IN South Fayette Fall 2017 | Page 52

South Fayette Summer STEAM Camp W hat do you do with old tires, iPads, rocks, LEGOs, and rubber gloves? You hold a four-day STEAM camp and let students imagine, design, and create! This year marked the fourth year of Summer STEAM Camp for intermediate students. The 70 participants in grades 3, 4, and 5 worked with Tori Bishop and Brittney Lunn to build and program LEGO WeDo robot prototypes designed to solve environmental issues. Mark Kuglar and Rocky Violi facilitated students in building outdoor seats using recycled tires, PVC board, rope, and hot glue. These seats will be placed around outdoor spaces at the Intermediate School. Utilizing the school’s state-of-the-art animation studio and green screen, students produced short animations about various science topics. You can check out their work on the Google site they created with Rachel Geis and Samantha Bozzer: https://sites.google. com/southfayette.org/sfissteamcamp/home. For the first time, the school district expanded their summer STEAM program by offering a camp for elementary-age students. Sixty first and second graders used recycled materials to create musical instruments with Kuglar and Violi. They brought their school-issued iPads to camp to code video games and animated dances. 50 South Fayette Bishop and Emily Rupprecht taught coding using Scratch Jr., a visual, block-based programming app for emerging readers. Bozzer and Geis tied the school’s Dignity and Respect campaign into a fun art project they called “South Fayette Rocks!” Students painted rocks, attached a dignity and respect tip and a QR code, and then placed the rocks around the South Fayette campus. Students of all ages are encouraged to look for these rocks, scan the QR code and follow the directions to share their own stories of dignity and respect. The camp director, Shad Wachter, calls the Summer STEAM Camp a complete success. “During the summer, students in the Intermediate School, and now the Elementary School, have an opportunity to learn more about science, technology, engineering, art and math through engaging, hands-on activities and projects. They are given the opportunity to practice ingenuity and flexibility while connecting with others and building a community.” You can see the Summer STEAM projects and more by following @SFIS_steamlab on Twitter. Submitted by Shad Wachter, SFIS STEAM Coordinator and Innovation Integrator