This year I signed up to participate in the Vermont Robot Rodeo.
My teaching goal was for students to have an opportunity to advance
their coding skills as they made connections between hardware and
software. I feel that in elementary school the ability to connect
coding to the physical manipulation of materials is an awesome way to
build true and lasting understanding. I have also seen it increase
student engagement as the sharing of results is so transparent (i.e.
Robots roll across the floor or say something or react to something!).
This
year I chose to focus the use of robots to build coding connections in
our third grade classes(younger classes got exposure to the robots less
formally). We began our investigation by giving every student a chance
to explore what robots could do. During this period, we might use apps
that were more like a remote control versus coding and kids were
encouraged to play. After this exposure I challenged students to use
coding applications to control the robots and to make them 'do
something' deliberate and expected. Students jumped right in to meet
this challenge. They used Blockly and Tickle applications and developed
cool project ideas: making a robot draw something, dance to music,
greet others, create a light show, interact with another robot, pull a
toy on a path, make it through an obstacle course...to name a few! They
wrote many lines of code, tested and iterated to achieve their goal,
worked together and had a lot of fun. Several students pointed out that
this work was hard....but not because they wanted to stop.....but I
think they were just proud of themselves! And I was proud of their
persistence and drive to learn.
Kindergarten getting early exposure to coding skill through maze building and BeeBot |
Third Graders putting their coding skills to the test! |
The Vermont Robot Rodeo is an amazing opportunity to expose students to these coding connections and we are grateful to all of the sponsors who provided funds to give our kids the chance to advance their coding skills. We will be sad to send Dash and Dot to the next school--but we are sure that they will learn as much as we did--and we will be watching and checking out their work too.
I look forward to watching as our RES students use all of the skills they developed and applying this same persistence, thinking and collaboration to other learning.
Below is a video that hilights student work with robots, coding examples and student reflections.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks so much for commenting on the RES Enrichment blog--your feedback increases student engagement and interest in writing and sharing! These comments are moderated to keep our students safe. Once Mrs. Rankin has reviewed the comment, it will show up on the blog feed. Come back and comment again soon!