Arlington School & Family Magazine March/April 2018 | Page 29

Pearcy Elementary Maximizes STEM Labs By Ryan Pierce As you walk toward the end of the long hall at Pearcy Elementary, toward the two new STEM labs, you may hear a lot of noise coming from inside the last two rooms on the right. “It’s not quiet,” Pearcy Principal Codi Van Duzee said. It’s the sound of excited discussion and even some laughter – the sounds of students figuring things out, working together, testing, failing and trying again. It’s the sound of learning – exactly what the two new STEM labs, which opened at the beginning of this school year, are for. Pearcy has wasted no time taking full advantage of the renovated spaces. All AISD elementaries are getting two new STEM labs as part of the 2014 Bond program. The STEM – science, technology, engineering and math – labs represent the strong commitment the AISD has made to improving education in science and math and sparking student interest in these disciplines. Each school is also getting a staff person to manage the labs. But Pearcy went a step further and hired a full-time STEM and technology teacher, Karissa Johnston, in addition to the STEM manager. Johnston, who, like her principal, can’t hide her excitement and enthusiasm about their STEM labs, designs and teaches STEM lessons for all Pearcy classes, kindergarten through sixth grade. She aligns the lessons with what the students are doing in their other classes, incorporating science, technology and engineering into their regular coursework. For example, when kindergarteners read the book “Twenty-One Elephants and Still Standing,” about P.T. Barnum’s circus elephants crossing the Brooklyn Bridge, Johnston designed a lesson that required students to build bridges out of Popsicle sticks and paper cups so that all the elephants could walk across. This STEM learning is student- driven. The students work together to figure out how to problem solve or make something work. “We’re really focused on rigorous and relevant learning experiences with enriching hands-on activities,” Van Duzee said. A recent third-grade project involved making parachutes. Students in small groups had to design and make a parachute, then attach it to a small cup that held a miniature Santa Claus. Johnston gave each group “$10” to buy the supplies they needed from what she had provided in the classroom and then turned them loose to do the work. They had to carefully choose their supplies – and make sure they fit in their budget – and then make an operable parachute that, when tested from a specified height, would allow Santa to land standing up. “Johnston never tells them how something is supposed to be done,” Van Duzee said. “A lot of times there is no right answer. “Value is in experience, and you learn so much when it’s wrong,” Van Duzee said. There is no doubt this method of teaching is something that works. “The kids love it,” Van Duzee said. "And there are no discipline issues because the students want to be there. “It’s very much an enriching time for them.” Yes, it might be a little noisy on the hall as you walk toward the labs – the sounds of talking, laughing, discovering, learning. But walk inside the labs and see where the noise is coming from. Look at some of the recent projects on display: the catapults, bridges, roller coasters, cardboard microwaves (actually used to cook s’mores) and more. And see the students huddled in discussion, or perched at a laptop writing code, or sprawled on the floor racing robots they built and programmed. The STEM labs are working. You can hear it. Arlington School & Family 27