The Power of Wireless Projector Connection

This is a real incident from a  study I just completed that compared teacher use of technology with and without wireless projection systems.  I found that these systems changed the spatial arrangements in the classroom as well as the reach and frequency of technology use.

Thanks to Sally Galman, who took my very crude cartoon and made it into something fabulous.  See http://blogs.umass.edu/sallyg/ for more information on Sally and her wonderful work including her research methodology books (in cartoon format).

techComicPage1 techComicPage2

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New Burglar Alarm Posters

Here are some nice example of grade 4 burglar alarm ad posters from this year.  Students have an open-ended engineering challenge of building a prototype burglar alarm.  Next, they design an ad poster and make a pitch at a simulated sales event.

 

BurglarAd18 BurglarAd19 BurglarAd20 BurglarAd21

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Burglar Alarm Fair Business Card

A couple of students made their own business cards for our grade 4 Burglar Alarm Fair totally on their own.  I was happy to see such investment and initiative!

Business Card

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Space Challenge Ready To Go

My enrichment students have finished building all the LEGO EV3 Space Challenge pieces and are ready to take on the challenge missions!

Space Challenge

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Dragsters 2014

I teach robotics one afternoon a week in a sister school in our district.  This is my third year there.  It is interesting to see the changes each year as students get more experience.  The classroom teacher and I were very pleased with the engineering results this year. All teams completed a dragster and got at least one time.  This year’s faster dragster was made by Kennan.  The car went 6.7 feet/second.  Second fastest was Jerry and Kaylie.  Their car went 5.9 feet/second.

Dragsters 2 Dragsters 1

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Found This Note on a Robot Kit Today

World Record Note

 

 

We found this note from two of last year’s sixth graders on one of the robotics kits.  It was very satisfying to find this note.  The two boys were so proud of their accomplishments.

“This kit was the one used to break the world record of 7.7 feet per second.  Use this kit wisely.  Kyle and Mark”

 

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Robotics Quick Update

Sorry I have not been posting much.  I spent a lot of time this summer working on my “comps” papers for my PhD.  This involved a robotics literature review and a write up of my pilot study, where I examined a second and sixth grade student doing an open ended engineering challenge.  The second drafts of both papers are in the Research section of this web site.

I am trying to finish up my coursework this fall taking 3 courses and finishing an independent study.  The latter is a reworking of a lit review  paper my advisor wrote on robotics as computational manipulatives.  If I survive the grueling schedule (7 weeks to go), I will have my final course in the spring (Qualitative Research 2) and a CAGS (Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study).  I am planning to defend my comps sometime this fall/winter and start my dissertation proposal this spring.

Couple of other things going on.  I went to Denmark for a week this summer of a consulting job.  We went to the Grand Canyon.   I am on a committee defining new computer science and digital literacy for the state of Massachusetts.  I was named a finalist (one of three) for the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching.  We have all new technology at our new school so it’s exciting but also a ton of work to get everything deployed.  My three enrichment students are working the the LEGO EV3 Space Challenge, which has been a lot of fun and it’s giving me chance to work with the EV3 more in-depth.

I will write about my pilot study research when I come up for air.

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Timeline

I want to plot kid’s engineering design process cycles but don’t know how to get EXCEL to combine events of the same type on the same line.  For the example below, I want the 2 PLAN events to be on one line.

 

chart

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Elementary Robotics Book Talk – June 19, 2014 – Meekins Library, Williamsburg

Author’s Talk John Heffernan

Elementary Robotics: Sustaining the Natural Engineering Instincts of Children

Thursday, June 19, 2014

7 PM to 8 PM

2 Williams Street, Williamsburg, MA 01341
413-268-7472

Toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarteners are natural engineers. They love sand castles, blocks, fairy houses, and other projects that support their creative, fantasy play. We support this natural engineering instinct in preschool and kindergarten classrooms with blocks, LEGOs, sand and water tables, and other activities. As students reach first grade and beyond, we remove all these activities from school. Yet we still expect them be interested in engineering when they get to high school and college.

The Elementary Engineering Curriculum (EEC), described in this book, supports students’ natural engineering interests all through elementary school. The EEC delivers a preschool to grade six engineering experience based on BeeBot, and LEGO WeDo, NXT, and EV3 robotics. Each year, students have at least one robotics unit. In grades K, two, three, four, six, students also have an open ended engineering challenge. The EEC explicitly teaches the engineering design process in an age appropriate way. Robotics provides very high interest, motivating, and deep learning experience for students. This book contains rationale, descriptions, research, and teaching tips on elementary robotics as well as complete lesson plans and standards alignment for the curriculum.

Park at the Post Office or West Main St, to leave the parking lot open for patron use.

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Comprehensive Exam Proposal

Comprehensive Examination Proposal
Elementary Robotics Case Study
John Heffernan
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
March 19, 2014


Problem Statement

Designerly play has been identified as a fundamental component of childhood learning (Baynes, 1994). Designerly play is supported in typical preschool and kindergarten classes with sand tables, water tables, blocks, LEGOs, art, and dramatic play areas. However, as students enter grade one and beyond, the increasing academic focus has resulted in the loss of opportunities for designerly play (Zhao, 2012). At the same time, there are increasing calls to increase the number, skill, and diversity of STEM workers (Brophy, Portsmore, Klein, & Rogers, 2008). My thesis is that the lack of opportunities for designerly play in elementary school results in a reduction of the number and diversity of students interested in the STEM fields (especially engineering) later in school. Elementary engineering curriculum such as the robotics based Elementary Engineering Curriculum (Heffernan, 2013) and more general Engineering Is Elementary (Ernst & Bottomley, 2011) have the potential to ameliorate this problem. Robotics offers specific affordances that make it an especially attractive educational technology (Brophy et al., 2008; Gura, 2011).

A brief review of the existing research on robotics and design in general follows. Because so few studies have been done, I include studies across a wide age range. Also, design process models and methodologies of older learners may still be applicable (with modification) to studies of elementary students.

Previous studies have investigated different aspects of design and engineering as a means of teaching science concepts and process skills (Puntambekar & Kolodner, 2005), engineering (Hynes, 2007), problem solving (Fortus, Krajcik, Dershimer, Marx, & Mamlok-Naaman, 2005), and systems thinking (Sullivan, 2008). These studies have been of limited duration, have focused on older children, and have looked at the overall educational efficacy of the intervention.

Other studies have examined the novice design processes of learners in different contexts, ages, and have used different learning and process models. McRobbie, Stein, & Ginns (2001) analyzed the novice design practices of preservice teachers. They found that novice teachers did not follow the idealized practices found in engineering design process models. Roden (1999) looked at changes in the design process from infant school to primary school in Great Britain over a period of two years. He classified the collaborative problem solving strategies as: personalization, identification of wants and needs, negotiation and reposing the task, focusing on the task, tools, and materials, practice and planning, identifying difficulties, talking self through problems, tackling obstacles, sharing and cooperating, panic or persistence, showing and evaluating. Each strategy was judged as: declining, emerging, developing, and changing over time. The study showed that these strategies do change over time and he suggests that teachers need to understand them and help children make them explicit. Roden included cognitive, social, and emotional strategies in his analysis.

Crismond (2001) compared novice and expert high school and adult designers as they tried to redesign some common household tools. Each teams’ activities was coded and analyzed in terms of an idealized design process model. Crismond found the teams did not follow the idealized model. Furthermore, only the expert designers used general principles and connections to science concepts to help their design process. Crismond concluded that teacher must scaffold design tasks for this reason.

Fleer (1999) looked at design at for 5 and 11 years olds in terms of how their intended designs relate to what they actually built. She found that drawings were not always used. However, post-make drawing, especially by the older students provided good documentation of design choices. Older students still engaged in fantasy play associated with the design task but in a more subdued and socially acceptable way. They showed a preference for using 3-D models (i.e., the actual materials) to solve design problems.

Portsmore (2011) looked at preplanning for grade 1 students and found that even first grade students could sometimes used effective preplanning in a design task with familiar materials. Welch (1999) studied grade 7 students in a design task, coded what they were doing, and compared that to an idealized design process. He found that students did not follow an idealized design process. The evaluated their design much more frequently, tried one idea at a time instead of evaluating alternatives, and preferred 3 dimensional materials over 2 dimensional sketches.

K-12 robotics engineering, which typically uses design challenges, has been identified as a promising and effective way to incorporate engineering into K12 (Brophy et al., 2008). Multiple studies have pointed out the need for teacher scaffolding in the design process (Crismond, 2001; McRobbie et al., 2001; Puntambekar & Kolodner, 2005). However, elementary children’s design processes are not well understood. This proposed research fills a need for systematic description and analysis of the design processes undertaken by young children over time in the context of an established and systemic robotics based elementary engineering curriculum.

Project Overview

The comprehensive examination will consist of a literature review and pilot study (with accompanying papers) designed as preparation to provide the theoretical framework and methodologies needed to answer the expected dissertation research question: how do grade K to 6 elementary students’ robotics engineering skills and processes change over time in terms of construction and programming techniques? Specifically, what changes in their techniques and processes can be seen over time that impact their ability to realize their design ideas? The literature review will answer the question: what are the most relevant frameworks, design process models, and research methodologies that can be used or modified in a longitudinal case study of elementary robotics students in the context of established K-6 elementary robotics curriculum (Heffernan, 2013)? The pilot study will establish the methodologies needed for the dissertation research by doing a small subset of the case study and determining the exact research protocols to use in the larger, cross-sectional, longitudinal study. The following questions will be answered.

• What will be the exact coding of videotape? Will they use temporal and/or summative?
• How can the developmental strengths and challenges of each age be identified more formally?
• What design process model best fits this study and age range?
• What is the best design task to use for the dissertation study?

Literature Review Paper

Although robotics has been identified as a promising way to increase STEM interest and also teach science concepts (Brophy et al., 2008), there is no research of student use of robotics in a sustained program. More research is needed to understand how to teach engineering to students as their cognitive, motor, and social skills develop (Penner, Giles, Lehrer, & Schauble, 1997; Roth, 1996). The studies that do exist show promising results for short term robotics programs in middle and high school (Hynes, 2007; Sullivan, 2008). The goal of the literature review is to determine the most relevant frameworks, design process models, and methodologies that can be used or modified in a longitudinal case study of elementary robotics students in the context of established K-6 elementary robotics curriculum (Heffernan, 2013). The overall aim is to optimize the curriculum and, more generally, to optimize the teaching of engineering with regard to elementary student development.

Pilot Study

The author has created and documented a complete, standards-aligned, robotics-based, K-6 engineering curriculum that has been in use for many years (Heffernan, 2013). It contains a mix of open-ended engineering challenges and more teacher-directed activities. Students receive five to twenty hours of robotics curriculum per year from grades K to 6. While the curriculum has been thoroughly tested in a number of schools, the next step in its refinement is to determine how teachers can better scaffold students’ engineering processes from grade to grade. To do that, students’ processes first need to be characterized in a systematic manner.

The pilot study will consist of a cross sectional, qualitative case study that examines two students at grades 2 and 6 as they implement the same open-ended engineering challenge with age appropriate robotics and craft materials. These materials will be ones that they have used in the classroom robotics curriculum and will change according to the grade level. Students will be invited to describe and capture their initial ideas and plans through talking, writing, and/or drawing. Students will be videotaped to capture their building moves. Their programming moves will also be captured. Through a think-aloud protocol and semi-structured clinical interview, their verbal discourse will also be captured.

Data that helps characterize the designs will also be captured: elapsed time of design activity, design artifacts, photos of the completed design, and number of pieces and programming steps used. The bulk of the analysis will focus on the time spent in the process on different activities such as planning, tinkering, researching, building, rebuilding, programming, reprogramming, and evaluating. The data will then be examined at to see how and if these change as students age. Also, any common age related challenges to realizing their design ideas will be identified. Differences between how students design and build in the classroom and in this more unstructured research setting will also be noted. This indicates how much of the regular classroom curriculum has been internalized for the students. The pilot study will specify the exact methodologies, codes, and research protocol needed for the larger dissertation study.

Conclusion

In my current collection of about 200 papers on design, engineering, and robotics, I was only able to find three longitudinal studies. Roden’s (1997, 1999) early study tried to broadly induce cognitive, affective, and social problem solving strategies at two points in early childhood. Fleer (1999) did some early, cross sectional work on characterizing the relationship between design and the artifacts actually produced in a design problem at ages five and eleven. English, Hudson, & Dawes (2013) are doing a longitudinal study of middle school students simple machine based designs. However, they are not looking at how students change over time but are more interested in the complete educational systems of teachers, students, and materials. More research is needed examine and better understand how to teach engineering to students especially at the elementary level and, more specifically, how students design processes change over time (Crismond & Adams, 2012; Penner et al., 1997; Roth, 1996). A longitudinal study of elementary design processes will fill in important gap in the research base to help elementary teachers provide the appropriate scaffolding at each rapidly development stage of school age children’s development.

The literature review will identify the most relevant frameworks, design process models, and methodologies that could be used for such a study. The pilot study will analyze videotape of two elementary students of two different ages as they complete an open-ended robotics-based engineering challenge. Through a combination of talk-aloud (Sullivan, 2008), direct observation, and semi-structured clinical interview, various coding schemes based on the ones described here will be tried and possibly modified to characterize student’s engineering processes over time with particular focus identifying on the challenging aspects at different ages. Once these are identified, difficulties will be tied back to the matching development milestones provided by the theoretical frameworks of Piaget and others to better inform instruction and curriculum design for elementary engineering in a developmentally appropriate way. The literature does not provide guidance nor is it clear on how to identify strengths at different ages besides subjective, inductive analysis. A more systemic approach for identifying strengths may emerge from the pilot study. Levy & Mioduser (2010) showed that complex and advanced cognition can occur in young children’s interpretation of robot rules and behaviors, likewise, similar understandings need to be uncovered for the construction and programming of educational robots. In light of the Next Generation Science Standards (“Next Generation Science Standards,” 2012) incorporation of engineering design as a way to teach science K-12, any research that helps teachers teach engineering design in a developmentally appropriate way has timely relevance.  
References

Applefield, J., Huber, R., & Moallem, M. (2000). Constructivism in theory and practice: Toward a better understanding. The High School Journal;, 84(2), 35.
Baynes, K. (1994). Designerly play. Loughborough: Loughborough University of Technology, Department of Design and Technology.
Brophy, S., Portsmore, M., Klein, S., & Rogers, C. (2008). Advancing Engineering Education in P-12 Classrooms. Journal of Engineering Education, 97(3).
Crismond, D. (2001). Learning and using science ideas when doing investigate-and-redesign tasks: A study of naive, novice, and expert designers doing constrained and scaffolded design work. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 38(7), 791–820.
Crismond, D., & Adams, R. S. (2012). The informed design teaching and learning matrix. Journal of Engineering Education, 101(4), 738–797.
English, L. D., Hudson, P., & Dawes, L. (2013). Engineering-Based Problem Solving in the Middle School: Design and Construction with Simple Machines. Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education, 3(2). Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&profile=ehost&scope=site&authtype=crawler&jrnl=21579288&AN=92609426&h=ht05k9am%2Ftl2QOU10jBAcagHyYxbrbL5QLpZyclHMmSLkzUB%2FYLBo6kmakVxYabX12tvjZ1iZfSRTKmxqBdJxg%3D%3D&crl=c
Ernst, J. V., & Bottomley, L. (2011). AC 2011-227: ELEMENTARY ENGINEERING IMPLEMENTATION AND STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES. Retrieved from http://www.asee.org/file_server/papers/attachment/file/0001/0688/NIH_Paper_3_10_11.pdf
Fleer, M. (1999). The science of technology: Young children working technologically. International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 9(3), 269–291.
Fortus, D., Krajcik, J., Dershimer, R. C., Marx, R. W., & Mamlok-Naaman, R. (2005). Design‐based science and real‐world problem‐solving. International Journal of Science Education, 27(7), 855–879. doi:10.1080/09500690500038165
Gura, M. (2011). Getting Started with LEGO Robotics: A Guide for K-12 Educators [Paperback]. Eugene, OR: ISTE.
Heffernan, J. (2013). Elementary Engineering: Sustaining the Natural Engineering Instincts of Children. Charlestown, SC: Printed by CreateSpace.
Hynes, M. (2007). AC 2007-1684: IMPACT OF TEACHING ENGINEERING CONCEPTS THROUGH CREATING LEGO-BASED ASSISTIVE DEVICES. Presented at the American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, Honolulu,HI: American Society for Engineering Education. Retrieved from http://icee.usm.edu/ICEE/conferences/asee2007/papers/1684_IMPACT_OF_TEACHING_ENGINEERING_CONCEPTS_.pdf
Levy, S. T., & Mioduser, D. (2010). Approaching Complexity Through Planful Play: Kindergarten Children’s Strategies in Constructing an Autonomous Robot’s Behavior. International Journal of Computers for Mathematical Learning, 15(1), 21–43. doi:10.1007/s10758-010-9159-5
McRobbie, C. J., Stein, S. J., & Ginns, I. (2001). Exploring designerly thinking of students as novice designers. Research in Science Education, 31(1), 91–116.
Next Generation Science Standards. (2012). Retrieved November 2, 2012, from http://www.nextgenscience.org/
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Portsmore, M. D. (2011). AC 2011-1780: FIRST GRADE STUDENTS PLANNING AND ARTIFACT CONSTRUCTION WHILE WORKING ON AN ENGINEERING DESIGN PROBLEM. Presented at the ASEE Annual Conference, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Retrieved from http://jee.asee.org/file_server/papers/attachment/file/0001/1710/Draft_Portsmore_ASEE2011v2.pdf
Puntambekar, S., & Kolodner, J. L. (2005). Distributed Scaffolding: Helping Students Learn Science from Design. Journal of Research in Science Teaching`, 42(2), 185–217.
Roden, C. (1997). Young children’s problem-solving in design and technology: towards a taxonomy of strategies. Journal of Design & Technology Education, 2(1). Retrieved from https://jil.lboro.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JDTE/article/view/375
Roden, C. (1999). How children’s problem solving strategies develop at Key Stage 1. Journal of Design & Technology Education, 4(1). Retrieved from http://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JDTE/article/view/404
Roth, W.-M. (1996). Art and Artifact of Children’s Designing: A Situated Cognition Perspective. Journal of the Learning Sciences, 5(2), 129–166.
Sullivan, F. R. (2008). Robotics and science literacy: Thinking skills, science process skills and systems understanding. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 45(3), 373–394. doi:10.1002/tea.20238
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Welch, M. (1999). Analyzing the Tacit Strategies of Novice Designers. Research in Science & Technological Education, 17(1), 19–33.
Zhao, Y. (2012). World class learners: Educating creative and entrepreneurial students. SAGE.

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