence found. I use the Engineering Design Process to plan, but you can definitely modify this same structure if you use a different process, such as the launch cycle, design thinking, or project-based learning. I also use a template for my multi-day project. So there builds consistency for me as a person planning the lessons, but also for my students as well. They are used to a specific structure, and they can be more confident using the Engineering Design Process. But the tools, strategies, skills, standards, and connections will change year after year, lesson by lesson, unit by unit. 


Naomi Meredith  04:17

First, when I am creating my lesson, I work on developing the ask. What is the problem students are going to be solving or the question that they are going to be answering? You can have students help you develop this question based on the time that you have with students. Or you can have this pre-written, so you know the end goal that students are going to get throughout this project. Before I get to developing the ask, I already have gone through the brainstorming process. So I am at a place where I do know what I want students to do. I'm really going to dive into the research behind creating this whole lesson plan. If you want to hear more about my brainstorming process and how I got out here, make sure to go back and listen to episode 24. I break down where I gather ideas and really go down through the line and get to where I am today getting into the lesson. I like to plan my units in my classroom around a theme. My K through five themes is all about STEM careers and animation techniques. Each grade level will have their own way to animate its designs while rooting it in standards and STEM skills. 


Naomi Meredith  05:31

Developing the ask actually takes me a lot more time than you think that it would because this is my North Star, it is my compass and base for the entire lesson. I really look at the wording of the standards to help me write this ask. Also, keep it very open-ended. When I am writing this question, I don't start with “Can you,” because that really limits the question to have a yes or no response. Instead, I start my question off with, “How can you,” so there are multiple ways to solve the problem and think of a lot of different solutions to their designs and their creations. The standard that I am basing this whole project around is the NGSS standard 3-LS4-1. Here's what it says, “Analyze and interpret data from fossils to provide evidence of the organisms in the environments in which they lived long ago.” This is the standard for third grade. That is why for this project, I thought it would tie in nicely with students taking on the role of a paleontologist and then using the evidence from the resources that I give them. They can infer and make connections as to what that living thing's life was like based on where the fossil was and the evidence that is surrounding it. 


Naomi Meredith  06:55

Now there are a lot of different ways that you can attack this standard. It definitely doesn't have to be STEM or stop motion. But this is how I am blending the two together, making sense of the standard and giving it my own STEM twist. So eventually, the ask that I came up with for this project that students will be answering along this whole week is how can you create a stop motion video to show how fossils have formed from living things long ago. I will be tying in other standards as it relates to Reading Informational Text writing, speaking and listening, producing short audio, and even some math where students have to count the number of frames that they are using in their video to make sure that it's not moving too quickly. All of those standards are part of my research as well. I'm not going to list all of those out here because of time, but just know that I'm using that NGSS standard as my big base. I am connecting in that ELA and maths standards as well. 


Naomi Meredith  08:01

Next is planning at the imagine and plan stage. Like with the standards, this stage takes me the second longest as well. I want to make sure that I am giving resources to my students that are really helping them answer this question and find the evidence and research that they need. So they can produce a script and a storyboard that will then help them create their props and then eventually have their whole stop motion animation video. Sometimes I even will write my own research for students, especially for the younger grades, because I will often find research that is so relevant to the standard, but the reading level is way beyond their grade level. So oftentimes, I will have to research many different things and then rewrite them in a way that will make sense for my younger students. Thankfully, for third grade and up, I can usually find things that work well that relate to the standards. 


Naomi Meredith  09:03

So using some of my favorite research websites and also epic books that have a great collection of things as well. So for this specific lesson, I found a lot of different resources that would be relevant for third graders to research how different fossils are found. It also gives them information on what the life of that fossil might have been like. Students will have to infer and add in their own information as well, to put it in a way that would make sense for a story, which eventually is their stop motion animation. I also like to include two to four video clips that we can watch together as a class at the beginning of the lesson to add to their knowledge and the science behind how a fossil is formed. Of course, my favorite go-to I always check out first is SciShow Kids, but sometimes I will find other resources that relate to the standard and also build that background knowledge. I also will create vocabulary that students will need to know that will be found in their research. Or they will also have to apply to the script and storyboard that they will end up writing some of those vocabulary words. Of course, I tell them what a paleontologist is and all the different types of fossils that they will be reading and exploring about. 


Naomi Meredith  10:23

When I create vocabulary, I like to have the word nice and bold at the top, write the definition in kid-friendly language and include a picture and maybe a little more about the picture to help them understand what those words mean and give them some context. For this planning stage, since students will be creating a video, this is a lot different than if students will be building a project where they might be planning through drawing and labeling. For this plan, they have a small graphic organizer where they can add three different examples of fossils that they have found through their research to help them gather ideas for their video. Eventually, they will be picking one of these examples where they will dive in deeper and create the story for the stop motion, the things that they're looking for in this lesson, and I really try to focus the resources that I'm giving kids are centered around these questions and pieces of evidence, type of fossils that they found about how old is the fossil? Where was it found? What do you think happened? Of course, in this project, and like other projects, my classroom students will be able to collaborate and work together to fill this out if they so choose. 


Naomi Meredith  11:41

I always give the option of independent work because some students sometimes just need that opportunity that students can work together to create this plan. They'll then move on to that create, experiment, and improve stage. During this create, experiment, and improve stage, specifically since they are creating a video, they do have a script where they need to plug in their information and sketch out what they hope to have their props do during their video. With any video and audio project that I do with my students, I always use a script. When I first started doing these types of projects, I didn't use a script. I noticed kids would get off track with their videos, and they would always say things like “like and subscribe.” They would definitely get off topic and not really zone in on what the project is asking and even miss a lot of important details. In fact, I will say writing the script and creating the props for this project for this stop motion animation takes a lot longer than the actual video production. 


Naomi Meredith  12:45

There is a whole lot of high-level learning when students are thinking about the story of how their props are going to move and connect to the words that they are going to say when it comes to the prop creation. To help save time, I give students the opportunity to create one page of the prompts on the computer, whether they use shape tools to create them or insert images. That way, they don't have to worry so much about the drawing, especially since they are making a stop motion video about fossils and things in the past, like dinosaurs, and all sorts of living things, which are very complicated to draw. So I make sure to include that part in the create stage where they don't have to be so stressed about the drawing part. They can have the props ready to go. Unless I'm planning, I also think about overall the types of materials I'm going to need, which grade levels are going to be working on specific projects, and how I'm going to store these projects. For this stop motion animation, I actually only use paper for the props. 


Naomi Meredith  13:48

Typically with stop motion animation, you might see 3D figures, clay, and playdough, which are excellent tools. However, when I'm thinking about how I have four third-grade classes, at least 25 students each, that is a lot of clay and playdough that my budget doesn't allow. So using paper is just as good. It can get the point across, and students can still create a stop motion animation. It's easy to store the materials when they're not in my classroom. So when you're doing that lesson planning, think about the tools that you have, how can you be creative with things that are easy to get to? Also, think about the tools when you're getting to that cleanup time. How long is it going to take students to clean up those materials and move on for the rest of the day? When I am lesson planning, I also like to include mentor examples and even non-examples for students to refer to when I am teaching them throughout the week, especially if this is a project I have never done with the kids before. I want to actually test out the script to see if it makes sense and find any holes and bugs that are missing before I actually teach it to the kids. 


Naomi Meredith  15:02

Of course, when you teach, things to come up, things are going to happen, and you're always going to have to modify. But actually, testing it out yourself is really helpful, especially when it comes to a video or animation. You can show kids your examples and talk about what went well and what are some other things I needed to work on. I will link in the show notes an example that I created for this stop motion video all about fossils, so you can get an idea of where this project is headed for students. Another thing that I like to do if projects are going well, and this is something that I would like to teach the following year, I will save a lot of their projects in my Google Drive, whether it is a link to the video or even the pictures that I take as well. This is helpful for me to show other students and future years of projects that were super successful. It also helps me reflect as a teacher. So when I'm planning for the next year, what are some things that I need to modify for the lesson to make them better? 


Naomi Meredith  16:05

Finally, I like to plan and think about ways how students are going to be sharing their work in a meaningful way and have an authentic audience. My favorite go-to tool is to use Seesaw K through five because it provides a variety of tools to have students share their voices. Students can write, draw, record, and even make videos of their responses, so they can definitely share in a way that works best for them. The cool thing about this project for this fossil's stop motion is students are creating a digital piece. Their peers can definitely see their work once we put it in Seesaw. With video projects, I also like to create a peer feedback rubric that is the same as the modification checklist or self-assessment rubric, it has the same qualification. So it's really good for kids to self-evaluate using this checklist and also for their peers to look for those same things as well. For this project, when I was creating the feedback checklist, I wanted to make sure to include things that were about the specific video editing. So did they take 30-plus pictures so that the video doesn't go too fast? Are their cameras still so that the light isn't flashing? Are those elements about this specific video I added to their checklist? But then I also made sure to include things that talk about the actual standard. Does your video actually tell the story of a fossil and what its life was like long ago and actually answer the question that we are looking for?


Naomi Meredith  17:43

 From there, I also create a student-friendly rubric that students can self-assess if they have time. Or I can use the same rubric as well. Years ago, I took a workshop about rubric writing. A thing that they mentioned when creating a rubric is to have the grade level expectations in the middle. So maybe it's a four-point rubric, you have the three as grade-level expectations, all written out in that kid-friendly language. Then you have the below-grade-level expectations like they're almost there, the twos have those all written out. But then the lowest, the one where they're missing things, is blank, where you can actually write in what they're missing, or students can write themselves what they're missing. Then the highest qualifier, the four, if they are beyond grade level, students can write what they did that is beyond grade level expectations. Or you can write about those things as well. Having a rubric cleaned out really helps you reflect as the teacher, especially for this project. I wanted to make sure that I am hitting all of those integrated standards, that I am providing the resources that make sense for this lesson, and that it really is answering that main NGSS standard. 

 

Naomi Meredith  18:58

So creating a rubric is super helpful. A lot of us are starting to have to add grades to our STEM space. So having this prepared ahead of time for your project can really help with your overall grading for your classroom. As you can see for this lesson, there is a lot of thoughtful planning when creating just one lesson for my third grade stop motion animation unit, all about them taking the role of the paleontologist and explaining the evidence behind why that fossil became the fossil that we have found today. I totally understand that this can be overwhelming going through this whole process K through five and having different units that are thoughtfully planned and standards-based. Lucky for you, I am obsessed with this stuff. I really do love lesson planning, and I just really love seeing the engagement in my students in my classroom and seeing how they're making all of these real-world connections. In fact, I have my ultimate STEM resource library membership that I would love for you to join. You can join one time for one annual fee or pay monthly, and you will get access to monthly themed lessons, but also the K through five core lessons that are planned with this structure so you can get some time back and not have to worry about every single grade level for every single unit. I hope that seeing this process has helped you rethink the way you're lesson planning and really thinking about all those connections you're making, tying them to standards, and bringing those authentic, real-world connections.

how to write a STEM lesson plan

how to write a STEM lesson plan

how to write a STEM lesson plan

 

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

structure-a-stem-lesson

How Do You Structure a STEM Lesson? [ep. 25]

How Do You Structure a STEM Lesson? [ep. 25]

structure-a-stem-lesson

Check out the full episode on How Do You Structure a STEM Lesson?:  

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!

Episode Summary

With all the cool tools and resources out there, it's important to structure your STEM lesson so that it is rooted in standards but still engaging. 

In this episode, I will be sharing with you four different ways that you can plan and structure a STEM lesson and make it work for the time that you have in your classroom.

In this episode, you’ll learn four different ways that you can structure planning your STEM lessons:

  • Multi-day projects
  • Challenges of the day
  • STEM and stories
  • STEM stations

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

With all the cool tools and resources out there, it's important to structure your STEM lesson that is rooted in standards but still engaging. In this episode, I will be sharing with you four different ways that you can plan a STEM lesson and make it work for the time that you have in your classroom. 


Naomi Meredith  00:49

In the last episode, Episode 24, we talked about how to organize all of those ideas and lead up to the actual lesson planning for your STEM lessons. So make sure to go back and check that out because we are at the tail end of that episode and are now getting into how to dive into that planning. Also, if you're curious about how actually to plan your whole STEM scope and sequence, I also recommend checking out episode 14, where I go more into detail about that process. So how do you structure a STEM lesson? Here are four ways that you can structure your STEM lesson, and I know that you are going to find a way that works best for you. You may even try all four of these ideas. 


Naomi Meredith  01:37

First are multi-day projects. For this and all of the different ways to plan, I am going to be talking about how I use the Engineering Design Process as my base, especially when it comes to those multi-day projects. I am really zoning in on the Engineering Design Process. If that's a process that you're not using, this is when you can implement project-based learning, design thinking, the launch process, or even the scientific method, whatever method you are using for planning. This is when I think about those longer multi-day projects. When I'm thinking about multi-day projects, I'm thinking projects that will obviously last more than one day, about three to five days, and you have 40 minutes plus with your classes. I will definitely stretch out and use all of my days with my second and fifth graders and really dive into all of those stages of the Engineering Design Process. 


Naomi Meredith  02:37

For my first and Kindergarten students, I typically have their multi-day projects last about three days. Then I use the remaining two days of my week doing STEM stations, which is another way of planning. We're going to talk about this later in the episode. When working on multi-day projects, here is how I break up all of the stages of the Engineering Design Process. Day one is all about ask and imagine, so using all of those resources to build background and really dive into that S-the science part of the project. Day two is finishing up any imagining and zoning in on their plans, and being thoughtful with those plans. Then days three through five are all about creation, experimenting, and improving, which those stages go back and forth a lot. Then eventually sharing their work in a way that makes sense for that project. 


Naomi Meredith  03:31

I do see kids K through five, five days in a row, the same six classes throughout that same week. If you're a teacher who sees different classes every day, here's how I might split up your multi-day projects. Day one would be all about your asking, imagine. On day two, you could finish up the imagining stage, dive into the plan, and start to gather materials. Maybe you don't have them build quite yet because you probably don't have anywhere to store projects that are being built. Then the final week that they come, day three, or if you do want to carry it into day four, the kids are diving into the creation, experimenting, improving, and sharing piece. Again, remember to have smaller projects. This will also help kids get their buildings done a lot faster. If you are storing projects for more than one day, if the projects are smaller then you will have more ways to creatively store those projects. I know storage can be really tricky, especially when we're not always going into classrooms that were originally designed to be a STEM space. 


Naomi Meredith  04:39

Now multi-day projects might not work best for everybody, and that's okay. Sometimes your schedule is out of your control. So this is for my people who do see the kids one day a week, or if you need ideas for sub plans, if you have a weird week, if you do see kids once a week, one day, but then you see them again the rest of the week. So, for example, there was one year that I taught, and my schedule was a bit funky. On Mondays, I taught eight classes a day, I did say eight, for 35 to 40 minutes. I can't remember exactly. But I taught eight classes in a day, it was insane. Let me tell you, I was super sweaty at the end of the day, that was on Mondays. Tuesday, I was co-teaching with the classroom teachers to help them implement STEM and technology in their instruction. Then Wednesday through Friday, I had the same classes, my same six classes K through five, for three days in a row. 


Naomi Meredith  05:40

For my multi-day projects, I had to zone in, make them more simple, and even shorten some stages of the Engineering Design Process. I also, on those Mondays, didn't connect it with my Wednesday through Friday schedule because it wasn't always the same kids that lined up for that week. So I use this method of the challenge of the day on my Mondays, where it was a quick STEM lesson that had elements of the Engineering Design Process and still planned with standards. I would start and finish within that Monday. So that's all the time that we got. 


Naomi Meredith  06:17

So this brings me to my second way to structure your STEM lessons, and that is the challenge of the day. Like the name says, you are done with a challenge in one day. It has elements of the Engineering Design Process, so you can go through them very quickly or zone in on one or two of them. You are literally done in one day. Here are some examples of challenges of the day that I have done in those random one-day lessons. The year that I had that one day is when I did all of those Dot Day activities. They were quick, they were fun, and students were able to express their creativity, but they were complete in one day, which was perfect for Dot Day. If you're interested in hearing about the types of activities that I did for Dot Day, make sure to go back and listen to episode 16, where I give you five different STEM lessons that you can try in your classroom. Another great use of these one-day activities is to do those themed holiday lessons. At the time of this recording, I am in the middle of the fall, and I have five fall STEM activities that you could try in your classroom back in episode 23. Another great use of your challenge of the day is thinking about those quick STEM projects that are rooted in standards that students can explore and zone in on those science topics. 


Naomi Meredith  07:42

I do take home STEM kits called STEM snack packs. These are quick challenges that families can do together and explore, or it could be a great option for the challenge of the day. If you really don't want to plan using the STEM snack pack models, then this could also be a great sub-plan. One of my lessons for this is the foil boat challenge. Students are given one large piece of foil, and they have to design a boat with just the foil. Then they test different objects to see how much they will weigh. So they make a hypothesis of how many of that same object they think their boat will hold, and then they try lots of different things within that boat. They can even calculate the weight of the items that it held. Things that you could put in your boat would be small marbles, LEGO bricks, popsicle sticks, or any tiny things that you might have laying around. You could find the weight of those things and help them do the calculations. So again, quick one-day activities where it really is a challenge of the day. 


Naomi Meredith  08:46

The third way that you can structure your STEM lessons, it's very similar to the challenge of the day, but that is STEM and stories. This one is definitely a favorite for when I have sub plans. If you're a library specialist who is implementing STEM, this is definitely for you. Of course, read the story to your students, and if you are short on time, I recommend you pre-record yourself reading the story. You could get an ebook version of the book and screen-record yourself reading it. It's even more fun if you're reading it at home with your pets or your children. I have my little dog Frederick when I do this, and the kids love it because I talk to him throughout the story.  The kids feel like they're at home with me, and they have that connection piece as well. If I am personally the one pre-reading the story, the students are just as engaged as they would be if I was reading it in person. 


Naomi Meredith  09:44

STEM and stories challenges allow me to gather any supplies that are needed. Also, when I have students who are coming in that have a hard time with transitions, they come in later in my lesson so that way I can chat with them and handle any of those situations. Once the story is over, all the kids are ready to go. I definitely recommend doing this. This is a great time-saving hack. STEM and stories lessons can last for one day, or you can also stretch it out to multiple days. One of my favorites is after reading the story, Not a Box, students will create a straw marble maze. I use Amazon cardboard as their base, and I have it pre-cut. The students use tape and straws to create the maze for their marble to travel through. You can experiment with different marbles, such as round marbles or marbles with a flat side, to see how it changes the pace of their game. 


Naomi Meredith  10:44

After listening to the story, on day one, students can create their straw cardboard maze. On the second day, they can do all of the math and peer reviews that go along with it. They can calculate how fast the marble goes through their maze. They can add points to their game, write the rules, and then have other people play their game and receive feedback on how the game went. This allows them to make modifications along the way. Just like any of these, you can always extend them further and add even more elements of STEM. STEM and stories are a great way to highlight those common core standards that go along with reading literature. Or you could even do a nonfiction text and really highlight their informational standards as well. 


Naomi Meredith  11:28

The fourth way that you can structure your STEM lesson planning is using STEM stations. During my first few years teaching STEM, I did STEM stations with K through five. This was a way for me to test out all the random supplies in my classroom, see what would work for different types of grade levels, and see my kids' skills and capabilities when it came to using different types of tools. Now while being in my fifth year teaching STEM, I have a pretty good grasp of what the capabilities are for all different grade levels. I only use some stations with K through one. Again, this isn't just a primary thing. I highly recommend using stations when you're short on time, so you can also test out all of those interesting tools. For most weeks, when I'm teaching Kindergarten and first grade, I will do a longer project that is three days or a smaller challenge of the day project around the same theme. The last two days are STEM stations. The way that I like to structure STEM stations, and that has worked best for time, is I have four stations, and students rotate through to a day. 


Naomi Meredith  12:41

So here's how I explain it to the kids, “Hold up two fingers on one hand, put up two fingers on the other hand. What is two plus two?” They usually can tell me four, and I'm all, “Great. We're going to do two today and two tomorrow. If you don't get to your favorites today, when are you going to do them?” They say tomorrow. So they understand that they will get through all the stations as long as they're at school and everybody's happy. I can get through explaining the lessons, often showing a short video that correlates with the science standard. They're able to do the first station, clean up, stand at their clean station, point to the next station they're going to, complete that station, clean up, and they are ready to go all in 45 minutes. Also, I don't throw out random things for the kids to do. I still plan everything with themes and with standards. Again, this does take careful planning, and you can pull out bits and pieces of the Engineering Design Process. 


Naomi Meredith  13:44

Now I told you I like to plan with four stations. So naturally, I plan each station that goes along with each letter of STEM, science, technology, engineering, and math. This also helps make sure that I am planning stations that have a variety of tasks for students to do, they are getting a well-balanced experience and their STEM station rotations. For example, here are the four stations that I used when I taught the sun, moon, and stars to first grade. We first started off with a related video with Sideshow kids. Then the science station was moon phase puzzles, where they had all of the different moon phases cut up, and then they put those puzzles back together and got to learn and recognize the details within each of those phases. The technology station was day and night coding where students used to Bee Bots or Blue Bots. They rolled a dice, and there were pictures on the grid that went to each of those things that can be seen during the day, night, or both. 


Naomi Meredith  14:44

The engineering station was some space inspiration. So students had LEGO bricks to build various things that go along with space and all those different images that were provided to them. If I want to mix it up with that space engineering board, I do have some flash cards I got from the Target dollar spot forever ago. They show real-life pictures of things that can be found in space and interesting facts on the back. I had both options for students, and they could choose what worked best for them. The math station was geoboard constellations, and students had different images of famous constellations that they could build using the geoboards and then check off on their laminated list of which constellations they were able to build during that time. Stations can have a little bit more prep work when it comes to supplies. But if you are teaching a lot of classes, it's definitely worth the time. Then you have the tools ready to go for many years to come, and the kids are even more engaged because they all go together and are planned around their standards and go along with that theme. 


Naomi Meredith  15:51

As a recap, here are the four different ways that you can structure planning your STEM lessons. First are multi-day projects. Next are the challenges of the day. Third are STEM and stories lessons, and the fourth is STEM stations. This episode is about finding a planning structure that will work best for you and really root your lessons in standards and research so that the experiences are super meaningful and you are digging into those experiences in your own STEM way. If you want lesson planning templates for this and really dive into structures and routines when it comes to planning and setting up your STEM space, I welcome you to join my course, STEM teacher 101, where I dive in deeper on all of these topics, give you templates and resources, a bonus community to chat with and you even get five PD credit hours that you can take in your own time and be the STEM superstar that you are.

structure-a-stem-lesson

structure-a-stem-lesson

 

Related Episodes/Blog Posts:

 

Connect with Naomi Meredith:

 

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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!

organize-my-stem-lesson-ideas

How Do I Organize All of My STEM Lesson Ideas? [ep. 24]

How Do I Organize All of My STEM Lesson Ideas? [ep. 24]

Organize my STEM Lesson Ideas

Check out the full episode on How Do I Organize All of My STEM Lesson Ideas:  

Subscribe to the podcast HERE on your favorite podcasting platform.

Have a STEM question? Leave a voice message for the podcast!


Episode Summary

STEM lessons are so much fun to plan, but they can be overwhelming. There are so many cool lesson ideas out there.

But how do you organize them all, especially when you teach Kindergarten through fifth grade STEM? How do you even fit it all in?

In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you my system to organize all of your STEM lesson ideas and help you choose lessons that will work best for your STEM space. 

In this episode, you’ll learn four ways to help you plan and organize your STEM lesson ideas:

  • Brainstorm themes
  • Research standards
  • Plug your lesson ideas and standards into your year-long plan
  • Fine-tune your lessons

Resources Mentioned:

Episode Transcript: 

Naomi Meredith  00:00

STEM lessons are so much fun to plan, but they can be overwhelming. There are so many cool ideas out there. But how do you organize them all, especially when you teach Kindergarten through fifth grade STEM? How do you even fit it all in? In today's episode, I'll be sharing with you my system to organize all your ideas and help you choose lessons that will work best for your STEM space. 


Naomi Meredith  00:56

I recently received an email from a fellow STEM teacher that inspired this episode, and I wanted to read that to you. “Hey, Naomi, I've been teaching STEM for a couple of years. My biggest challenge is being organized with all the resources I'm now finding more of, focusing on my plans for the year, and each grade is my biggest challenge. Doing themes would be ideal, but I seem to be all over the place. Any advice?” from Ban K. 


Naomi Meredith  01:24

Before I jump into my response, I want to make sure that I am best serving you with my podcast and answering your specific questions. I want to hear your voice. You are always welcome to email, but I also mean your literal voice. I have set up a special voice message system where you can leave me an audio message, hit record, ask your question, and even have the chance to be featured on the podcast. Think of it like one of those help columns that used to be in newspapers. You don't even have to use your real name if you don't want to. You can say things like struggling STEM teacher, or excited for STEM can be examples of names. I will link this voice message system in the show notes for today and all future episodes. I really can't wait to hear your messages and gain inspiration for future podcast episodes!


Naomi Meredith  02:27

Okay, back to the question from this email. I totally get it. I am definitely an ideas person. I am not one to be running out of ideas, whether it's podcast episodes, lesson plans, things to wear for my bachelorette party, you name it. I always have so many ideas swimming around in my head. If you want to get a peek inside of my brain, it's like when you have so many tabs open. I can only focus on one at a time. But I always have lots of things running in the background that I am constantly working on. I definitely understand how it can be overwhelming when you are seeing all of these cool ideas online, on social media, and in books, you read. You start wondering how you can organize all of these in a sequential way that makes sense for your STEM space so you're not just teaching a bunch of random stuff. 


Naomi Meredith  03:27

I'm going to be sharing with you my system for organizing all of these ideas and putting it all together so that it makes sense. There is a progression of learning. The first step is to brainstorm themes. This is the most fun part, and this is where you are going to start organizing all of those ideas. You don't need to be super specific about what the actual lesson looks like. This is all about getting it out of your head and putting it in a place where you can visually see what is going on. You can do this digitally or on paper. You can do it in any note tracking system like Google Keep or Trello, which is one of my favorites. But this is where you will brainstorm and add in all those ideas. You are going to organize these ideas somewhat so that when you get into the next stages of this system, it's going to make a lot more sense. You're going to set up a piece of paper, physical or digital, and each piece of paper is going to have a major STEM theme that you are planning for. You can definitely take a peek at my free K through five STEM year-long plan to give you some ideas and some major things that you definitely want to have in your STEM planning. 


Naomi Meredith  04:46

The themes that I am thinking of are coding, robotics, Makerspace, and 3D printing. You should have each of these listed on their own sheet of paper, and when you see ideas or you have ideas of your own, you learn something at a conference, you might even learn something from this podcast, add it to your brainstorm list and try to categorize them. This will actually help you visually see what types of lessons you have tons of ideas for and ones that you need more research on. Also, this will help you create a balance throughout your year, so you're not doing one or the other. You can create a whole bunch of experiences for your students. So this will be your first go to place to jot down any of those ideas, it doesn't mean you have to teach them. It's going to help you organize everything that's floating around in your head. 


Naomi Meredith  05:41

The next step is to dive in and do backward planning when it comes to standards research. When you think about it, your lessons really do need to be rooted in standards and have that connection to the NGSS or science standards in your state, Common Core, which includes English language, arts, math, and even those speaking and listening skills, along with the ISTE standards for students. Even if you want to think bigger and broader, the four C's, this is where you want to take a peek at your lessons and what types of lessons can really hit those standards. You might have to do some research on what would fit, what would not fit, and also which activities are more of a filler activity. There is nothing wrong with these types of STEM projects. They have a place for different situations. For example, I love those little filler activities, and so instead of me teaching those in the classroom, I see them as a great opportunity as sub plans for last-minute things when I am super sick and I have to pull that out. I also create take-home STEM kits, which I'm figuring out how to do an episode all about that. This is something that I'm actually experimenting with my own students right now. So it's definitely in beta mode. But think about how you can send home these ideas with students, where families can support them in this learning where it is more guided step by step and not as deep. So those filler activities definitely have a place, but they might not be with your really high-level instruction. 


Naomi Meredith  07:22

The standards research is going to help you pick and choose which lessons should be taught within your classroom. Also, when researching those standards, you might even see some common themes and standards that connect across the grade levels. For my video and audio production unit, I picked standards that went along with earth science and space science and how those all connected together within all the grade levels. Each grade level had its own video and audio production unit, and all the standards connected together, which made the planning a whole lot easier. I could see these connections as a teacher and also when I was creating those lessons for my students over the years to help them make those connections. So research those standards, get to know them, and put them in with that STEM twist. 


Naomi Meredith  08:18

Once you have researched those standards, it's time to plug them into your year-long plan. Back in episode 14, I talked about how to write your STEM year-long plan. So make sure to go and check that out that will really help you with this step. I dive more into detail right there. You have your brainstorm, you research the standards, then plug them in into your year-long plan where you can visually see that progression of learning that I was talking about. Again, this will also help you see the holes in what you're missing and where you might have to go back to that brainstorm stage and find lessons that will be high-level learning standards space that will work well within your classroom. You might have an idea of how you want to teach these lessons. But you don't have to be totally married to that right now. You are just plugging in those lessons and those standards to see where you need to fill in those holes. 


Naomi Meredith  09:17

Finally, step four is to really fine-tune those lessons and decide how you want to teach them. For all of my lessons throughout the whole entire school year, I use the Engineering Design Process as my base. I am always referring to this process and how it changes with all the different ways that we are creating and building to solve a problem that is always my base, every single unit from K through five. Now there are different ways that you can actually plan your lessons when it comes to the Engineering Design Process. So you can definitely mix this up for your students and make it work best for your classroom. First, we have the long-term projects that go into detail within Engineering Design Process. This will probably take about three to five days. 


Naomi Meredith  10:07

If you need help with the Engineering Design Process and you are unsure of what I am talking about or how you can actually plan using this, I have a whole bunch of episodes for you to go back and listen to. It starts with Episode 15, where I talk about what the Engineering Design Process is and how you can use it in your planning. From there, we skip ahead to Episodes 17 through 22, where I have a mini-series about each stage of the Engineering Design Process. Then it is finished off with a nice pretty bow with my first guest interview with one of my STEM teacher friends, and how she even does the Engineering Design Process with quick one-day challenges. Again, you don't have to plan with the Engineering Design Process, there definitely is a place for it within the K through five STEM space. There are actually standards that talk specifically about the Engineering Design Process when you go and take a peek at the Next Generation Science Standards. So you are backed up by standards, and you can definitely plan long-term projects. 


Naomi Meredith  11:10

Here are three other ways that you can plan your lessons. You can also think about how you want to integrate STEM stations. This is especially great when you only see kids once a week. You could do two stations per day. For week one, the kids could do two stations the following week. The students can do the last two stations, so you have four stations total, and maybe each one has a different part of the Engineering Design Process that is linked to the standards. Another way that I like to do stations is, especially with my younger students, Kindergarten through first grade, I might have a long-term project that lasts three days. I really zone in on those stages, and we get them done. The creation might even just take one day for my little babies. Then the last two days, I will have four stations. Again, they will do two stations one day and two stations the next day. Each station will go along with the theme for the week or that long-term project. Then each station hits a different letter of STEM. So one is the science station, one is technology, one is engineering, and one is math. So I have a whole balance of things. 


Naomi Meredith  12:20

Yes, it does take a bit more planning to have that variety of things for the little kids. If you have come from the classroom before being a STEM teacher, you know you need a lot of stuff for those little kids to keep them engaged and excited. It is definitely worth that extra planning, and you will have plenty to do for those little ones. Another way that you can plan is to have a challenge of the day. This could be related to a STEM book, fiction or nonfiction, or even thinking about those quick engineering design challenge sprint's that my good friend Jen Sevy discussed in her guest interview. There are four different ways that you could plan, which are multi-day projects, STEM stations, the challenge of the day, or planning them with STEM and stories. 


Naomi Meredith  13:06

As a recap, here is the structure you can use to help you plan and organize all of those ideas floating in your head and get them organized in a way that makes sense, which can eventually turn into your year-long plan, and then your standard-based lessons. First, brainstorm themes. Next, do your standards research. Third, plug them into your year-long plan. Fourth, fine-tune your lessons. Having plenty of ideas is definitely a good thing, and you have that growth mindset where you want to bring in all those awesome experiences for your students. However, you definitely want to organize them in a way that makes sense, so you're not just pulling out random STEM lessons, but instead, it all cohesively goes together, and you have a whole structure for all of those ideas. 


Naomi Meredith  13:59

In the next episode, we will actually be talking more in detail about those four different types of STEM lessons that I just mentioned. I think this will really help you when you get into that lesson planning stage and how you can make these experiences even more meaningful for your students. Also, don't forget to leave me a voice message using the link in the show notes. I definitely want to hear those questions. I think that'll be a really fun way for us to interact and have a community with this growing podcast.

Organize my STEM Lesson Ideas

Organize my STEM Lesson Ideas

 

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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. 

Your mindless scrolling days are over! Your new STEM-best friend is now here in your ear buds!