feedback from teachers: hands-on materials for stem lego engineering conference april 4, 2008 cathy...

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Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education [email protected]

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Page 1: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM

LEGO Engineering ConferenceApril 4, 2008

Cathy Helgoe

Senior Project ManagerLEGO Education

[email protected]

Page 2: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Context

Page 3: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Questions

Extracted from dissertation research on policy, philosophy and choices of teaching practices in the context of increasing pressure on teachers for “accountability” in demonstrating progress on standardized tests.

• Why do teachers use hands-on materials?• What are they using?• How frequently do they use them?• What types of activities are students doing with

these materials?

Page 4: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Background

• Survey of US teachers who have hands-on materials in their classroom, including LEGO science and robotics materials

• PreK-12 represented with middle school as the majority

• Public school teachers• Sample of 118 respondents

Are teachers using the materials more or less or the same amount since NCLB?

Page 5: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: Why?

Use of hands-on materials has increased.

• Hands-on materials are very important to instructional practice because…

• Students learn better.

Page 6: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: What learning do they see from students?

When using hands-on materials, students:• Refine and improve the quality of work• Cooperate with one another• Work harder• Show more initiative• Perform as “gifted” students even though

they are “average”• Have a welcome break from other types of

lessons

Page 7: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: What type of materials and how frequently?

Teachers do not limit themselves to one type of material.

For ten or more lessons, hands-on materials of these type were used:

• General problem solving materials(46% )• Mathematics sets (30%)• Non-computer games (26%)• Robotics sets (23%)• Life science sets (19%)

Page 8: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: What type of materials and how frequently?

In one or more lessons, these types of materials are used:

• Role play scenario materials (72%)• Free building (69%)• Simple machines (64%)• Motorized machines (51%)

Page 9: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: What type of activities are students doing?

• Experiments involving data collection (98%)

• Projects or competitions (96%)• Creating models to illustrate reports

(88%)• Demonstrations about a topic (80%)• Programming robots in their classwork

(53%)

Page 10: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: Influence on changing practices

• Experience with technology and hands-on materials is the most important factor affecting these teachers’ change of instructional practice.

• Professional development is another important influence on changing practices.

Page 11: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Feedback from Teachers: Influence on changing beliefs

• These factors influence what teachers do in the classroom...and results also show indicated that these factors influenced changes in what teachers believe about how people learn.

• Teachers became more constructivist in their beliefs about how learning happens… that also influenced their use of hands-on materials.

Page 12: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

It’s not just what you use…

It becomes a question, therefore, of determining by which methods this social milieu that is school will achieve the best formative results, and if this formation will consist of a simple transmission of knowledge and of rules, or if it presupposes … relationships that are more complex between teacher and student and among the students themselves.

(Piaget, To Understand is to Invent, p. 55)

Page 13: Feedback from Teachers: Hands-on Materials for STEM LEGO Engineering Conference April 4, 2008 Cathy Helgoe Senior Project Manager LEGO Education cathy.helgoe@LEGO.com

Thank you!

[email protected]