Hour of Code at Discovery

Yesterday over 230 Discovery Academy 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grade students were part of a world-wide coding event. The Hour of Code will have over 100 million students in over 180 countries coding for an hour. It was amazing to watch the perseverance, focus and absolute fun in the classrooms. With the aftercare joining us we coded for a duration of TEN 24 hour days! All of the tutorials are accessible at home on an iPad or computer at Code.org. Check out this video to learn more:  https://youtu.be/2DxWIxec6yo

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Geocaching at Discovery Academy

3rd Geochaching

Today was an exciting day in Mrs. Miller’s class. We went on our first geocaching adventure and blended social studies, science, and math to help us understand our place on the globe. Geocaching is a sport that uses Latitude and Longitude coordinates to find hidden treasure boxes. When you find a box you sign the log book and exchange a trinket with one you brought. Discovery Academy has four boxes hidden on the grounds and we used GPS units with way-point coordinates to find a hidden treasure box.

3rd Geochaching find

Come and join the learning adventure at the November PTO Geocaching Presentation by our STEM and Reading Coaches. Dress for the weather and bring a small trinket (whistle, dice, key chain, tiny toy…)

An Amazing Night

STEM Night 2015 was jammed packed with family fun. Young children were learning side-by-side with parents. Smiles were everywhere and discoveries made in every room. The Science of Suds and Robo Science assemblies by the Connecticut Science Center were a filled with wonder and awe.

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Thanks for the great support from the UConn Engineering Ambassadors and Discovery Academy faculty.

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STEM Night Update

Dear Parents and Families,

STEM Night is fast approaching and we would love some help from you.  Our theme is STEM Night: It’s What YOU Make! In that vein, we need some supplies to help “make” things on Wednesday, November 5th.

Below is a list of supplies that we are collecting.

  • Cardboard cereal and tissue boxes. 
  • Junk or unwanted electronics
  •  Paper towel rolls
  • Plastic bottles (2 liter washed)
  • Cereal boxes/tissue boxes
  • Milk cartons (1/2 gallon/gallon washed)

If you have any that you can send in with your student(s), it would be greatly appreciated.  I will be compiling a list of “things I still need to get” this weekend so if you could have them sent in by Friday, it helps me plan for next week.  Thank you so much.  We can’t wait to see what you make!

Just to get your interest up below is the list of activities we’re planning for each grade level at STEM Night:

PreK – Nature Collages:  Use nature to make beautiful artwork.
Kindergarten – Weather Instruments: Be your own meteorologist.
First Grade – Shadow Puppets:  It’s storytelling and science all in one.
Second Grade – Invention Convention Take-Apart: The anti-making activity.
Third Grade – Recycled Materials Challenge: How many ways can we reuse common materials?

Have a great week

-Mr. Reed-Swale

Not Knowing is Just Fine

I talk with a lot of parents about our programs and what we’re studying and often get responses that sound something like, “Well, I don’t know much about that.”  or “Wow, that’s just something I never learned in school.”  They give me that kind, smile as if to silently say, “Science is complicated, hard, even a little intimidating and I don’t think I’d be able to do that.”

The problem is that science, technology, engineering, and math are all of those.  They’re one part complicated, another part difficult, another part intimidating, but I would argue a huge part exciting and fun.  Too often as parents we let our own fears about being wrong or not knowing the answer stop us from taking the leap.  Don’t do that.  Take the leap.  Be wrong.  Make mistakes.  You’re human just like the rest of us and it’s just fine.

Ten years ago I was a 4th grade teacher who had no real computing experience other than using a computer to complete school projects.  I had a vision though.  I wanted to teach students how to build their own websites. I thought that it would be a valuable learning experience for students to have full creative control to make the site look the way they wanted, act the way they wanted, and show off all their hard work.  There was only one problem: I knew basically nothing about building websites.  Fast forward ten years and I’m a STEM coach who was the project manager overseeing the complete redesign of my previous school’s whole website.  When it was done, we were awarded “Best School Website” by CABE.

This afternoon I am starting an after school engineering club.  I am NOT an electrical engineer.  The last experience I had with building circuits and making devices like this work was a little set of resisters and wires I got in a science kit when I was eight.  I am learning as I go and will most definetly not have the answers to the questions that students start to ask.  That’s the fun.  We will be learning together and I will be a guide for them.  If all goes according to plan, we will be building complex circuits with USB controlled external motherboards controlled by computer-based Javascript code.  Sounds complicated, hard, and intimidating right?  It is!

When we worry what will happen when we don’t know the answer, we hesitate and avoid.  But students want us to take that risk with them.  They want to explore the unknown.  It’s in their nature.  I can’t tell you how many times my son has asked me something and I will say, “I don’t know buddy.” to which he will follow up with, “Well then look it up on your phone!”  You see, he knows that there is an answer out there and that if I don’t know, there’s a way to find the right answer.  Sometimes we learn that answer by looking it up.  Sometimes we find that answer by finding someone who knows it already.  And sometimes we discover that answer by taking a risk and figuring it out first hand.

The next time your student asks to try something that seems a little complicated, hard, and intimidating, embrace the opportunity to learn along side your child.  It may not be the straightest line, it may not be the prettiest path to success, but I assure you it will be a rewarding experience along the way.

-Mr. Reed-Swale

The Path to Success

The 5-E Engineering Club

3rd Grade Parents,

I am excited to announce that Discovery Academy’s 5-E Engineering Club will start on Monday, September 29th.  This will be an after-school club held in the Colt Building on Huyshope Avenue.  Students who are already enrolled in aftercare may attend and then return to aftercare.  Students who are not in aftercare may sign up for the club, but parents must pick them up promptly at 4:30.

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We have many exciting technologies to explore including MaKey MaKey, Drawdio, and Arduino.  I can’t wait to get student tinkering away at their own circuits, electronic creations, and computer code.  If your student is interested in this opportunity, please fill out the permission slip and return it to Discovery Academy by Wednesday, September 24th.

Have a great weekend.

-Mr. Reed-Swale

Reinventing the Wheel

As we work to develop a sense of inquiry and love of learning in our students we often push them to create their own knowledge, their own thinking, and their own ideas.  While this may be a much more challenging way to teach, and at times a little more frustrating way to learn, because it’s much easier to be only asked yes/no questions.  Still we push our students to work that extra bit and put in that additional effort.  It’s why we have the Persistence All The Time (PATT) award.  So when I hear people say something like, “Let’s not reinvent the wheel here.”  On one level I understand what they’re saying, “Don’t do the work that someone has already done, try to use what they’ve done to help  you solve your problem.”  But on another level, I can’t help but think, what if we did try to reinvent the wheel?  What if the current wheel just wasn’t good enough and could be improved?

Several engineers at MIT did just that.  They decided to reinvent the wheel and what they came up with is amazing.  It’s called the Copenhagen Wheel and it will connect with a smart phone to turn any ordinary adult bicycle into a hybrid electric one.  I am currently planning on getting one of these to help me commute to school and back (and not be a mess of sweat in the morning).  I can’t wait to see it work in real life.  It’s a perfect testament to the fact that when you apply some out of the box thinking and work hard, just about anything is possible.  This is what we are building at Discovery Academy, students whose mindset will be to look at something that works perfectly fine and say, “I think I can make that work better,” and then have the tools to do it.

-Mr. Reed-Swale

Taste of Discovery QR Codes: “How did they do that?”

Thank you to all the families that came to our Second-Annual Taste of Discovery.  It was a wonderful event that saw many different cultures and family traditions shine.  The food, storytelling, and community was amazing to be a part of.  As a STEM school, we wanted to make this night showcase our school in every way.  The QR scan codes were a way for us to connect the work students completed in school to the evening events.

So how did we do that? First we filmed the videos on a digital device and uploaded them to the web so that they could be accessible over the Internet.  Next we took the link to those videos and we connected them to a website called Kaywa.  Kaywa makes the QR codes, much like the bar codes on anything you buy at the grocery store.   Once we print those QR codes out, they are readable by different mobile apps.  When your device sees the QR code, it then uses that code to find the website that houses the video.  We use QR codes in many different ways and if you want, you can use them to enhance stories or other reading at home.

The classroom teachers will be posting links to the videos on their own blogs.   Thank you again for helping to make the Taste of Discovery a success.

-Mr. Reed-Swale