Tuesday, January 17, 2017

ESH makerspace is now...The Creation Station.


It seems like we just started back to school and here it is the week before winter break. There has been a flurry of activity in the ESH makerspace, now officially named the The Creation Station, by 1st and 2nd graders. Students submitted many great ideas for the name. Names were narrowed down to four and then voted on. The Creation Station was the clear winner. Total and individual classroom voting results in the form of bar graphs and pie charts hang outside the PS office for students to see and examine on their own or with teachers and their classmates.

Students have been working on a variety of problems and challenges in The Creation Station so far this year. Here are a few…Mr. Ratliff’s 2nd grade classroom worked on designing and constructing plant cages and trellises made of wooden skewers, wire, string, and dowel rods for an indoor class garden. Ms. Gillespie’s 2nd grade class designed and constructed a collection of cardboard play areas on large bases for their classroom rabbit, Cookie, who ventures in and out and climbs the ramps. This year, Ms. Marinho’s 2nd grade class has been publishing a digital and print classroom newspaper. For the print version, a rotating group of her students designed and constructed a newspaper vending machine using cardboard.

Ms. Wagonheim’s class has been in working on a neighborhood project. Students worked in groups to design a neighborhood on different plots of land and then transformed those designs into three-dimensional models. In several 1st grade classrooms we’ve explored and played with opened and closed circuits and switches and then connected it to classroom areas of study. After reading a book about the telegraph and morse code, group of students in Ms. Wagner’s class used cardboard, wire, brass paper fasteners, and a battery, to make a working telegraph. As part of a unit on Patterns, Ms. Luna’s class incorporated their knowledge of circuits and switches to create Scribblebots using a motor, battery, markers and a plastic cup. They observed the resulting patterns and marker trails on paper left behind by their creations and how by making subtle changes to their design, they could affect those patterns. Ms. Lee’s class incorporated circuits, simple paperclip switches, and LEDs to add lights to their three-dimensional neighborhood project's buildings.

I’m looking forward to many more classroom collaborations in the coming year.

Best wishes for a blessed holiday season.




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