Monday, February 23, 2009

STEM in Out of School


In a time of rather depressing news - take your pick as to what that may be for you personally or for your program or organization, there is some really interesting movement in getting Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math projects into Out-of-School Programs.

Currently the United States is not faring too wall in science education when compared to other countries. This may be due to how it is hard to measure one country against another. The difficulty to uncover standards or norms when there are so many variables and the fluid nature of knowledge when measured by strict instruments. Perhaps comparing Finland and the United States is like comparing informal learning environments to formal education. Or holding informal learning environments responsible for what occurs during the school day. Nevertheless, many researches think we can measure Finland against the United States and clean the data to give us a clear picture of the quality of our science education in this nation. If that is the case, as so many educational statisticians argue, we are not doing too well when compared against that and other nations. In fact, we rank #29th of 57 nations. Finland is #1.

Leaving the debate over evaluation and assessment of nations or learning, we can always use an extra hand in science education. Some say that our nation's financial health can only be saved by increased investment in science education.

This has led some to identify Out-of-School Time programs as the logical place for expansion of learning - and a natural place for learning that is by its nature out of the classroom and outside of the tests and answer sheets associated with current educational systems and academic-focused Out-of-School Time environments. Out-of-School Time programs have used projects for years to enrich their offerings and raise their quality.

Nevertheless, we will have to see whether STEM can work in the OST environment and the latest pilot to do so runs now until the end of summer. There are two groups in Massachusetts one in the west managed by WESTmost and the other in the east. The Eastern Cohort Group is run though a partnership of Build the Out of School Time Network, The Department of Early Education and Care, Department of Higher Education, Massachusetts Afterschool Partnership, The Museum of Science, and the Donahue Institute. The four sites and representatives of the six partners gathered today at City Year in Boston to learn about how to teach engineering using the Museum of Science's Engineering is Elementary curriculum. The training covered the fundamentals of engineering - have goals and ask questions until you solve these challenges with the materials at hand. The group was surprised at how simple materials were all that was needed. They also learned that through projects many children who may get factual answers wrong on a science actually can innovate in projects and become engaged in ways they may not through text books and discussions.

Over the next coming weeks, this group of STEM pilots will launch their projects and we will see what potential there is for this work and what challenges programs face in implementing these projects looking at what supports are needed, whether "out of the box" curriculum works, child engagement, and if these projects are fun for staff and children.

At a point in time when science, technology and engineering are opening all these incredible potentials in our world from micro-computers to green technologies, the United States is falling behind in the production of graduates in these fields. We need to do something towards growing the next generation of STEM workers. Already "by 2010, only four years from now, more than 90 percent of all scientists and engineers in the world will live in Asia." We have our work cut out for use to bring our rating up from #29th in the world science community and to make this country again the innovation powerhouse we are accustomed to.

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