#MakeyMakeyChallenge

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Some of my favorite catapults from the final day.

Around mid October 2014, Diana Rendina and I started chatting about getting our #makers together.  We wanted our students to learn from each other.  Through tweets and our first video conference we ended up with a design challenge. (I’d been dying to have one go well! Read my upcoming article in SLJ to hear my ups and downs with “Design Challenges.”)  One of my students suggested a catapult challenge in our iWanna box, and when we mentioned it during our chat to the makers at Stewart MS, an amazing collaborative journey began. (Read Diana’s post about our Catapult Challenge at Renovated Learning. Her students ROCKED making “things that fling stuff!”) The catapult challenge was the first time I had to store longterm maker projects in the library and it wrecked our Makerspace room!  There were rubber bands and popsicle sticks littering our space.  I also knew that my maker supplies needed to shift OUT into the library.  They needed to be visible EVERYDAY so more students would create with them.

Over the break, we were getting a new circulation desk and new tile flooring.  Since I had to move a lot of books off of bookshelves for my new floor installation,  I did a little redesigning and created a project shelf for our next design challenge- the #makeymakeychallenge. This empty shelf sits right next to our Maker station which rotates maker themes each month.  We had a Student’s Rebuild bookmarking station to start and a folded book art station in December. In January I set up the maker station with our Makey Makeys and collected different materials for kids to sort into conductive and nonconductive items. During our Google Hang Out, Diana’s students challenged us to create a game on Scratch and design a game controller to use with our Makey Makey microcontrollers.  On account of the amount of things that one can utilize with Makey Makey, I decided to put an Inventor’s Box filled with junk in the middle of our project shelf to help inspire young innovators (I learned during our chat with Jay Silver that this is called bricolage!)

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Nowhere for projects = MESS

I also took this time to move all of our #makerspace supplies out into the library and my student aides helped me organize them in a Harbor Freight parts rack and we put more expensive equipment on an empty shelf we moved behind our circulation desk. (More on this in a post on library redesign and makerspace organization coming soon.) Before I introduced the design challenge on the first Maker Monday of 2015, I set up the Makey Makey as a banana piano on our new circulation desk and all of the kids thought it was really, really cool.  But how was I going to get them to get beyond the banana? Every day I played around with other materials and demoed different games at the circulation desk. (Seems weird, but our circ desk is like a hangout. Our students love to hang out here and chat with other student volunteers behind the desk, so it’s the perfect place to showcase new ideas!) To start the challenge, our Maker Monday focused on a Chasing Game Challenge to control with Makey Makey. Ideally, I should have taught my students Scratch in December, but we were busy making folded book art. So I decided to go for broke and teach Scratch and introduce Makey Makey to them at the same time.  Many had done Hour of Code the May before, so they already had their coding feet wet. I had about twenty students show up and they started creating their own games, but weren’t too interested in the Makey Makey yet.

Demo of Playable Graphite Drawing

Demo of Playable Graphite Drawing

I still needed to hook them into the idea of controlling the computer with everyday objects. I needed more kids to see what they could do with this everyday invention kit.  Two boys fell in love with a weird old gaming pad I found when we created a “Space Banana – Click Banana” Vine, so I created a flyer from this experience to hang around the school: #Makeymakeychallenge flyer.  The makers were really starting to get into Makey Makey; however, my students still weren’t really attempting any real tinkering. I decided we had to get rid of bananas totally, so I set up a playable pencil drawing to get them thinking beyond the banana. I also talked the guys over at The Joy Labz into a video conference in the upcoming weeks, and I needed our students to prepare questions for this chat.  I wanted our next Maker Monday to stand out, so I set out Scratch cards, marshmallows, gummy fish, twizzlers and an “Invitation to Innovate.” We played, we created, and we started generating questions for the makers of Makey Makey.

makeymakeyinnovation2innovateThis event got more students involved and they began making pretty complicated games in Scratch. Our students have the ability to use our Makerspace before school, during study skills, lunch, and advisory. This extra time during the school day allows them to come in and brainstorm One student even checked out a Makey Makey and took it home to create his controller out of Legos.  A girl began to see an old telephone as a gaming device. My students began to tinker with creating different objects as gaming devices AND creating games specifically for our event. I wanted to make sure the whole school knew they had the ability to chat with the Makey Makey team from MIT, so I created this promo for students to watch during advisory and put a sign up on the library door:

Promo

We chatted on February 2nd, and it was amazing and inspiring! Jay, Liam, Todd, Rachel, and Dave are so down to earth and awesome for conferencing with our students! They did a great job talking to the kids on their own terms and answering their questions in a way that the kids not only understood, but helped instill “creative confidence.” Now our students are building, problem solving, and innovating!  I edited out the reverb and lag time from the chat, so please watch the inspiring video conference below to learn from these amazing inventors!

Chat w The Joy Labz

Organizational tip: I learned from my 8th grade English teachers last year when we Skyped with Claire Legrand, that chats go better if you print the students’ questions out ahead of time.  So I pass out questions before every chat, and then make a clear path for students to come sit in front of my computer!

In the next few weeks, the students will be bringing in their final #makeymakeychallenge products. With these projects and other things we’ve already made, Lamar Library will be hosting our first ever Mini-Maker Faire! We are also going to Skype with the #makers at Shawna Ford’s library to showcase our Makey Makey game controllers and hopefully spark their interest in their own #makeymakeychallenge!

Follow our #makered journey on Twitter, Instagram, and Vine!

I’ll be posting their final design challenges soon, so check back often!

Final Design challenges are in! Check them out on this Tackk!
See on Tackk.com

 

 

All Songs Considered PBL

About two months ago, I was listening to All Songs Considered with my little one as we ate breakfast. On my drive to school, I started thinking about how cool it would be if our English classes could make their own version of this since middle school kids LOVE music.  I got really excited about trying to connect with the hosts as our expert mentors. (Although this connection never panned out, we had many other great connections.)

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As I entered my rambunctious library, I discussed the notion with Mrs. Wilson one of our 8th grade ELA teachers who was on library duty.


She loved the idea of doing a PBL (Project Based Learning) centered on
 music as Mrs. Witter and Mrs. Wilson were already discussing revamping their yearly music project.

We created a great brain trust with our design coaches and decided to focus on the essential question, “How can Music shape our lives?” From there we had students blog, interview family and friends, and even help create our rubric.  Essentially, this was a research project where we used “crowdsourcing” as our source of information. Students took all of that info and wrote radio scripts and then recorded their podcasts with Audioboom.  Our band students came by and gave some feedback and then we finished our PBL with an  “All Songs Considered Listening Gala.”

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We were so pleased with the outcome, all of the listeners that came to our gala, and all of the musicians who listened to podcasts online and commented on them.

Visit our TACCK to see the details about the project (You’ll have to go to Tackk to get to the final product Audioboom links): https://tackk.com/8pzbq8

Overall, it was an amazing project and I can’t begin to tell you how amazed I was by our students here at Lamar.  A few of these podcasts sound exactly like something you could hear on NPR.

However, one of the biggest elements of Project Based Learning is teacher reflection, and I’ve been thinking a lot about what we should do next year to make this project even more successful.  One of the things I’d really like to add is more database research. I want our students to become better at finding good sources of information and finding great information inside those sources. Our design coaches also had some ideas about connecting with “Themes” earlier in the inquiry process. This got me thinking that it would be great to pull out some great articles from Gale about music connected to certain themes. Maybe I could pull some scholarly articles about “music and Alzheimer’s,” “music and stuttering,” “how culture shapes music,” and more.  We could have students read these articles in small groups, identify the themes in each article, and then find two items that support the theme within the article.  (I know this is super English teacher geeky of me, but looking at great writing is a great way to show them how to write their final product!)

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This would help frontload nonfiction writing for the students.  We could pull those articles out again at script writing time and say, “Now, remember when we read these? You are going to use the information from your interviews and your research in the same way to support your theme!” 

(This should cut down on the podcasts that turned out like, “I interviewed my mom, my brother, and a friend. My mom said….” ETC.)

I’m also thinking that these articles would be a great pre-search activity.

The articles about music tied to certain themes should get them thinking about how music shapes our lives and maybe their PBL will become more focused?

Our band director, Mr. Hanna, also said he’d love to help with a lesson in sound quality and production quality for the podcasts.

Screenshot 2015-02-01 15.09.39 While most students did a decent job, some had a lot of noise interference and some spoke very quietly with loud music blaring in the background. A lesson in sound quality could greatly enhance their final product.  He could also guide them in the
art of “fading in” and “ fading out” so they don’t abruptly begin and end songs that stifle their beautiful writing.

I wonder what the students will be more curious about? I wonder how focused will next year’s PBLS be?  Normally, I would be tired of a project after such a lengthy process, but I can’t wait to be a part of this project again next school year.

Our LISD Director of Educational Technology, Jerram Froese, wrote a great blog post about our collaborative PBL.