The Gooru Corner: Contain It Housing: Part I

 
This Autodesk Digital STEAM Workshop collection is the first part in a series of three. In this project, students will design a green home out of cargo shipping contains using Autodesk Revit Architecture software. Learn how to design an alternative home that is affordable, easy to assemble, functional, and sustainable!
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National Robotics Week: Kids Need STEM Inspiration

This is a guest post by Colin Angle, CEO iRobot

 
The first robot was created in 400-350 BC, a steam-powered pigeon engineered by the mathematician Archytas.  Since then, robots have captured our imagination. They embody innovation, success and progress, and they inspire our vision of the future. 
 
National Robotics Week, now in its fourth year, helps us realize that we are already knee deep in the robotics era.  Robots are cleaning floors, making cars, keeping our military safe, assisting in patient care, exploring the depths of the oceans and patrolling the skies.  However, for the United States to remain a dominant force in this quickly growing industry, we will need significantly more skilled professionals in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) in the future.
 
Companies, universities, museums and associations across the U.S. are embracing National Robotics Week as an opportunity to capture the imaginations of children and share the exciting world of robots with all. Robots serve as a way to engage and show off the fun side of STEM in the hopes of inspiring youth to pursue technology-related fields and combat the STEM crisis in the U.S.
 
Established by the U.S. House of Representatives (H.Res. 1055) in 2010, National Robotics Week celebrates the strength of robotics in the U.S. as a symbol of American innovation.  Here in Massachusetts, we are home to almost 100 robotics companies and 10 robotics research institutions.  
 
Throughout history, the U.S. has earned international respect as a leader in business and industry. Much of this falls on the back of our nation’s educational system and innovation in STEM.  Yet our ability to produce the next generation of STEM graduates has become inadequate and is trending in the wrong direction.  The World Economic Forum’s 2012-2013 Global Competitiveness Report ranks the United States as 47 out of 144 countries in terms of quality of math and science education, and 7th overall in terms of global competitiveness.
 
If you think of our educational system as a pipeline, a very troubling picture is emerging.  By the end of middle school, we have lost 79% of our potential STEM workforce.   According to the STEMconnector’s 2012 annual report, “Where are the STEM Students?”, we lose more than half of those remaining in high school.  Although STEM covers a tremendous number of industries and opportunities, only about 1 in 10 students graduating high school has an interest in STEM careers.
 
At the college level, this grim scenario gets even worse.  For every 100 students who graduate with a bachelor’s degree, only 10 will end up working in a STEM-related job.  It seems we are convincing our children and young adults that science and math are hard and scary.
According to Change the Equation, a shocking 30% of the population would rather clean a bathroom than solve a math problem. 
 
So what do we do? We start with National Robotics Week.  At iRobot, we organize, publicize, laud and shout about the more than 180 National Robotics Week events. There is at least one event in every single state in America. We applaud our friends in Alaska hosting student workshops. We say ‘aloha’ to the Hawaiian students hosting a robot competition. We laugh with the robot comedian in Montana.  We invite you to join us at the Robot Zoo in Cambridge on April 13, where more than 40 local robot companies, teams and researchers will gather to show off the latest and greatest in robotic innovations.  
 
But still, that’s not enough. National Robotics Week is too short to reverse the trend by itself.  Rome wasn't built in a day, nor are robots or the skills needed to build them.  We need to prove to kids that science and math are cool.  We need to go to classrooms with world-changing robots , explain where they come from and educate students on how they can be a part of it all. We need to bring kids to labs and introduce them to the amazing engineers who turn these products from science fiction into reality.  
 
It's up to us to prove to kids just how important and fun STEM is, and to show them a path to get there.  National Robotics Week is here and now.  Join us at these events and in the online conversations. I also challenge you. Who will you inspire after this week? At iRobot, the thank-you notes we get from soldiers saying that our robots have saved lives inspire us every day.  We need to provide the same level of inspiration to our students - the next generation of engineers, roboticists and inventors who stand ready to change the world. The STEM gap is ours to fill.  
 
Colin Angle is Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder of iRobot Corp.
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Discovery Education And Digital Promise Host Summit On The Transition To Digital Classrooms: ‘Future@Now’ Accelerates National Discussion On Digital Learning And The Impact On College And Workforce Readiness

Congressman George Miller, Senior Democratic Member on the House Education and the Workforce Committee, Joins Leading Educational Organizations, Superintendents, Business Leaders and Students to Address Digital Education in America. This is a Press Release from Discovery Education.

 
Silver Spring, Md. (April 11, 2013)Discovery Education, the leading provider of K-12 digital textbooks in the U.S., and Digital Promise, a nonprofit organization chartered by Congress to spur innovation in education, in conjunction with Connect2Compete, ERDI, ISTE, NCERT and other leading national and state-level education organizations, today launched the inaugural Future@Now: Transition to Digital Classrooms conference to discuss one of the most important issues in education today - the state of digital learning and its impact on college and workforce readiness.
 
Held today at Discovery Education’s global headquarters and streamed live nationwide, it marked the first such event by the organization and set the stage for an announcement of a new national initiative to provide free trial access to digital textbooks for educators across the country. 
 
Launching a year after the FCC and DOE's Digital Textbook Playbook initiative, the goal of the Future@Now: Transition to Digital Classrooms conference is to raise awareness about the benefits of digital learning and celebrate the successes of districts that have already deployed digital textbooks in meaningful ways in their classrooms. The conference also is designed to drive discussion among education thought-leaders, school district leaders and members of the business community on the challenges of transitioning to digital learning, the impact of digital resources on students and educators, and opportunities to advance the adoption of innovative digital tools in order to best prepare today’s students for the careers of tomorrow.  
 
Author of the “Transforming Education through Technology Act” and the most Senior Democratic Member of the House Education and the Workforce Committee Congressman George Miller (D-CA) joined a number of senior policy-makers, educational thought leaders, superintendents, business and foundation leaders to give exclusive insight into the transition to digital learning environments. “There is a new imperative of digital learning in this country. The classroom has already evolved in such amazing ways and must continue to do so for us to compete on the world stage,” said Congressman Miller. “The digitization of America’s classrooms is one of the most important issues we as a society can tackle today.”
 
To support educators in taking the first-step toward transitioning to digital learning environments, ISTE, Connect2Compete, Digital Promise and Discovery Education announced that beginning this month educators across the country will be given trial access to Discovery Education’s Techbook™ series, the award-winning series of digital textbooks featuring K-12 science; physics, chemistry and biology; and middle school social studies. In addition to providing free trial access to its digital textbooks, Discovery Education and ISTE will also provide educators with the opportunity to participate in more than 40 virtual professional development sessions, also at no cost, to support educators in effective classroom implementation of digital tools.
 
“Discovery Education’s Techbook™ series is already being used by districts across the country and we’ve seen amazing results in student engagement and achievement,” said Goodwyn. “We want to put a digital textbook into the hands of every educator in the U.S. to enable them to experience the impact digital resources make in classrooms and see firsthand how such tools are transforming teaching and learning.”
 
Other leaders on hand for this inaugural event, which was also streamed to more than 1,000 sites nationwide, included Dr. Mark Edwards, AASA Superintendent of the Year, Digital Promise League of Innovative Schools member and Superintendent of Mooresville Graded School District; Alberto Carvalho, Miami-Dade County Public Schools Superintendent and recipient of the Broad Prize in Urban Education; Zach Leverenz, CEO, Connect2Compete; Holly Jobe, President, ISTE; Eric Spiegel, President and CEO, Siemens Corporation U.S.; Shannon Schuyler, Corporate Responsibility Leader, PricewaterhouseCoopers; as well as students who have used the technology in their own classrooms. In addition to Connect2Compete, ERDI, ISTE and NCERT, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, Suburban School Superintendents, AEP, TASA, Texas ASCD and Illinois ASCD also partnered to launch the conference.
 
The conference also included a unique, live look inside a digital classroom, featuring students and educators from Collier County Public Schools in Naples, Fla.
 
Discovery Education’s Techbook™ series is revolutionizing instruction by providing support for multiple learning styles, interactive content that specifically appeals to digital natives and real-time updates that allow educators to incorporate current events and cutting-edge thinking into their curricula. In addition, Discovery Education offers built-in assessments in each digital textbook that measure students’ progress and support individualized classroom instruction.
 
For more information on the conference, to view its archive online and to learn more about the Techbook™ trial, visit: www.discoveryeducation.com/futurenow
 
About Discovery Education
Discovery Communications revolutionized television with Discovery Channel and is now transforming classrooms through Discovery Education. Powered by the number one nonfiction media company in the world, Discovery Education combines scientifically proven, standards-based digital media, a dynamic user community, assessment services and professional development in order to empower teachers to improve student achievement. Already, more than half of all U.S. schools access Discovery Education digital services. Explore the future of education atwww.discoveryeducation.com.
 
About Digital Promise
Digital Promise is an independent, bipartisan 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization chartered by Congress to spur innovation in education. Through its work with educators, technologists, researchers, and leading thinkers, Digital Promise supports comprehensive research and development to improve all levels of education and provide Americans with the knowledge and skills needed to compete in the global economy. One of its flagship initiatives, the Digital Promise League of Innovative Schools, is a national coalition of public school districts committed to digital innovation that delivers results for students. The League of Innovative Schools is made up of 32 school districts and education groups in 21 states, that collectively serve more than 2.5 million students.
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New Study From GAO Finds Overlapping Federal STEM Initiatives

New Study From GAO Finds Overlapping Federal STEM Initiatives

On April 10, 2013, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a study titled “Governmentwide Strategy Needed to Better Manage Overlapping Programs” regarding STEM education. A helpful sheet of highlights from the testimony before the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education, Committee on Education and the Workforce, House of Representatives can be found here.

The GAO found that “In fiscal year 2010, 13 federal agencies invested over $3 billion in 209 programs designed to increase knowledge of STEM fields and attainment of STEM degrees”. Sounds like a lot of needed support to the STEM field to help the workforce pipeline, right?

Unfortunately, the GAO found that of the 209 STEM education programs, “Eighty-three percent of the programs… overlapped to some degree with at least 1 other program”. At a time when the sequester hangs over federal agencies like a cloudy day, it’s important to be smart about coordination and not overlap STEM initiatives. One example of such budget cuts being the recent cutback of programs from NASA for outreach.

Among their recommendations, the GAO has stated “that the OSTP should direct the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) to work with agencies to better align their activities with a governmentwide strategy”. The US needs workers with STEM skills, and as such, more coordination is necessary to ensure less waste. If these federal agencies can come together to form a coherent strategy, the STEM-skilled jobs pipeline will be full of great, highly skilled workforce candidates.

The GAO suggests that for more information, contact George A. Scott at (202)512-7215 or scottg@gao.gov.

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2013 WindSenators Programming- Help KidWind Teach the World about WindPower!

This is a guest blog post from the KidWind Project

In the summer of 2008 we started building the WindSenators Education Network with eight motivated teachers from New York; we now have over 91 WindSenators in 26 states. These highly qualified and dedicated educators (K thru College) have impacted thousands of teachers and hundreds of thousands of students in the last four years through teacher workshops, KidWind Challenges and a variety of engaging regional events.

In 2013 we are looking for more educators who are interested in helping us work with teachers to improve wind energy education in their region. This training is a unique opportunity which combines improving your knowledge about wind energy science and teaching about wind in K-12 classrooms using a wide array of curricula and educational materials.
 
If you want to learn about wind energy from the experts and share this knowledge with teachers and students in your state or region this is the program for you.  As a WindSenator you will be part of this team and will be certified to provide trainings and represent KidWind at conferences, events and workshops.
 
The five-day training program will provide hands on instruction about wind energy science and technology using a variety of subjects (physics, technology, biology, earth and environmental science) and includes in depth training on WindWise and KidWind materials and curricula. There will also be a number of guest speakers from the wind industry, and tours of local wind facilities. Existing WindSenators will be instructors and available to talk about how they have implemented training programs in their states.
 
While we are looking for educators interested in learning and impacting other educators, we understand that some teachers are just looking for a program to learn more about wind energy and how to integrate these subjects into the classroom.  Be assured that this is one of the primary goals of the WindSenators training program.
 
Participants at both event will leave with full curricula and over $500 in classroom wind energy gear.
 
WindSenators Portland
Portland State University
 
Applications accepted until May 1, 2013.
 
Join us in Portland for 5 packed days of training, tours and learning about Wind Power. DETAILSAPPLY NOW!
 
MANY SCHOLARHSHIPS STILL AVAILABLE! If you are local teacher there is a commuter rate contact michael@kidwind.org for more info.
 
 
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WindSenators Southern California
College of the Desert
Applications accepted until May 15, 2013
 
If you are teacher in California or the southern California region join us in Palm Desert, CA for 4 packed days of wind energy education training that will help you bring wind energy to your classroom in an engaging and exciting fashion. DETAILS. APPLY NOW!
 
We are working on scholarships for this program and hope to have more information soon!  If interested apply and once we have raised the $$ we will match you up with funding.
 
 
Please check out the info and APPLY NOW!
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Discovery Education and Digital Promise Launch Future@Now: Transition to Digital Classrooms Event

Congressman George Miller (D-CA), leading educational strategists, school district leaders and students from across the country come together to discuss the state of digital learning

WHAT:
Discovery Education and Digital Promise, in conjunction with Connect2Compete, ERDI, ISTE, NCERT and other leading national and state-level education organizations, are launching the inaugural Future@Now: Transition to Digital Classrooms conference that will gather both public sector and private industry thought-leaders from across the country to discuss one of the most important issues in education today - the state of digital learning.  Launching a year after the FCC and DOE's Digital Textbook Playbook initiative, the goal of Future@Now – Transition to Digital Classrooms is to raise awareness about the benefits of digital learning and celebrate the successes of districts that have already deployed digital textbooks in meaningful ways in their classrooms. 
 
Discovery Education will also be making a special announcement at the conference that will impact students and educators across the county.
 
WHO:
  • Congressman George Miller, U.S. House of Representatives member, Senior Democrat of the House Education and Workforce Committee and author of the “Transforming Education through Technology Act”
  • Dr. Mark Edwards, AASA Superintendent of the Year, Digital Promise League of Innovative Schools member and Superintendent of Mooresville Graded School District
  • Alberto Carvalho, Miami-Dade County Public Schools Superintendent and recipient of the Broad Prize in Urban Education
  • Dr. Kamela Patton, Collier County Public Schools Superintendent
  • Mary Moss Wirt, 3rd grade student in the Wake County Public School System and digital learner
  • Sara Schapiro, Director of the Digital Promise League of Innovative Schools
  • Bill Goodwyn, President & CEO, Discovery Education
  • Zach Leverenz, CEO, Connect2Compete
  • Holly Jobe, President, International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
  • Senior policy-makers, educational thought leaders, superintendents, CAOs and CFOs who will offer exclusive insight into digital learning and the strategies for its effective implementation
WHEN/WHERE:
Thursday, April 11 – 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
 
Discovery Communications’ International Headquarters
1 Discovery Place
Silver Spring, MD
 
If you are unable to attend the event, you can still participate by viewing the live stream here: www.discoveryeducation.com/futurenow
 
About Discovery Education
Discovery Education partners with districts, states and like-minded organizations around the world to transform teaching and learning with innovative content and services that support educators and accelerate academic achievement.  With a presence in over half of all US schools and in 50 countries around the world, Discovery Education fuels educational transformation with award-winning multimedia content including digital textbooks, professional development, assessment tools, and the largest professional learning community of its kind.  Powered by Discovery Communications (NASDAQ: DISCA, DISCB, DISCK), the number one nonfiction media company in the world, Discovery Education is the global leader in standards-based digital content for K-12 and community college instruction.  Explore the future of education at www.discoveryeducation.com.
 
About Digital Promise
Digital Promise is an independent, bipartisan 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization chartered by Congress to spur innovation in education. Through its work with educators, technologists, researchers, and leading thinkers, Digital Promise supports comprehensive research and development to improve all levels of education and provide Americans with the knowledge and skills needed to compete in the global economy. One of its flagship initiatives, the Digital Promise League of Innovative Schools, is a national coalition of public school districts committed to digital innovation that delivers results for students. The League of Innovative Schools is made up of 32 school districts and education groups in 21 states, that collectively serve more than 2.5 million students.

 

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The Gooru Corner: Contain It Housing Challenge

The Gooru Corner: Contain It Housing Challenge
 
Watch this video, created by middle school teacher Jennifer Caffrey, to learn about the Contain It Housing challenge and her inspiration for designing the curriculum.
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Gooru is a free search engine for learning developed by a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization whose mission is to honor the human right to education. Visit us at www.goorulearning.org.

 

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National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc. (NACME) and ExxonMobil Foundation Advance Opportunities for More Students to Pursue Engineering

National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc. (NACME) and ExxonMobil Foundation Advance Opportunities for More Students to Pursue Engineering (via PR Newswire)

April 10th event featuring key government officials will discuss critical need to increase representation of minorities in engineering WHITE PLAINS, N.Y., April 9, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, Inc. (NACME), a premier non-profit organization…

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Arizona State University Announces Cutting-Edge Online Electrical Engineering Degree

Arizona State University Announces Cutting-Edge Online Electrical Engineering Degree (via PR Newswire)

TEMPE, Ariz., April 9, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- The Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University (ASU) today announced plans to offer its renowned Bachelor of Science in Engineering (B.S.E.) in Electrical Engineering in an online format beginning in the fall 2013 semester. "Today's…

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Final Next Generation Science Standards Released State-created standards for science education in the 21st Century

On Tuesday, April 9, the final Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), a new set of voluntary, rigorous, and internationally benchmarked standards for K-12 science education, were released.

Twenty six states and their broad based teams worked together for two years with a 41-member writing team and partners to develop the standards which identify science and engineering practices and content that all K-12 students should master in order to be fully prepared for college, careers and citizenship. The NGSS were built upon a vision for science education established by the Framework for K-12 Science Education, published by the National Academies’ National Research Council in 2011. 
 
The lead state partners include Arizona, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia.
 
“The NGSS aim to prepare students to be better decision makers about scientific and technical issues and to apply science to their daily lives. By blending core science knowledge with 
scientific practices, students are engaged in a more relevant context that deepens their understanding and helps them to build what they need to move forward with their educationwhether that's moving on to a four-year college or moving into post-secondary training,” said Matt Krehbeil, Science Education Program Consultant, of Kansas.
 
“This blending of the dimensions described in the Framework for K-12 Science Education aligns with what research has shown are the most effective practices in teaching science. Students who experience quality instruction based on the NGSS will be prepared to understand the world around them and will be college and career ready.”
 
“As emphasized in the Framework, an active learning of scientific practices is critical, and takes time. A focus on these practices, rather than on content alone, leads to a deep, sustained learning of the skills needed to be a successful adult, regardless of career choice,” said Bruce Alberts, PhD, who is Editor-in-Chief of Science and served two six-year terms as President of the National Academy of Sciences. “We must teach our science students to do something in science class, not to memorize facts.”
 
The creation of the NGSS was entirely state-driven, with no federal funds or incentives to create or adopt the standards. The process was primarily funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, a leading philanthropy dedicated to improving science education in the U.S. The NGSS are grounded in a sound, evidence-based foundation of current scientific research- including research on the ways students learn science effectively- and identify the science all K–12 students should know. 
 
In Michigan, our conversation about education always includes workforce training. Whenever we adopt a new set of standards we make sure to promote the opportunities the standards afford, not just in terms of college readiness, but in terms of workforce readiness. That's particularly relevant with the NGSS,” said Susan Codere, Project Coordinator for the NGSS in Michigan.
 
“The Next Generation Science Standards are going to pull together inquiry and practice, and recognize the role of engineering. Pulling together the cross-cutting concepts is going to be a challenge, but it’s really effective pedagogy,” said Ellen Ebert, Washington State’s Director of Science for Teaching and Learning at the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. “In Washington State we’re looking at the NGSS to propel students into 21st century—we’re looking at college and career readiness. This is a real opportunity to help students see the potential of science in their lives.”
 
"The Next Generation of Science Standards promise to help students understand why is it that we have to know science and help them use scientific learning to develop critical thinking skills—which may be applied throughout their lives, no matter the topic. Today, students see science as simply a list of facts and ideas that they are expected to memorize. In contrast to that approach education researchers have learned, particularly in the last 15 to 20 years, that if we cover fewer ideas, but go into more depth, students come away with a much richer understanding. Unlike previous standards, where you have separation of inquiry and ideas that students should know, in the NGSS they are now together,” said Joseph S. Krajcik, Professor of Science Education in the College of Education at Michigan State University and a member of the writing team. 
 
Achieve, a non-partisan nonprofit education organization, coordinated the states' effors.
 
Media Contacts:
Chad Colby, Achieve: 202. 419.1570
Marina Stenos, Widmeyer: 646.213.7251
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This video is about NGSS NEW Short Sizzle V6F A/O 4/6/13

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