Makerspace Workshop for Region One Librarians

Last week I had the privilege of being invited down to Region One Education Service Center to lead Region One librarians in a half day makerspace workshop.

We started out with a simple chat about owning failures so we can learn from them. I also pointed out that it’s very important when beginning your makerspace journey to immerse yourself in maker education and not to get caught up in following directions. Don’t be afraid to fail and fail often in front of students. Try not to get flustered instead show them how you can learn from these experiences.

Then we got straight to work! I was hoping to give them 4 short tasks with each maker resource and move quickly so they could visit each maker station, but librarians like to move at their own pace, so we ended up moving more freely than this slideshow would suggest. (Since some of my task cards will appear in a one of my book projects with the #superlibrarianhubs, I can’t post task cards here yet.)

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Librarians enjoyed rotating through stations and learning about Makey Makey, littleBits, paper circuits with Chibitronics tutorials, coding with Scratch, programming Sphero robots, and making simple robots with electric toothbrush motors.

View more about our learning that day by clicking on the image below to go to my Tackk documenting the day.

https://tackk.com/makerworkshop

We ended our day discussing how to start a makerspace and get buy-in from administrators.

I got some great feedback on the day:

  • “I really enjoyed the coding game and the marker bots!”
  • “Loved the banana piano. Makey Makey”
  • “My favorite station was the makeymakey station.”
  • “Getting to try out and play with the different stations.”
  • “Trying out the littleBits kits:)”
  • “I loved that we got to play and experience things for ourselves before the actual presentation.”

Thanks again for having me, Dr. Sheneman!  It was a great day of learning for us all! Can’t wait to see where your librarians go with their makerspaces!

Artbot Mania during Makerspace lunches @ryan_library with Sphero and littleBits!

This week @ryan_library we made artbots (robots that make art) during our makerspace lunches.  On Monday, I shared how to make scribblebots. On Tuesday, I challenged kids to make artbots with littleBits, and on Wednesday, we programmed our art with Sphero!

Sphero Art!

Sphero Art!

Some students started a timelapse video of our scribblebots on Monday, so I made a few more when we started making art with Sphero. I’ve edited a lot out, but you can enjoy watching our robots draw. One of the best things was watching students lurk, eat lunch, then get up and participate and make a simple walking robot!

Even though they are high schoolers, they were most amazed by the scribblebots the one bot I thought might be too juvenile to teach them. They loved adding markers, adding motors, and creating DIY switches.

I’d assumed that my students loved Sphero so much, that they would be the most excited to dip Sphero in paint. However, my Sphero painters were all new kids to this awesome programmable bot. In fact, the first batch of Sphero painters were all girls, so I made them all sign up for my girl’s STEM and robotics club: The Circuit Girls. (More on these awesome ladies soon!)

Some of these projects will be in my McGraw Hill book co-authored by my #superlibrarianhubs , Aaron Graves!  You’ve got some time to wait, but it’s gonna be a pretty rad resource.  Although I’m biased so meanwhile…. watch some more cool videos of things my students made!

Girls programming Sphero to make art!

Wireless transmitter littleBits art bots!

I liked this girl’s thinking. She didn’t want her drawing bot to scribble, she wanted a straight line, so she weighted the marker with a battery. She found just the right amount of weight!

More Scribblebot Mania!