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E-grāmata: What STEM Can Do for Your Classroom: Improving Student Problem Solving, Collaboration, and Engagement, Grades K-6 (Supplement your teaching with field-tested strategies.)

  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Solution Tree
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781954631465
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  • Cena: 32,57 €*
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  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Solution Tree
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781954631465
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"Good STEM education begins with good instruction. In What STEM Can Do for Your Classroom, Jason McKenna describes how teaching STEM in his elementary school changed not only his classroom but his life, improving his students' and his own approaches to problem-solving, collaboration, and general motivation to learn. Using a vast variety of examples, tried and tested classroom projects, and collaborative strategies, What STEM Can Do for Your Classroom opens up STEM education for K-6 educators in exciting and expansive new ways"--

Author and educator Jason McKenna describes how teaching STEM education in his elementary school changed his classroom and his life, improving his students’ and his own approaches to problem solving, collaboration, and general motivation to learn. Offering examples, tried and tested classroom projects, and collaborative strategies, this innovative resource opens up STEM education in K–6 classrooms in exciting and expansive new ways.


K–6 educators will:
  • Understand the benefits and importance of STEM in elementary schools
  • Build resiliency and curiosity in students
  • Discover a variety of classroom instruction strategies to approach STEM assessment
  • Read vignettes discussing STEM implementation across grade levels
  • Use new strategies to engage and motivate student learning through voice and choice

Contents:
Part 1: Start STEM Early
Chapter 1: Inspiring Students With STEM Narratives
Chapter 2: Teaching STEM in Elementary School
Part 2: Discover STEM Learning Principles
Chapter 3: Focusing on Authentic Engagement, Choice, and Collaboration
Chapter 4: Creating Risk Takers
Part 3: Explore STEM Pedagogy
Chapter 5: Exploring STEM Teaching and Guided Discovery Learning
Chapter 6: Making Assessment Student Centered in Elementary STEM Classrooms
Chapter 7: Exploring STEM and Creativity
Chapter 8: Bringing It All Together
Epilogue
References and Resources
Index
About the Author xiii
Introduction 1(4)
How I Started With STEM
1(1)
Who Should Read This Book
2(1)
What Is in This Book
2(3)
Part 1 Start STEM Early
3(1)
Part 2 Discover STEM Learning Principles
3(1)
Part 3 Explore STEM Pedagogy
3(2)
PART ONE Start STEM Early
5(30)
Chapter 1 Inspiring Students With STEM Narratives
7(12)
Exploring Science and Engineering
8(1)
Seeing Integrated STEM in Action
9(4)
Searching for Life on Mars
10(1)
Discovering a Key to the C0VID-19 Vaccine
11(1)
Capturing the First Black Hole Image
12(1)
Visualizing Cells to Accelerate Drug Discovery
13(1)
What You Can Do Now
13(4)
Determine Where STEM Fits Into Your Curriculum
13(1)
Start Students' STEM Learning by Teaching About STEM People and Projects
14(1)
Provide Students With Examples of Authentic STEM Connections
14(2)
Visit Other Schools to Observe STEM Instruction
16(1)
Have Spaces Dedicated to Exploring, Tinkering, and Iterating
16(1)
Key Takeaways
17(2)
Chapter 2 Teaching STEM in Elementary School
19(16)
Becoming a STEM Teacher
20(1)
Understanding Why All Students Can Become STEM Learners
21(1)
Exploring the Interdependency of STEM Skills
22(3)
What You Can Do Now
25(8)
Find Ways to Incorporate STEM Into Your Elementary Classroom
25(1)
Emphasize That All Students Can Learn STEM (or Any Subject)
26(1)
Incorporate More Spatial Reasoning Into Your Lessons
27(2)
Connect STEM to Students' World
29(1)
Begin a STEM Teaching Journal
29(4)
Key Takeaways
33(2)
PART TWO Discover STEM Learning Principles
35(36)
Chapter 3 Focusing on Authentic Engagement, Choice, and Collaboration
37(18)
Motivating Students
37(9)
Secure Success
38(2)
Run Routines
40(1)
Nudge Norms
41(1)
Build Belonging
41(3)
Boost Buy-In
44(2)
Understanding How Classroom Management Affects Student Motivation
46(1)
Collaborating to Enhance Learning
47(3)
What You Can Do Now
50(4)
Use the Five Drivers of Student Motivation
50(1)
Provide Students With Authentic Connections
51(1)
Use Random Rewards
51(1)
Spread Classroom Values
52(2)
Key Takeaways
54(1)
Chapter 4 Creating Risk Takers
55(16)
Viewing Failure as a Goal
56(2)
Understanding Failure and the Engineering Design Process
58(6)
Grades K-2 Project: Design and Create a Chair or Bed for Your Favorite Stuffed Animal
59(3)
Grades 3-6 Project: Design and Create a Container for the Egg Drop Challenge
62(2)
What You Can Do Now
64(5)
Reframe Your STEM Lessons So Failure Is the Goal
65(1)
Create Your First Penguin Award
65(1)
Embrace the Engineering Design Process
65(1)
Model That It Is OK to Make Mistakes
66(3)
Key Takeaways
69(2)
PART THREE Explore STEM Pedagogy
71(80)
Chapter 5 Exploring STEM Teaching and Guided Discovery Learning
73(18)
Understanding Knowledge Versus Skills
74(2)
Thinking About Thinking
76(2)
Clarifying the Differences Between Unguided and Guided Discovery Learning
78(6)
Using Effective Classroom Discussions for Guided Discovery Learning
80(1)
Modeling Effective Classroom Discussions
80(2)
Implementing Guided Discovery Learning
82(2)
What You Can Do Now
84(6)
Use Guided Discovery Learning in a First-Grade STEM Lesson
85(1)
Use Guided Discovery Learning in a Third-Grade STEM Lesson
86(4)
Key Takeaways
90(1)
Chapter 6 Making Assessment Student Centered in Elementary STEM Classrooms
91(26)
Defining the Purpose of Assessment and Grading
92(3)
Understanding Assessment
92(2)
Understanding Grading
94(1)
Making Assessment Student Centered
95(12)
Create Clear Goals
96(1)
Cocreate Learning Targets
97(3)
Use Ongoing Formative Assessment
100(3)
Adjust Teaching as Needed
103(1)
Use Conversation-Based Grading
104(3)
What You Can Do Now
107(8)
Cocreate Learning Targets in Grades K-3
107(2)
Use an Engineering Notebook in Grades K-3
109(1)
Use Formative Assessment Strategies
110(1)
Engage Stakeholders
111(1)
Build a Learning Profile for Your Students
112(3)
Key Takeaways
115(2)
Chapter 7 Exploring STEM and Creativity
117(14)
Understanding Creativity as a Habit
118(2)
Teaching Creativity
120(6)
Understanding Mini-C and Little-C Creativity
121(3)
Using the Engineering Design Process to Teach Creativity
124(2)
What You Can Do Now
126(4)
Believe That All Students Can Be Creative and You Can Teach Creativity
126(1)
Recognize Different Types of Creativity Exist
126(1)
Have Students Think More About a Problem Before Trying to Solve It
127(1)
Model Creativity for Your Students
127(3)
Key Takeaways
130(1)
Chapter 8 Bringing It All Together
131(20)
Organizing STEM Learning While Building a Tower
131(3)
Key Takeaways
133(1)
Ensuring Group Work Works by Rescuing an Astronaut
134(2)
Key Takeaways
135(1)
Creating a Classroom Culture Where Failure Is OK by Moving a Mars Rover
136(4)
Key Takeaways
139(1)
Being Creative by Preparing to Design a Crane
140(3)
Key Takeaways
142(1)
Making Choices and Collaborating in a Robotics Competition
143(2)
Key Takeaways
144(1)
Teaching STEM Across Grade Bands by Creating a Weather Station
145(4)
Key Takeaways
148(1)
What You Can Do Now
149(2)
Establish a STEM Vision
149(1)
Share Your STEM Vision
149(1)
Create an Implementation Plan
150(1)
Epilogue 151(2)
References and Resources 153(10)
Index 163