Incorporating Design Thinking Within “Genius Hour” with Laura Discenza
In this interview with Laura Discenza, we discuss advice for getting started with learning how to teach CS, speaking with arts educators about the intersections of the arts and CS, regularly incorporating the “20% free learning/creating time” into the school day through a “genius hour,” avoiding overly scaffolding learning in the classroom, the importance of having fun with CS in elementary school, and much more.
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      Welcome back to another episode of the CSK8 podcast my name is jared o'leary each episode of this podcast discusses computer science education by either unpacking a publication in relation to cs education or by interviewing a guest or multiple guests to talk about computer science education in this week's particular episode i'm engaging in a conversation with laura desenza in our discussion we chat about advice for getting started with learning how to teach cs we also talk about speaking with arts educators about the intersections of the arts and cs both laura and i have degrees in music education we do have some background in that we also discuss a class called the genius hour which basically allows you to regularly incorporate the 20 free learning or creating time that like organizations like google are known for like 20 of your time is to work on what you want in this case i created a whole class on it we also discuss avoiding overly scaffolding learning in the classroom as well as the importance of having fun with cs in elementary school and so much more we do mention several resources in this particular episode which you can find at the show notes by going to jared o'leary.com where there are hundreds if not thousands of free computer science related resources including a link to boot up pd.org which is the nonprofit that i create coding curriculum for 100 free and i think there's about 100 projects on there right now so make sure you check it out if you haven't but with all that out of the way let's now begin with an introduction by laura hello my name is laura desenza i am going into my sixth year teaching computer science fifth year in my current school i'm at davis academy in new haven connecticut we are a public magnet school for kindergarten through eighth grade and it's been great it's been a lot of fun so excited for the new school year can you tell me the story of how you got into computer science education absolutely so it's kind of a roundabout when i was in college i actually wanted to double major originally in computer science and education but in the state i went to school in we weren't allowed to you had to have a double major in a liberal arts it couldn't be in one of the sciences so wound up in music still loved it but kind of put that computer science on the back burner for a while and then with teaching general at fourth grade wound up in a science position and they cut the position and tech opened up and i jumped at it because i've always loved computers loved teaching it loved kind of being a part of it and fell in love and never looked back so i was very lucky to get a position in the school i'm in now to kind of start the program from scratch because i never had a computer science teacher before so it's been a lot of fun kind of making this program what i want it to be has that changed like can you now double major in like cs in education or so i went to school in massachusetts and in massachusetts it still has to be a liberal art major why yeah it's kind of crazy so unfortunately that's not a problem there are schools who are now offering specific programs that are computer science education so it's not a separate major but your double major has to be at least in that state some in the liberal arts family that's interesting i have a lot of questions for whoever came up with that but that's for a whole separate podcast so then how did you learn computer science a lot of trial and error and a lot of honestly learning with the kids so being an elementary level i definitely had a little more leeway with that it kind of started off with one year i got an email about the hour of code through code.org saying try us with your kids i was like you know what this looks like fun i went to a catholic elementary school and we had a teacher who was definitely way ahead of her time and she started doing html with us with seventh and eighth grade but we had to make websites about the ten commandments and the beatitudes and you know you had to link it to a website so clearly in my glory i linked a beatitudes website to the wnba website because that's what was most important kind of computer science and tech so when i saw the code.org i was like oh i love doing this when i was a kid i bet these kids will too and the hour of code took off we had kids talking to their homeroom teachers them wanting to get involved more and i was like you know what let's see if this is feasible let's see if this is something i can make happen and wound up taking the code.org classes for teachers and their week-long seminars and kind of falling in love and learning how to do it and taking the courses myself to learn it and grew the program from there so i too had a lot of like self-taught or like taking like a udemy course to learn how to like program apps on like ios things like that just to try and supplement because i didn't have this kind of education in the music education degrees that i got and whatnot but i'm curious because it has changed over the course of since you've been teaching the last six years what would you recommend for somebody who's interested in getting started like now to start with it like would you recommend the same path or are there new advancements or new organizations that you point to and say hey start here i think it really depends on where you want your courses to take you so i truly believe for the younger grades code.org is a great place to start because it is leveled you can start with as young as kindergarten but depending on what your experiences and what you're comfortable with there are other sites so i know for our kindergarten we really liked using codable because you didn't really have to know any language it starts you off with you know what direction does this character have to go in and kind of teachers too understand you don't need the advanced degree necessarily to introduce these concepts of coding to kids it's more than just you know well what does the bracket mean and why is there slash here you know get the basic fundamentals you need things in order you need things to make sense and flow in certain directions or loop and then grow from there the other part is don't be afraid to learn with your students don't be afraid it shocked me what some of our fifth graders were coming up with in some of the more advanced courses i mean they would code these games i'd look at it and like yeah i wrote it out they said i was learning how to use python i was like cool that's amazing and let them explain to you what they did and learn from them and ask them questions because not only are you learning more how it's pushing them and it really is great i mean the first class i had that was coding in fourth and fifth grade are now eighth graders and seeing those projects evolve over time is just amazing so if you were to travel back in time and give yourself some advice and like hey here's some of the things that i really wish i knew when i got started but learn later on what would be some of those recommendations or advice don't try to do everything at once we got bombarded we were very lucky that we were kind of in a grant position so they're like you know what tech do you want when you're starting this new position and kind of went in a bunch of different directions so we did you know robots and coding and bloxels and this and that and the other thing which is great and right now i love having them but it was definitely very overwhelming to start so you know it's okay if you have four different grade levels that are kind of starting at the same spot because when that younger class gets older now you can add on those next things everyone does need a starting block don't expect a fifth grader to be able to complete a fifth grade course just because it says the grade level when they've never had tech before so it's okay to start small and let it grow it will happen just give it time yeah i had some people who would come into my classroom and see like oh there's all in the same class like four different programming languages going on on different platforms devices etc and like they would look at that and go i can't do that it's like well you didn't see the progression that led to this like i started with one language and then next semester okay i'm going to add in one more option etc so like you can grow so i definitely would second that don't overwhelm yourself right off the get-go right and also there's a ton of resources out there depending on your state so for connecticut we haven't really adopted computer science standards there's some that are out there but they're more library media standards than computer science and our tech class specifically isn't just computer science it's also just technology as a whole so you know we do engineering projects is kind of part of it and we have different things so know that you know if you're not coding the whole time that's okay you can still include those computer science concepts and other things you're doing so you know they're writing algorithms for coding a snowball when they had a snow day that's still coding to them that is still an activity that is adding on to those experiences in getting the information in their brain about how things work and how things need to go to make a program run and it's connecting it with everyday like in the moment but knowing that both of us have a shared background in like music education i'm curious how do you approach those intersections with the arts and computer science so we have two different platforms that i really like to use especially with the music one is using the micro bits in our classroom because you can code them out to do different sounds the new ones that were released have speakers right built into them which is amazing we unfortunately don't have those in our building but we can connect speakers so the kids you know are making songs together the other thing that we have it's a newer program or newer company they're called unruly splats i don't know if you're familiar with them but they actually integrate the music and kind of physical education in with coding and there are little bricks i can actually i think i have one i can grab that the kids can jump on smash on stand on run around to but you can code them either using a midi player or just straight kind of using an octave tonals and make songs so the kids you know they're learning this song in music class well let's see if we can code it you know how much time do you need between a note how long does the note have to be how do you make it so if you're playing the a on this one and the b on that one how are they going to interact with each other so that's been a lot of fun and it's great so in our school we have things called majors and minors for our fifth grade students and up so what it means is once they hit fifth grade they pick what specials they want to focus in on so if they pick technology as a major they'll have tech twice a week and if they pick music as a minor they'll have music once a week so you're kind of getting these kids in different tracks and it's cool how they might all take the same tech but then use it within their other specialty and we have a lot of music tech crossover so it's fun to see those kids kind of work together and be like look at this song it sounds better than when we played it on the drums okay yeah i haven't heard of phrases majors and minors that's interesting i'm all for like having multiple pathways for students to kind of specialize in things and if they want to okay you can take a generalist approach and just kind of sample here and there but like forcing everybody to do that it just i personally didn't like it going through school like i wish i could have taken more music classes instead of being limited to the number that i had in like high school but that's my own biases i'm curious from your perspective what do you think the cs educators and arts educators can learn from each other it's a lot of commonality that isn't discussed you know in music you have a set pattern that you're going to follow and that's how you get to the end and if you don't follow it the song isn't going to be the song you're writing a program if you don't follow it and put it in the right order the program isn't going to run as a program and a lot of the terminology is the same or very similar if it's just discussed i'm very lucky again in my building this isn't the case but i've seen a lot of schools where people are very territorial about their subject areas yeah you know music teachers are going to stick to music teachers and tech teachers are going to stick to tech teachers and they're not willing to have that communication about well how can we make this one and when you do that i mean it opens so many doors you know maybe there's a kid that's in the tech class that's never played an instrument before because they could never afford it or never had the opportunity but now you're doing this crossover and you find out they're gifted musician they have natural rhythm they have natural beat look what they can do and they might not have ever had that opportunity to express it before so i think that's another thing of just opening those doors for the kids to see the other side of some of these kind of specialty areas and express themselves in a way that they couldn't do just in like a large ensemble class like there are so many cool things that you can do that you can only do with an intersection of like the arts and code like making things randomized so like i created like a randomized drum set so it creates like a random beat and fill forever and i have no idea how it's going to sound when i change it to a different seed to start it like that is something that i can't do on drum set by playing that so it's like this different way of exploring music and computer science i have a lot of arts educator friends who are honestly afraid of losing their job because they're usually low priority compared to other subject areas one because it's not like required they're not part of the standardized test et cetera computer science is also not part of the standardized test however there's a huge push for it like nationally because of all the unmet jobs and things like that so it's at least a higher priority than some of the arts classes but how do you speak with other arts educators and music educators to help kind of quell some of those fears of like no we're not replacing you but to also show like hey here are some of the beautiful things that you can do with computer science that relate to what you are doing in the arts again i'm in a very unusual situation with my building in terms of our magnet school is arts and design innovation that is our focus so our entire staff is very aware of the fact that we are trying to integrate these two things into every subject and into every class cool so it gives us that conversation starter of how to do it in my previous school though i was very lucky the art teacher and i were very good friends and it was cool to kind of get that crossover and explain how you know if we work together look what these kids can do and also bringing that back to the homeroom teachers of you know we're not just here to give you a prep period we're here because there's skills that are needed for you to use in your classroom as well yep kind of showing that crossover i think in some of the conversations that i had when i was in teaching coding class when i'd speak to the music teachers and be like well how do you explore music through it's like well you know there's all these standards outside of performing like all of the composition standards history standards you can explore a lot of those through code but also you can explore just like diving into a better understanding of what is rhythm what are pitches what is timbre why does that matter and like thinking of sonic pie which allows you to code live music or compose music that you just hit play and then it runs on itself like there's so many neat things that you can learn in that or reinforce that also connect to it so like i had kids who would come in they'd bring their band method book into their class for like trumpet and they just rewrite their favorite songs in code and that would help reinforce like their understanding of pitch and rhythm etc so for us one of the cool things we did this summer is the art teacher that's at my building and i were both part of another summer professional development which i highly suggest to anyone who does maker classes or anything it's the pathfinder summer institute but specifically the maker educator collective bootcamp and it's kind of how you can get making into every single aspect of teaching no matter what you teach how can you make it a maker class and we got into talking because we were starting to use turtle code i don't know if you've seen in that program but pretty much you can put out different shapes and there's a little turtle on the screen that'll draw out the designs and how cool it would be for the art students who were talking about symmetry and shading and line design so then be able to code their design and then print it out on our laser cutter and yep there's your connection you've got your tech piece you've got your art piece you have these kids who are doing that integrated design and they can bring it back into their classroom to make classroom decorations it's all right there and just her excitement as well going like oh i don't have to be my own silo anymore this really can be a whole school event and is this typical throughout the district like do you have other magnet-like schools or is this like a special case because your school sounds awesome yeah so we do have a lot of different magnet schools in our district there are i believe it's 42 i might be slightly off on the number of schools in our district i believe there's about 20 that are magnet but everyone has different themes so there is another school that is science and education there's another one that's multicultural so it really depends on the building at what theme they take ours we're just we're coming to the close of a specific grant that changed our focus from being just art to that art and design so i kind of again was very lucky and hit the jackpot in my placement because it very much aligns with my teaching methods and what i like to do with my kids yeah and speaking of one of the things that why i think your school is so awesome is we had a previous conversation talking about genius hour at your school so i think it was the birds of a feather when you discussed it for csta's conference i'm wondering can you share what is the genius hour absolutely so the genius hour in our building it's kind of based off of google's 20 time so the whole concept is giving students time during their school day to do passion projects so it can be almost anything under the sun in the older grades and the younger grades we kind of tailor it a little bit more to teach them the process and have them understand kind of how to work through their own project from topic idea to questioning to research all the way through to whatever their final product is it's definitely been eye opening the last few years and it's been really cool seeing what some of the kids have come up with it's also been you know a learning curve for teachers trying to figure out how do you make this work the most surprising thing was how some of the students struggled being given that freedom and not being told oh i have to make this thing no you can make whatever you want you can turn this into whatever you want okay but what do you want me to do no no you can literally do whatever you want to solve this problem or solve this idea or learn more about this yep our process right now we have relied greatly on um the book launch i don't know if you've heard of it it's john spencer is one of the authors for it so it's called the launch cycle and it's built off of kind of the design thinking process it's the same standards it's just put into an acronym so people can remember it a little easier and that's what we've used and it's been great for them because it gives them kind of set spots to get to within their project but it's still self-guided so you know we might have one person on step one and someone else on step five and that's okay but they kind of have that framework of how to work around to get to a final product okay i'm really curious how did this class get added to your school's offerings was it because of the grant or like what's the story behind that it kind of started because of the grant we wanted to be able to give students more design process and design thinking and this was the way that we decided to integrate it there was a lot of discussion about you know well let's just make it more science classes let's just do more you know experimentation but it was kind of the well that's not really design that's you know telling the kids do these steps do exactly this you're going to get this result what did you see which is great that is very important being able to do that is very important but we really wanted to give them student choice and kind of student accountability over what they were doing and give them that freedom to go you know your ideas do matter your thoughts and your process do matter but let's put that into something so you can share it with the world so how has covid impacted this i'm assuming your district went to virtual teaching for at least part if not full-time for a portion of this last school year so did the this genius hour did it continue in some capacity or was it expected or not expected so we did do it all the way through it definitely changed a lot and i can't really say for better for worse it was just very different and i think for some students it was a lot more feasible for them and they didn't get as overwhelmed for other students they really missed that hands-on activity portion so you know in years past we would get to the create part of the launch cycle and my classroom would look like a hot mess i mean yeah organized out of organized chaos there was just everywhere but it was great there was creation whereas this year you know we couldn't share supplies we couldn't do this half the kids were home half the kids were in school starting in january we were fully remote until then it was you can make something but you got to find the stuff at home you can bring it in if you want to make it here and leave it in a corner but there's nothing i can give you to make this creation as a result of that though some of them got creative and we got talking about you know making something doesn't mean you physically have to build it you might be making a podcast you might be writing a book you might be making someone one of the kids really liked video games and decided he wanted to make a video game guide for a game that didn't have one out yet and he researched how to put it together and what should be included and how do you get it published and he created you know chapter one of the first level of the game as his product as his prototype to present to the class you know cool that's awesome we had other kids who were physically engineering something but in a prototype state out of the stuff that they found at home so it kind of opened their eyes a little bit to the creation doesn't necessarily mean one thing a creation can be anything that you want it to be as long as you can present it in some way that's kind of our only real rule here yeah that's an excellent point and i love that example of creating like the walk through like that sounds like a project that i would have done in an instructional design course like having done similar things where it's like okay either create or refine this existing walkthrough of how to do something like a work order a worked example or whatever if somebody's just listening to this and like it sounds awesome we don't have anything like this in my school what advice might you give to them or another framing of this could be like if you were to switch schools all of a sudden you get reassigned somewhere else and they didn't have it there but you wanted to get it started what would you do to get something like this started in a school i would definitely start with a single grade level and have it integrated into a class some way so one of the easiest ways that i've seen it integrated is science just because they have some more of those hands-on things for people to kind of see and buy into but there's a lot you can do within your ela class which like to do with our younger students giving them reading them a book and picking a problem from the story and having the kids create some kind of solution to that problem and start small give the kids kind of those leading questions and give them their jumping off point and then as you go now make it more open-ended to them being like well we gave you the problem last time but now what's a problem you see in your classroom what's a problem you see in your house that you can fix whether it's you know our can opener doesn't work i don't like feeding the dog something small and then grow it out to be kind of on a bigger scale so we're currently doing that school-wide where the younger kids are given the issue the middle age group are given the topic and the older students are just you know pick something more than likely our 8th graders next year they can pick anything within their major topics the idea is it's going to kind of be a capstone so you know you're a music major something to do with music you're a drama major something to do with drama and then from there let their minds let their minds go but definitely you know don't be afraid to start small and give those jumping off points because it's going to help them understand the process and then as they get comfortable with that you can give them more and more opportunities to explore it i would have loved something like that in my school the idea of starting small letting expand from there kind of treating it as like a prototype maybe that can help get more people on board once they see the success that's going on and that like that really resonates with me thinking about a podcast that recently released that was talking about like students with disabilities and how some kids do really well in these like open freedom create whatever you want and then other kids need that like step-by-step instruction and they they struggle with that kind of agency or freedom what kind of advice would you give or how might you approach those kind of students who are having difficulty with that so we have a few in the building i have some that immediately pop into my head and the biggest portion of it is know your kids and know what they need i have one particularly he needs a visual aid and as long as i have something of this is what you did last time i saw you this is your goal by the end of today what could that look like having you know two three minute conversation with them about what's gonna happen today at the end of the day grab it make sure that it's logged i have another student who independently can't work as well so if they're doing a project if their idea happens to be similar to someone else's maybe their c gap moved and they happen to be at this table now and they can mimic off of what another student is doing or how they're processing it's not going to be the same project but they can kind of see the steps the other student is taking so it really know your students and know how they're working it'll make all the difference and one of the other things i love again i'm promoting this i wish it was a sponsor but the launch cycle there are so many great resources there's videos on each different step of it as well as there's worksheets available there's a breakdown of how to break it down to students with different learning disabilities out there it's an amazing resource highly highly recommend yeah and i'll make sure to include links to it in the show notes if i were to flip the question so i was asking like what advice would you give what about what would be something that you'd recommend avoiding or not doing hand holding as teachers sometimes one of the hardest things is giving up control and letting the kids really take something even if you can see you know the bottom of the pit and the explosion already going off and the kids don't see it let them have that moment timelines are another thing for teachers it's one of those like well i have to have this project done by this time because grades are coming us yeah it's part of a control that has to let go so in our building we decided as a whole it is not a graded class it's a past fail in terms of did you show up and try to do something or did you sit there and go i don't care at all that's right because how do you grade someone on something that they're passionate about and they're trying to make it's gonna go differently for every kid so kind of giving up that control and going it is what it is and it's gonna be okay they're gonna learn so much more by something exploding on them than they are just being told no you can't do it that way just do this instead let the explosions happen metaphorically and physically yeah that reminds me a lot of i think it was in two different podcasts we talked about it one was with kristen stevens martinez and another one was with shuchi grover so we talked about like assessment and then like grades and i shared how my class was basically what you described like are you in here and are you working if so cool you keep an a like if you're in here and you're just goofing off cool you don't keep your a like as long as you're actively working towards something i'm not going to tell you what that is you get to determine i can help you but i'm not going to force it upon you but because there's no like fixed deadline of hey you have to finish this by this week or this particular quarter like it allowed kids to work on massive projects that some of them spent multiple years on and because they didn't have to worry about like being able to stop midway through and go okay i want to change my mind like they really got to explore and learn new things about themselves that they didn't realize they were interested in absolutely it's funny to see some of the students too because they'll come up to you and be like what do i have to do to get an a well what do you mean well like what's the rubric what what do i have to accomplish don't worry about that just learn just explore but i need to know how to get the a that doesn't exist have you found that those questions are less frequent the longer your school has been doing this absolutely i mean it's a mindset so once they realize that we aren't here to penalize them we're not here to keep you know close oh you didn't do that exactly right right it's also the cooler the projects become because they're willing to take those risks knowing that it's going to be okay yeah and i asked that because it was a similar thing like the first year i started doing this in the k-8 school that i was in it was a lot of questions like what do i need to do like where's the rubric et cetera by year four like those questions were only asked by the kids who like transferred into the district and who weren't used to this kind of class but everybody else who had been there been like yeah this is the class to like explore what you want and like there's a waiting list to get into the elective version of it etc but the people who transfer in they're just like i'm not sure what's the catch here like are you gonna fail absolutely so if we were to think broader than just this particular class which sounds awesome and you were to design like your own ideal learning environment that could be anything you want like wave a magic wand boom you get it what would you design for like what would it look like how would it sound et cetera legos everywhere no i'm gonna be perfect yes i have almost my ideal set up now we were very lucky and kind of got new tables and stuff so just a lot of space for students to collaboratively learn and grow together so whether it's you know grabbing chromebooks and figuring out how to code something out or they're grabbing the you know bloxels cubes to build a new video game or the splats or whatever it is and giving them that freedom to explore different realms of either technology or if we're ingenious hour whatever their topic is in a comfortable space for them so you know if i have a kid who just needs to lay across the floor and have things cool you do that as long as you're learning as long as you're communicating and having that communication i am lucky in the terms of there isn't really another classroom around me i've got the gym down the hall and the library where they don't really house classes so these kids can get as loud as they want to and the rule is i don't care how loud you are as long as you're on some kind of topic that can trace back to this you might be talking about spongebob but it's because you're trying to animate something in scratch and you want it to look cool that's fine that's perfectly fine right but how's the time back and from there have fun yeah i wish i had a professor who one time was like why isn't whether or not somebody enjoyed a class like a standard that we actually strive for shouldn't kids walk away enjoying education and because it's not something that we focus on isn't that pretty telling of what school is going to end up doing to students absolutely so speaking of negative things my apologies listeners what do you feel is holding back the field and framing it into a positive what can we actually do about that i think one of the negatives is the consistency i know in rc i mean even in our district there are three of us who are computer science teachers in the entire district specifically most of our schools don't even have a class so then the kids get high school and it's well i don't think i want to take that i've never done it before why am i going to jump it now or never even heard what that is so we're limiting the number of students the number of people interested just because it's not available and it's not consistently available or you know they'll transfer into another school that has computer science but their entire computer science course is learning how to type and only typing which again great skills something you have to do with the younger students but they don't have any other background because that's all that's taught getting more tech into the buildings in terms of tech teachers i think is great as well as different ways of interacting with it it's not just having a chromebook so they can write the paper it's having a chromebook so they can learn how it works learn how it operates it's growing it's definitely growing you can see by the numbers of people online and in different forms and groups but especially at the elementary level just getting that consistency so we know that every kid has at least experienced it or been exposed to it i think is our biggest challenge right now yeah that really resonates with like the core mission of the nonprofit that i work for like we're trying to get cs in all the elementary schools and make it so that's mandatory like everybody can do it and i think that can really help with some of the sunk costs that can go into well if i haven't taken this class for the first like eight or nine years of my schooling now the risk versus reward is much like more challenging because i've done these other things that i know i like and i there's this new thing i don't know if i want to give up something that i know i like for something that i might like but if you can just dabble in it even for like a year like when it's not as high stakes like i took soccer in elementary school and basketball and turns out i didn't want to be a soccer or a basketball player like it was fun for that year that i did each of those but i didn't want to do it forever now had i not tried it and i got into a high school and i was in band which i knew i loved i loved doing drumline but i had this like opportunity to have to switch to something else i'd have to give up something that i knew i enjoyed for all i know i could have been i don't know a soccer player like when it comes to cs it's the same thing like okay if we don't offer it early enough then kids won't know and they might just say well i don't know maybe i'd be interested in it but i think i'll just stick with this other thing even though it might end up being like their passion absolutely i think you hit the nail on the head there and we see the numbers right here so i mentioned the major minors when our fourth graders are at the end of the year they have to kind of rank what do they want their class to be and we try to keep the computer science class to around 18 kids just so we can pull out the robots we have in this or that and we had almost of them just going to choir all of them just going to band because they've experienced it since they were first and second graders versus the grades before they had it for half a year in third grade and that was it right so i mean the data's for us is right there it's exactly that yeah that's good you're able to actually look at that and compare it and again this major minor thing my wheels are still spinning like i just think that's really cool adding that with the genius hours like i wish more schools had that opportunity to do that for skids for kids being able to develop individualized expertise in something that's interesting to them it's great to see and it's amazing what they can do when you do have a class as well that's excited to be there you know you can get a lot more done and a lot more advanced when you've got a group of kids who are there because they want to be there and they're excited to be there versus i'm taking this because i have to take it because it's the 45 minutes a day i'm told to sit in this classroom right the scary thing though is like from an educator standpoint is at least from some teachers that i work with is they're like well what if i don't know an answer to that and it's like well because kids are developing individual as expertise like they can talk to each other like to get some questions answered or okay we don't know the answer to this let's explore it together we'll learn together let's figure it out absolutely which building off of that like you mentioned how you got started and kind of taught yourself cs and like taking some workshops and whatnot but how do you continue to practice like also being a musician i know you know what the grind is like in order to actually improve on the areas that you need to improve with your voice or instrument or anything but how do you do that with your pedagogy or with your understanding of cs it's a lot of honestly continued seminars or i do rely highly on the code.org work and continuing on and getting into their ap courses and taking those individually on my own or on my own time i'm currently trying to work in c programs because right now computer science teachers do not need to be certified in computer science in connecticut for the elementary level and i'm trying to work on having that because i know it's coming down the pipeline so finding programs that are local that aren't ridiculously expensive to try to get that certification and get those classes so kind of that mixture of the collegiate level and what's out there for students and teachers mixing it together and hoping for the best speaking of hoping for the best like hoping for the best for this upcoming school year but we we talked a little bit about this like some of the struggles but how do you try and prevent that burnout that can occur just in education in general but especially over this past year with everything that went on with covid definitely making sure i take time to do my passions as well so on top of teaching i'm also a high school basketball and volleyball coach so having that time that's almost scheduled from august all the way through march that's you know i've got at least two and a half hours a day in the gym with the high school kids and playing with them and coaching them and focusing on that and then i'm a crafter too so making sure you know i know maybe i'm doing this project for the kids but let's have some fun and do it for myself so speaking of that time away but also knowing that i am prepared we've been through worse it's gonna be okay so let's just see what we've done and what we can make better or adjust for whatever situation we're in so if you know we're in person full time great you know i can use the 3d printer that's in my classroom or i can use you know the doodle pens you know we're remote now well maybe we get cardboard and we try to make our own okay the kids are still learning the concepts and the ideas i want them to learn it's just in a different form yeah i like that it's like making the the best out of what you have but also approaching it from like this too shall pass one of the things that's been frustrating to listen to is i like hearing some people frame this as like the lost generation it's like okay we can all take a break from learning for a year even if like kids just like didn't engage at all with school for this past year they can still be fine they can still continue to learn things it's not like they're now never going to be able to learn again yes it was unfortunate but there's many cool things that they can still continue to do and learn you know i've seen it on memes i've seen everywhere the only people that are writing about being concerned that kids are a year behind are the ones looking at test scores we made those rules up why can't we change those rules you know yeah i think to myself this entire building didn't have a tech program before i came and what they were doing was learning google slides that was tech class so they're still years ahead then they would have been if they were in fourth grade or second grade five years ago it's okay we're gonna catch up catch up they're gonna learn what they're gonna learn they're gonna have fun with it that's all that matters yeah and having fun with it part like even if they take a year off if they come back continuing to do something they learn i would be willing to bet they would be further ahead than if they never had a year off and they were learning stuff they didn't care about because it'd be irrelevant to them so they wouldn't put in the effort absolutely that's my own pedagogical bias and whatnot it's fun to see with some of the little ones so i had genius hour for kindergarten last year and we were making ridiculous things and there was one particular student who school was a rough time for him you know very energetic kids sitting in one spot was not meant for him it's one of those kids and we were talking about roller coasters and their project was to try to make a roller coaster out of whatever legos they could find in their bin well it made out this kid apparently found what he fell in love with and from then on if they needed him to talk about a story or something he just had to have legos in his hand and he would build out what he was doing he'd be able to express himself through whatever creations i'm like you know what he might not have been able to actually make the roller coaster but we found something that he can express himself in and help him refocus in class that is a much bigger important lesson learned in my book than what i was trying to get at that day yeah i love that story shifting gears a little bit when it comes to like equity and inclusion in cs education do you have any advice that you recommend either for better ncs educators or teachers who are new to cs so i can't speak to the high school level which i know a lot of those situations come on because it's an elective versus you know here we're in elementary school it's a lot more controlled and contained it plays into that student interest so showing students that you know computer science isn't just you know one little hole that you have to go through that specific things and you know you're only doing it's not all star wars and lego building necessarily it can take on whatever form you wanted to and portraying it to students that way showing students how computer science fits into so many different facets of life because i think that's going to open a lot more doors to people who might not consider themselves a computer scientist or interested in the fields i know girls who code do a lot of work with that and a lot of different there's a bunch of different organizations out there i definitely can't name them all who have a lot of great programs to help promote more of that equity and more of that inclusion which is wonderful in terms of the special ed again there are a lot of great programs you know i might have a student on different levels because intellectually they can't handle what's going on in the general ed class but they still feel included they're still on the same site they're just leveled differently or certain controls are adjusted and they can still succeed one of my top students is labeled autistic and it is absolutely phenomenal what they come up with and it's just that's their niche they found their excitement and their parent was concerned about them even being in the computer science class because they thought it'd be too much for them to handle so making sure they have that opportunity to try it and have that moment because i promise you they'll surprise you yeah we found that across a lot of our districts as well or especially kids in special ed like parents or teachers there'll just be some concerns but yeah some kids are just able to just completely run with it when you would think otherwise like we have a video of the teacher who took over the classes that i was previously doing in the k-8 school so when i was there he was the fourth grade teacher and when i left he ended up taking over and he's said that it was a an eye-opening experience for him because he was able to see some of his prior students that he worked with who had struggled in his like ela class just absolutely thrive and excel in cs and he's like it's the same kid same teacher just a completely different subject area and night and day in terms of difference on how they would be able to do in it another area that i don't think gets talked about enough are our ell students and the joy on some of their faces because for some of them especially the younger ones it's the first time they feel like they can truly communicate with their peers because you know the code language is the code language our kindergartners you know we use arrows and stuff a lot because they aren't readers yet so they can code through a map they can be the top of the class and be proud of what they did when they might struggle in other areas because they can't read the directions they don't know what's going on they can't understand code.org it's in a bunch of different languages so this is just a fun story we had a student who was a refugee from syria and spoke arabic at home was learning english as he went along as a fifth grade student and onco.org you can change the language so he put into arabic however it changed the whole screen over to their alphabet which reads backwards and on the opposite side of the screen so he comes up to me goes i need help and i look i'm like well i don't even know what you're on right now what is happening blind like couldn't figure out how to transfer back so now we're trying to match up screens with someone else but it opened conversation with another student i couldn't figure out where he was at but another student knew the screen and they're talking through and showing and they're now best friends three years later and it started in that classroom together being able to work together in their own languages both be successful together and work together to succeed so yeah from an accessibility standpoint like having that ability to just toggle any language just on the fly while it's running it's definitely helpful and i say that as somebody who is very much so struggling learning kanji for japanese i know some individual kanji but then you put it in a paragraph and i'm like i have no idea what this is talking about that right there says water i think i'm curious thinking of like research that can inform not only just the pedagogical practices but specifically in like cs education what do you wish there was more research on that could assist with that i think development at the younger ages there's not a lot out there at all about you know developmentally what the kids can succeed with and what they can understand and process at the younger level in terms of computer science i mean there's the step-by-step there's stuff that you can pull in terms of language development to help transfer over but there's mostly research done that's done for middle school and high school levels there's not a ton out there for the elementary kids yeah i'd second that i know there's people who are doing it but we need more yes what about it what's something that you're working on that you might be able to get assistance with like if there's somebody who's listening to this you're like i really wish somebody would help me with blank what would that be i mentioned this before like this program didn't really exist before i got here so i've been building it from scratch so kind of creating that vertical planning across the grade levels i'm still figuring out you know what stuff should fit where and which grade level and it's trial and error like we're starting year six but you know a year and a half of it was in a pandemic so that threw everything we did before out the window to an extent and it was a different plan so kind of if people have great road maps of what they might have done in lower grades through upper grades or what has or hasn't worked i'm always looking for ideas and articles and research out there about how people are running their programs through elementary schools so i will share this in the show notes san francisco has a scope and sequence that i frequently point to and say hey here's an example of how you might be able to do this in elementary school oh awesome so we've actually had several districts in different states like ask a similar question like well what does this look like in terms of vertical alignment how do you like scaffold in the different standards et cetera and san francisco had some really awesome people on a team work on this a few years ago so it's a good starting point at the very least it's easy to find alignment with most state standards if you're fortunate enough to have them because most of those state standards are at least based off of csta's work we're working on it out here we're getting there so then where might people go to connect with you and the organizations that you work with so i have a instagram and twitter account a brand new one for tech i decided after this past pathfinder is a my you know aim screen name that i had since fifth grade was no longer probably appropriate for professional teaching so we're slowly transferring over there's not a lot there yet so at tech make teach with underscores in between if you want to find my old one that has a bunch of projects over the last few years and some random basketball pictures it's lmd b-ball rocks because again 5th grade me was really cool and again they're both on twitter and instagram i'm also out on facebook just with my name so feel free i post a lot of my tech stuff there and then we've got a donor's choose page up we were lucky enough to get a laser cutter in our building this past year so much fun but we need a cart to put it on so the kids don't get you know crushed by it saying on the floppy table we've got so working on getting that for them so we can roll it into the classroom so these kids can start making their projects and with that that concludes this week's episode of the cska podcast make sure you check out the show notes at jaredillery.com so you can visit laura's donorschoose page as well as check out the other resources on the website and in the show notes if you'd be so kind please consider sharing this episode with another colleague or friend or consider leaving a review on the app that you listen to this on stay tuned next week for another episode and until then i hope you're all staying safe and are having a wonderful week 
Resources/Links Relevant to This Episode
- Other podcast episodes that were mentioned or are relevant to this episode - A DREAM job with Addison Lilholt - In this interview with Addison Lilholt, we discuss Addison’s DREAM job, the importance of students having fun through meaningful learning experiences, lessons learned from remote teaching, the importance of mental breaks when learning/teaching, recommendations for getting started with CS, the intersections of CS and environmental sciences, creating an arcade cabinet to explore engineering and CS, being open about iterating on abilities as an educator, and so much more. 
 
- Connecting with and Listening to Students with Dominick Sanders - In this interview with Dominick Sanders, we discuss the importance of connecting with and listening to students, the impact of being a positive role model for kids, considering equity for individuals and across the entire state of South Carolina, what Dominick learned through their experience with Xposure STEM, Dominick’s plan for improving CS in South Carolina, Dominick’s experience with CSTA’s Equity Fellowship, how Dominick continues to learn and grow as a CS educator, thinking through intersectionality in relation to representation, and so much more. 
 
- CS Educator as Dungeon Master with Jon Stapleton - In this interview with Jon Stapleton, we discuss metaphors for education and facilitating, the importance of community and navigating inappropriate content online, how programming languages and platforms influence learning, theories and philosophies that inform Jon’s practice, critical code studies, and much more. 
 
- Discussing Computer Science in K-12 with Shuchi Grover - In this interview with Shuchi Grover, we discuss the importance of having a variety of assessments in a CS class, why we need more research on computational thinking, why educators and scholars should read literature outside of the field, Shuchi’s new book titled “Computer Science in K-12: An A-To-Z Handbook on Teaching Programming,” and much more. 
 
- From Mathy McMatherson to Codey McCoderson: An interview with Dan Schneider - In this interview with Dan Schneider, we discuss how Dan transitioned from math education to CS education, designing spaces for educational experiences, suggestions for expanding and diversifying CS programs, how pedagogical approaches evolve over time through experimentation and reflection, the importance of listening to and working with kids one-on-one, and much more. 
 
- How to Get Started with Computer Science Education - In this episode I provide a framework for how districts and educators can get started with computer science education for free. 
 
- Individualized Learning Without Grades with Sofía De Jesús - In this interview with Sofía De Jesús, we discuss Sofía’s book (Applied Computational Thinking with Python: Design algorithmic solutions for complex and challenging real-world problems), the importance of bringing your full self into the classroom, designing for equity and inclusion, working with individuals one-on-one rather than teaching to group averages, problematizing grades in education, collaborating with educators, and much more. 
 
- Intersections of Popular Musicianship and Computer Science Practices - In this episode I unpack my (2020) publication titled “Intersections of popular musicianship and computer science practices,” which discusses potential implications of hardware and software practices that blur the boundaries between music making and computer science. 
 
- Learning at Scale with Kristin Stephens-Martinez - In this interview with Kristin Stephens-Martinez, we discuss learning CS in large classes (e.g., 200+ students), the winding and challenging journey through education and research, recognizing the importance of representation and providing support for underrepresented identities, the benefits of peer instruction, Kristin’s podcast (CS-Ed Podcast), the disconnect between research on education and practice in the classroom, and much more. 
 
- micro:bit, Rhizomatic Learning, and CS for Healing with Katie Henry - In this interview with Katie Henry, we discuss the micro:bit and the do your :bit challenge, rhizomatic learning, the potential for CS for healing, and much more. 
 
- Music Making in Scratch: High Floors, Low Ceilings, and Narrow Walls? - In this episode I unpack Payne and Ruthmann’s (2019) publication titled “Music making in Scratch: High floors, low ceilings, and narrow walls,” which problematizes the limitations of making music with Scratch. 
 
- Open Design for Learning with Aria Chernik - In this interview with Aria Chernik, we discuss student-centered engagement situated within authentic contexts, problems with focusing entirely on capitalistic purposes of education, using critical pedagogies to problematize power dynamics in the classroom, using an open design for learning, the phenomenology of collaboration, creating a space that encourages taking risks in education, and much more. 
 
- Open Way Learning with Ben Owens - In this interview with Ben Owens, we discuss Ben’s transition from working as an engineer to working in K-12 education, opensource as a metaphor for teaching and learning, various stakeholder reactions to opensource resources and learning, bridging the gap between out-of-school and in-school learning, iterating on teaching and learning, and so much more. 
 
- Reconceptualizing “Music Making:” Music Technology and Freedom in the Age of Neoliberalism - In this episode I unpack Benedict and O’Leary’s (2019) publication titled “Reconceptualizing “music making:” Music technology and freedom in the age of Neoliberalism,” which explores the use of computer science practices to counter neoliberal influence on education. 
 
- Rhizomatic Learning with Catherine Bornhorst, Jon Stapleton, and Katie Henry - In this panel discussion with Catherine Bornhorst, Jon Stapleton, and Katie Henry, we discuss what rhizomatic learning is and looks like in formalized educational spaces, affordances and constraints of rhizomatic learning, how to support individual students within a group setting, standards and rhizomatic learning, why few people know and use rhizomatic learning approaches, how to advocate for and learn more about rhizomatic learning, and much more. 
 
 
- Connect with Laura 
- Find other CS educators and resources by using the #CSK8 hashtag on Twitter 
 
          
        
       
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
  
  
    
    
     
  
  
    
    
     
  
  
    
    
     
  
  
    
    
     
  
  
    
    
    