STEAMed Magazine July 2016 | Page 18

principles and concepts to take their education further, or in a direction that enables new possibilities for their own learning. PLANNING FOR YOUR STEAM OUTCOME To plan for STEAM education I start by doing a bit of an audit of my program. Firstly I decide which concepts within each discipline really lend themselves to a STEAM approach. Whilst I want to ensure I still planned opportunities for explicit instruction for Science and Mathematics concepts that were embedded within the unit of work, I am very conscious that the theme and investigations I plan aren’t tenuous applications of STEAM education. After all, if I didn’t believe in the purpose of the work then my students certainly wouldn’t! One outcome from such planning was the creation of following investigation: “The City of Mount Gambier is re-developing the railway lands into a community shared space. There is t he opportunity for a group of local artists to use the steel from the old railway tracks to create a public art installation that reflects Mt Gambier’s railway history and connects it to our local environment and community”. • You have X meters of steel to use, which is from the old railway tracks (each group negotiated this length, however students were placed in mixed ability groups to maximise learning opportunities) • The structure can be any shape and size, but cannot exceed 50m2 of surface area at its base • You may use other materials in your design and sculpture, but the focus must be on the railway tracks • Its design must reflect, connect or represent our unique natural environment/ community/ history in some way • You must submit a written proposal to local council justifying why your sculpture is the most suitable along with a scaled model STUDENT GROUP Creation STEAMed Magazine 18 July 2016 Edition