Professional development camp embeds educators in the STREAM
鈥淥ften you go to professional development, somebody talks at you for a few hours, and you leave,鈥 said 帝王会所 Zanesville鈥檚 Dr. Teri Peasley, program coordinator for early childhood and elementary education. She and Dr. Theresa Paterra, education program assistant, decided it was up to them to create a more meaningful experience for teachers.
Utilizing funding opportunities from OHIO Regional Higher Education鈥檚 Workforce Success Initiative, they created a professional development opportunity in the form of a STREAM Camp for Professional Educators in summer 2022.
鈥淲e brought in local educators who teach third, fourth and fifth grade and taught them what it means to teach and embed STREAM concepts in daily course content 鈥 which is a little bit of a switch sometimes for people to go from very curriculum-based, 鈥業 must do this, I must achieve this,鈥 to a more hands-on approach with their students,鈥 said Peasley.
During this two-week camp, teachers developed and delivered engaging curriculum for students in STREAM content (science, technology, reading/writing, engineering, art and mathematics), while positioning students for success in adulthood.
The standards-based lesson plans created by teachers focused on aerospace and meteorology, two concepts that are frequently taught in third to fifth grades.
鈥淭hey had to build content, build a lesson plan, figure out how to fill two and a half hours of time with children they鈥檝e never met 鈥 and make it relevant for everybody,鈥 said Peasley.
Teachers went through self-assessments to gauge their own understanding of the concepts and then were able to work with materials such as film canisters, Styrofoam trays, tape and other simple materials to experience STREAM content for themselves during the first week of the camp. This allowed them to utilize the 鈥渓earn, practice, apply鈥 educational strategy throughout the course of the camp.
鈥淓xperiential learning is something in education, in some factions, we鈥檝e gotten away from because we are so busy making sure that students can achieve the goals of a standardized test,鈥 said Peasley. And experiential learning is important because it 鈥渉elps the learning stick. When we move and create, we don鈥檛 forget what we鈥檝e done. It鈥檚 good for teachers to have those experiences themselves, because we get back to our childhood selves and remember that learning is fun and it doesn鈥檛 have to be boring. Experiential learning for teachers helps them to be experiential educators.鈥
After educators built their curriculum, including three aerospace activities and three meteorology activities, they shared the newly created content with each other. This led to deep, engaging conversation about the challenges they experienced in their classrooms, as well as their successes, said Peasley.
The second week of the camp, the children arrived
鈥淪eeing these truly engaged young children in the dead of the summer 鈥 school is the last thing on their minds. It really became very play-based, which is so important for young learners,鈥 said Peasley.
On the final day of the camp, the children were introduced to the story of Caine Monroy, a child who created an arcade from discarded cardboard and tape in his father鈥檚 auto parts store. His creation, dubbed Caine鈥檚 Arcade, spurred challenges across the globe to build working creations out of cardboard. The STREAM campers participated in this challenge.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a really neat experience for children who are used to having high tech and everything at their fingertips to go back to the roots of childhood and literally create something with boxes and tape,鈥 said Peasley
The campers shared their work on stage in an auditorium in front of their parents, camp leaders and peers.
鈥淓ach child got to hold the microphone and, with a ton of confidence, shared exactly what they had done and why,鈥 said Peasley. 鈥淲e got to engage the families, the teachers were proud, the students were prouder.鈥
According to Peasley, the STREAM Camp was a success for both student learning creativity and inspiring teachers to take these ideas back into their classrooms. And the successes and learning didn鈥檛 stop there.
Peasley and Paterra recently had an opportunity to present their STREAM Camp at the 帝王会所 Educational Technology Conference and share with administrators and professional development coordinators from across the state, and Paterra is contributing a chapter to 鈥淢otivation and Momentum in Adult Online Education鈥 to share her strategies for teaching future educators about K-12 STREAM education.
Peasley is also continuing to collaborate with her community, as she was approached by a Head Start program and asked to create a STEM training for preschool teachers. Peasley used many of the same materials for the preschool STEM training as she did in the STREAM Camp, but adapted them for a younger audience.
鈥淚 had 30 people who were down on the floor and playing and learning,鈥 she said of her new trainees.
Paterra also shared her skills with the community, preparing programming for Sycamore Youth Center鈥檚 K-12 summer camp.
Regional Higher Education Workforce Success Initiative funding creates opportunities
As for her colleagues who may be considering applying for Regional Higher Education Workforce Success Initiative funding, Peasley says they should take advantage of the opportunity.
鈥淒on鈥檛 be afraid to take a risk and think outside of the box for something that would support the workforce across any discipline鈥 Peasley said. She noted that the Appalachian region will soon see growth across all sectors due to Intel鈥檚 plans to build in the area. 鈥淲e know that and we are in a position to do something about it, and to support the people in our community.鈥
To learn more about the RHE Workforce Success Initiative, or to apply for funding, visit /regional/faculty-and-staff-resources/workforce-success-initiative.