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anonymous

Creativity is the Secret Sauce in STEM | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Humans have a few basic needs: air, food, water, clothing, shelter, belonging, intimacy and Wi-Fi.
  • Creativity is the secret sauce to science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).
  • It is a STEM virtue.
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  • Creativity is really the art of metaphor.
  • Metaphors create a linkage between two dissimilar ideas and are useful in the sciences because they allow information to be attained by connecting the unknown with the known.2 And this is the key element to scientific creativity.
  • the skills of the 21st century need us to create scholars that can link the unlinkable. These scholars must be willing to try many combinations before finding the right answer. They must be comfortable with concepts that they can play with in new ways. We want smart-thinking creative people.
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MIT Unleashes New Online Game for Math and Science - 0 views

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    A group of researchers in MIT's Education Arcade are trying to harness the power of MMO games to teach high school students to think like scientists and mathematicians. Their game, The Radix Endeavor, is designed to be an educational game, and capitalizes on the interactions students can have as a way to build their knowledge and skills.
aybüke gül Türker

Computers and Fabrication: Revolutionizing the Art World - 0 views

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    What happens when you add Art to STEM?
anonymous

Why women leave academia and why universities should be worried | Higher Education Netw... - 0 views

  • Young women scientists leave academia in far greater numbers than men for three reasons. During their time as PhD candidates, large numbers of women conclude that (i) the characteristics of academic careers are unappealing, (ii) the impediments they will encounter are disproportionate, and (iii) the sacrifices they will have to make are great.
  • Men and women show radically different developments regarding their intended future careers. At the beginning of their studies, 72% of women express an intention to pursue careers as researchers, either in industry or academia. Among men, 61% express the same intention.By the third year, the proportion of men planning careers in research had dropped from 61% to 59%. But for the women, the number had plummeted from 72% in the first year to 37% as they finish their studies.
  • the constant hunt for funding for research projects is a significant impediment for both men and women.
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  • But women in greater numbers than men see academic careers as all-consuming, solitary and as unnecessarily competitive.
  • Successful female professors are perceived by female PhD candidates as displaying masculine characteristics, such as aggression and competitiveness, and they were often childless.
anonymous

Three female engineers build toys to inspire young girls to love science | VentureBeat - 1 views

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    Love the first line... "When Alice Brooks was a little girl, she asked her father for a Barbie doll. He gave her a saw, which she used to hack a dollhouse."
anonymous

Sociocultural Theories of Motivation | Education.com - 2 views

  • instructional environments found in the home and in the classroom. These studies provided detailed accounts of the way that students' regulation of their own thinking processes originated in the negotiation of goals and norms among students, teacher, and families. These studies were important because they identified the source of motivation as the relationships that students developed. This included relationships with school activities and relationships with the many other participants in school learning. Therefore, motivating classroom learners meant helping them coordinate the goals implied by a range of different relationships, and recognizing that some of the goals will conflict with other goals. This implies that before searching for strategies to motivate individual learners, teachers need to help students learn to negotiate worthwhile goals for themselves and their classmates. In doing so, teachers need to acknowledging the influence of other goals which might interfere with classroom learning, but which have real value for students.
  • “motivation in context” had emerged as an important theme among motivation researchers.
  • According to Gee (2004), the abstract generalizations that are taken for granted in modern cognitive perspectives come at the end of a long process of socially situated activity—if they come at all. Because of this, situative theorists believe that students' learning is strongly attached to their participation in the construction of situated knowledge in socially meaningful activity.
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  • While continuing to give ample treatment to motivational strategies that focus on individual learners, many also point out that teachers need to help the classroom community negotiate worthwhile goals, acknowledging that the students themselves help create and change these very goals.
  • the widely held distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation was too crude to be of much use in developing intentional learning environments. Both of these seminal considerations of situated learning suggested that the motivational strategies from earlier individually oriented theories of motivation might actually interfere with efforts to motivate engagement in situated learning. Given that situative theorists consider all learning to be socially situated, situative perspectives on learning seemed to have profound implications for motivating classroom learning.
  • Hickey and McCaslin (2001) also described the basic tension between earlier behavioral and cognitive views of motivation. As illustrated by the seemingly intractable debate over extrinsic incentives (e.g., prizes, competition, and grades), they argued that these tensions were a major obstacle to educational reform. Reflecting their very different views of learning, cognitive theorists have long argued that incentives interfere with natural learning processes, while behavioral theorists have long argued that incentive are useful for encouraging learning. Hickey and McCaslin argued that a relatively neutral situative view of motivation might offer a more useful lens for studying and comparing behavioral and cognitive strategies for motivating engagement. From a situative perspective, incentives and competition are not inherently good or bad. Rather, all motivational practices should first be analyzed in terms of their impact on students' success at negotiating meaningfulness of the language and concepts of the particular academic domain. Importantly, a situative theory of motivation assumes that the success of these negotiations is the primary source of individual motivation towards the domain. Therefore it is the collective success of these negotiations that predicts whether or not those individuals will be motivated to engage in the practices of the domain in the future.
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    Dan Hickey's article on different models of motivation - proposing that socio-cultural and situative approaches are more appropriate than individual-based models.
Virginia Glatzer

"I tell my students that it is OK for their hypotheses to be incorrect. If their hypoth... - 1 views

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    Science is cool. I strive to make it accessible and interesting to every person, even those who thought it was outside their realm of possibility.
anonymous

US NSF - News - Science of the Summer Olympics - 1 views

  • "Science of the Summer Olympics," the fourth and latest installment in the "Science of Sports" franchise, explores the science, engineering and technology that are helping athletes maximize their performance at the 2012 London Games.
  • "Science of the Summer Olympics: Engineering in Sports" is a partnership with NBC Learn, NBC Sports and NSF's Directorate for Engineering. The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) will provide free lesson plans for each video.
anonymous

Videos: Bill Hammack's Engineerguy videos - 0 views

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    Engineer Guy Videos...  Videos explaining how certain things work.  
anonymous

Engineering is Elementary | Engineering Adventures - 0 views

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    Project on engineering bubble wands - 10 to 12 hours of activities
anonymous

Education Week: 'Digital Badges' Would Represent Students' Skill Acquisition - 2 views

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    skeptics argue that introducing digital badges into informal education settings-where most agree they would have the greatest impact initially-could bring too much structure and hierarchy to the very places students go to seek refuge from formal achievement tracking. And many point to research that suggests rewarding students, with a badge for instance, for activities they would have otherwise completed out of personal interest or intellectual curiosity actually decreases their motivation to do those tasks.
Virginia Glatzer

Connecting Students to STEM Careers Social Networking Strategies By Camille Cole - 1 views

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    book
Virginia Glatzer

Horizon Report for STEM - 1 views

shared by Virginia Glatzer on 27 Jun 12 - Cached
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    To be launched in July
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Evidence Persists of STEM Achievement Gap for Girls - 2 views

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    With the 40th anniversary of Title IX just days away, one key area where questions about gender equity persist is STEM education and the under-representation of women in those professions. In researching this subject for a forthcoming EdWeek story, I discovered some evidence that a STEM achievement gap persists for girls at the K-12 level, especially in science.
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