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.

  • Welcome back to another episode of the

    csk8 podcast my name is jared o'leary

    each week of this podcast is either a

    solo episode where i unpack some

    scholarship in relation to computer

    science education or an episode with a

    guest or multiple guests in this week's

    episode i'm interviewing addison lilholt

    we discuss addison's dream job which is

    an acronym the importance of students

    having fun through meaningful learning

    experiences lessons learned from remote

    teaching the importance of mental breaks

    when learning and teaching

    recommendations for getting started with

    computer science intersections of

    computer science and environmental

    science creating an arcade cabinet to

    explore engineering and computer science

    being open about iterating on abilities

    as an educator and so much more as

    always you can find a link to the show

    notes in the app that you're listening

    to this on or by visiting jaredaler.com

    where there are hundreds if not

    thousands of free computer science

    education resources and speaking of this

    podcast is powered by boot up which is

    the non-profit that i work for where i

    create 100 free elementary coding

    curriculum and we also provide paid

    professional development so check out

    boot up pd.org if you're interested but

    with all that being said we will now

    begin with an introduction by addison my

    name is addison littleholt

    thanks for having me to the podcast

    today i am the middle school dream lab

    coordinator at the baldwin school in

    pennsylvania as well as the chair of the

    computer science department and

    engineering department and those are my

    passions those two things that i get to

    teach every day so

    so the audience likely understands what

    means by coordinating like computer

    science but what is the dream lab oh

    great question dream's an acronym it

    stands for

    design robotics

    engineering art and mathematics so it's

    all of those things

    it's an umbrella a catch-all and we've

    decided to

    dedicate a space well three spaces

    actually one in the lower school one in

    the middle school and one in our high

    school where students can really pursue

    each of those areas i think one of the

    main

    goals that we try to encourage in our

    students is to

    not fear making mistakes

    in their work and

    focusing as much on the process as in

    the product

    of what it is they're doing if not more

    the process being the design process so

    it's really a space for them to

    experiment and learn about their own

    ways of doing things in these fields the

    way that some people use acronyms like

    that whether it's dream or stem or steam

    or whatever it tends to be siloed for

    each one of the letters is it siloed

    within this space or are they all

    intersecting and interwoven together at

    times they can be interwoven at other

    times

    if it's a robotics

    unit we're talking about robotics

    however

    we've just introduced a new course that

    operates within the dream lab in the

    middle school so interdisciplinary

    design is a course where we talk about

    how any projects require

    multiple disciplines in order to make it

    happen so the dream lab is a space

    where we can do that as well so yeah at

    times things are interviewing and

    sometimes we actually branch out now

    more so than before in the past three

    four years in the middle school at least

    we've been bringing on board teachers

    from outside of the cs and engineering

    department teachers from the english

    department and the languages department

    and the music and art department they

    are now sharing our spaces and we're

    working together to build these well

    truly interdisciplinary projects that

    sounds like a dream job ah sorry i had

    to say it

    i might use it sometime do it

    missed opportunity if you don't

    no but in all seriousness like that

    really does sound like an interesting

    job that i would love to one participate

    in as a student but then two to be able

    to like facilitate those experiences the

    explorations and then the collaborations

    with other educators that sounds

    wonderful if you have the time it's a

    really neat experience to be able to

    create projects

    and then have

    experts from those fields contributing

    to those projects all simultaneously so

    if there's an english component that's

    actually truly important to that project

    you have the english teacher there right

    right at that point so yeah it makes for

    the in the moment that works out really

    well but then the end product typically

    does end up turning out really great now

    if somebody to walk into like that space

    or

    even if you wanted to think specifically

    like an ideal computer science space

    what would they experience or observe

    they would experience

    the students having fun that's ideal

    ideal every day

    students have fun and learning that's

    number one but i think there needs to be

    meaningful

    interactions with whatever it is they're

    learning about i think in the dream lab

    with computer science

    i'm really hoping that if somebody

    walked in they saw students engaged with

    this very broad class of computer

    science the curriculum there's tons of

    areas of computer science that we just

    expose them to in seventh grade then

    they can continue down that path in the

    high school but in the seventh grade i

    want to engage them with the things they

    use all the time and have them take

    ownership in their own creations in this

    space right when people do come into my

    space because this happens often we have

    guests that come through and they do

    come into my space and i think if i was

    to walk into this space and i didn't

    know about what it is i do i would be

    very confused i would walk into the

    space thinking i'm in a typical school

    and i would seek what would appear to be

    chaos

    and that would make sense to most people

    walking into my lab it does look like

    somewhat chaotic but it is controlled

    chaos what it is really is the

    individual students or individual groups

    of students taking ownership of the work

    that they're doing and understanding

    their own dynamics within their groups

    or their own individual work styles so

    they might be standing at the tables

    they might be standing the white boards

    they might be sitting on the floor they

    might be talking to each other they

    might be with their headphones on

    everybody's doing what it is that they

    need to do in order for them to be as

    successful as they can be and i found

    that during those moments of you know

    hands-on work if the framework is set up

    correctly you walk in it doesn't look

    like your typical classroom but it's

    very effective yeah it can be hard to

    design for the many ways of like doing

    being and experiencing in a classroom

    like that and that's the harder part

    facilitating that for me at least it was

    easy because you're walking around

    interacting one-on-one with groups like

    that was the easy part so if somebody

    would come in they'd be like oh jared's

    not really doing much like not up there

    lecturing like you're right sort of i'm

    asking a lot of

    guided questions because i'm trying to

    help them get to where they want to go

    but like what you're missing is the

    hours of work that went into designing

    this experience and especially designing

    an experience that supports multiple

    ways of experiencing whatever it is

    we're exploring that is exactly right

    we're currently doing some work and i

    showed something about wicked the

    musical and it kind of explored the

    engineers who designed all of the

    framework for the stage and all of the

    contraptions and the air with the ropes

    and all of this stuff they have this

    huge head that has a mouth that opens up

    and its eyes can move in different

    directions and then they go around back

    and the guy's conducting an interview

    and he shows the mechanism it's a

    handlebar like on a bike and it can pull

    out and now the person in the backstage

    has full control of this head i mean

    this is a 10 foot head and this is

    happening live on stage during these

    wicked performances on broadway and i

    show this to my students because i think

    in the process of these projects there

    is an audience often and they see that

    project they see what's going on on

    stage but to go backstage and to look at

    it from all of these other points of

    view all the people that had to become

    part of

    this end result which is whatever an

    hour and a half of a performance they

    begin to see that the process

    is the backstage

    of their projects and it's pivotal in

    them having success and all of their

    learning really is happening during that

    process the design process in our case

    so i think it was a good analogy to what

    they do in our classroom and i mean

    these engineers that put this show

    together in any of these shows

    the amount of thought that goes into it

    and the multiple disciplines there was a

    scientific aspect there were these

    bubbles that were being blown out of the

    mouth of this big head and they had to

    design a specific solution that if it

    would float and it would become a bubble

    very quickly but then the property of it

    when it landed and popped on the floor

    it didn't leave any slick residue so

    that the dancers wouldn't slip science

    right so it's funny how so many

    different disciplines come together to

    make something that many people would

    think oh they need music

    and dance right those would be the first

    two things and probably are those would

    be the first three

    major ones but there's a lot that goes

    into it how would your answer compare

    contrast if you were to

    have been asked that question before

    kovid happened like would it be the same

    or would it differ that's a good

    question because covet has happened i

    don't think my approach would have

    changed

    with regards to

    making sure that the students understood

    the value of collaboration

    we actually focus on collaboration as a

    key benchmark in what we do it's

    critical really we wouldn't have as much

    success if the students didn't work

    together when we went remote we had to

    problem solve as teachers we

    then took on the role that i often put

    on my students solve this problem go

    there do this this isn't easy figure it

    out we don't have the answer i tell the

    students to do this all the time now

    we're thrown into this

    crazy situation where okay you're never

    going to see your students from the next

    we don't know when so you don't even

    have that answer number two yeah let's

    try this new thing everybody's gonna be

    on their computers for i don't know six

    seven eight hours a day oh by the way uh

    nobody's ever done this before nobody

    knows how to do it for me

    oh by the way you're gonna set this up

    oh whoa okay so cool i don't really know

    what i'm doing but if you're cool with

    me trying stuff i'm fine with trying

    stuff oh by the way our lms just broke

    because there were too many users on it

    oh cool so now we have to switch lms's

    within two days of the switching over to

    virtual

    this all happened right and we were

    problem solving in real time in the

    moment and it was messy and i remember

    not knowing how it was gonna end and you

    know what if it wasn't for

    thinking in the way that the students

    think and being vulnerable in that

    moment and just saying this could fail

    but we gotta give it a shot we don't

    have any other options really right we

    would have been in a bad place but we

    were able to write the ship we were able

    to get online we were able to teach the

    teachers how to teach in this way to

    some degree i mean teaching remotely it

    is not ideal if you've been teaching in

    person and if the student has only had

    an in-person experience from the teacher

    teaching remotely it can be effective

    and i think

    we had found ways to make it more

    effective but is it ideal i think

    there's a lot of value in the in-person

    interaction and then when it comes to

    dream lab i mean we're hands-on so

    there's definitely that piece but i

    think with coven it gave us a real world

    example of how people need to be able to

    solve a problem given whatever it is you

    have on hand without knowing the outcome

    at all right code's thrown everything

    out the window for me because teachers

    plan teachers often come up with really

    good plans they can and i do this too i

    filled out these unit long plants right

    and when coveted hit every single one of

    those

    was gone for the most part because of

    the constraints i was given what i've

    learned in covid is that not only myself

    but people in general and my students

    i've learned this about are very very

    resilient and if they're given the

    opportunity to be resilient they will

    take it they'll often exceed

    expectations when i started realizing

    some of this while we were remote and i

    was seeing a decline in my student

    interest this was happening across the

    board across the country across the

    world everybody was zooming in and

    tuning out i really started to come up

    with new ways to do it all and i found

    it to be successful and i wouldn't have

    ever even dabbled in any of the things

    that i did if it weren't for covet i

    mean i turned my entire class for

    computer science specifically into a tv

    show it became a talk show called the cs

    show and i was broadcasting live every

    day to my audience and my students were

    my audience the cs show is live i had

    daily interviews that i would pre-record

    and interview and cut and splice videos

    and put it all together i would have

    them come on stage i was air quoting

    that they would join into the

    conversation they wanted to be on camera

    they wanted to even join the

    conversation and oftentimes they would

    give me ideas for the show for upcoming

    shows there would be games in the shows

    because why not let's have a game show

    right and then i would gamify whatever

    it was we were working on i mean it was

    silly i had like a monologue at the

    beginning of every class that was my

    intro and like what are we doing to well

    i just turned it into a monologue and we

    were having fun and even though we were

    all remote i had students giving me

    weather reports from their rooms and

    they would open the window shade and

    they would say hey mr lawless it's

    snowing today right here in so and so

    pennsylvania and at one point that one

    of my students was in the country they

    were over in switzerland and i said oh

    well we need to have a daily

    international weather update

    now this has nothing to do with computer

    science

    at all but i created a little intro for

    them and it was like

    so with today's international weather

    and but they just didn't know what was

    going to happen right in the next class

    and to keep students on their feet i

    think there's some real value in that

    and if you can do that in a pandemic and

    you can do that via some remote weird

    situation i think i did okay and has

    some of those approaches transferred

    over into in-person experiences yeah

    what worked i took back and brought it

    with me back into person but some of it

    i left back there in zoomtown because i

    mean sitting behind a screen all day

    that's tough so with computer science i

    think one of the things we need to

    remember is computer science isn't only

    conducted on a computer there are times

    where there's a lot of

    necessary collaborative work that goes

    into a project in fact today students

    were working on whiteboards developing

    flowcharts for their work i think that's

    just as important as getting them back

    onto a computer to code right some of it

    i took back the weather thing because

    we're all in the same room now

    so we all know what the weather is

    outside but i did do something what was

    it it was something like that and i

    think it was like the lunch update and

    the students had like just come back

    from lunch and i heard them talking

    about lunch and i just go up to a

    student i heard you talking about lunch

    should we make an announcement about

    this for everyone so i stopped the class

    now they're in the middle of their work

    take a break i say listen i've been

    talking to so and so this is critically

    important we all need to pay attention

    for about the next 30 seconds public

    service announcement the pizza today was

    phenomenal and i have so-and-so here to

    back me up tell us about the pizza and

    doing that at the end of each semester

    is a

    student assessment of myself i ask about

    all this stuff now they may just be

    lying which is fine because it's

    building my self-esteem but i think

    they're telling the truth

    and they find it to be a welcoming place

    and they

    find themselves because of the space we

    create in these dream labs the students

    aren't afraid they're not afraid to take

    those risks in their projects where hey

    you know what you put these next few

    popsicle sticks on that thing there's a

    great chance it's gonna completely fall

    apart and you're not gonna have anything

    at the end or

    you're gonna complete the whole thing

    and it's gonna look amazing and nobody's

    ever done that they're not afraid to

    take those risks they're not afraid to

    have the risk completely fail on them

    and i think that's really important

    because in the end they learn whichever

    conditional path they just went down

    they learned something and it was

    worthwhile so so

    back when i used to teach drumline it

    was very skill based so it's all about

    like performing something and

    playing very consistent with it so

    you'd sit there and you'd rap stuff

    sometimes for like an hour or two just

    like the same thing over and over just

    keep going through it refining as you go

    along but i noticed that students

    attention span would start to wander at

    times because it's just it's hard it's

    mentally draining to practice the same

    thing over and over so it was good to

    sometimes just like hey let's take a

    fiver let's just get a water break let's

    just like talk about your day let's it's

    more personable and it allows them to

    just kind of like press the refresh

    button on their brain and then be able

    to come back and

    not be as mentally drained and make it

    so that they're more focused when they

    actually come back to it so i like that

    idea of like hey sometimes it's good to

    just take a break but i have seen some

    administrators who would look at that

    and be like

    this has nothing to do with the content

    like you mentioned that the number one

    thing for you is having fun

    but an administrator is going to look at

    like the assessments and go i don't see

    a standard for having fun like it's all

    about learning these concepts and

    practices have you had any pushback from

    admin when you do these breaks or when

    you focus on enjoyment in learning i

    would imagine there are probably schools

    where i would have that but not here so

    it is a dream job

    it is a and you know what this is the

    phrase that i was trying to think of

    earlier teamwork makes the dream work

    it is a dream job but i gotta say i'm

    pretty lucky there was some proving that

    had to happen over the course of a few

    years

    also with parents and community but i

    think at this point i've developed

    enough of a rapport with everyone that

    they know that i have the students best

    interests in mind in every interaction i

    have with them and in every plan i make

    for them i feel confident that that's

    why i'm able to do some of the things

    that an administrator would have no

    reason to say keep doing that except it

    is yielding great results right so i'm

    actually interested in that like your

    journey so if you were to write a story

    about your journey into education and

    into cs education in particular what

    would the chapter titles be and then

    like what sparked your different

    transitions between the different

    chapters so many chapters chapter one

    birth

    i'm kidding we won't go back that far so

    i'd say chapter one would be

    undergraduate degree question mark

    because i got a i got a degree in uh

    food marketing so it wasn't even an

    education through that though i got into

    computer science i was doing work

    with various different companies

    throughout my college career with my

    brother we had started a web design llc

    it was a lot of fun and it was kind of

    when the internet was starting to really

    kind of get going chapter two i went

    into the business world chapter three i

    quit the business world chapter four i

    went back to school for education

    chapter five i graduated and became a

    teacher in the field of science

    specifically science so i didn't go

    straight into cs and i was teaching a

    lot of different sciences i was teaching

    chemistry biology physics and

    environmental science and i tried to tie

    environmental science into everything i

    did the first school i taught at was an

    environmental based charter school so it

    was my first experience in a public

    school setting albeit it was a charter

    so i started honing my

    craft there i think one thing i always

    look back on these weird life

    experiences and you've been mentioning

    the music side of this and i've played

    instruments my whole life and i played

    in band so i've been on stage

    number a number of times throughout my

    college career and then beyond and even

    up until now and there's some carrier

    that i've noticed and i remember

    realizing that as an early teacher i was

    like you know what i think i can use

    this skill that i didn't learn in any of

    my classes of getting up on a stage and

    performing and use some of the tricks

    that i've learned

    over the course of the years that got

    the audience engaged with the students

    and so that's what i would do at the

    beginning and i didn't realize kind of

    what i was doing right away but then i

    looked back on it and said ah that's

    so chapter five kept teaching there for

    a while and met my wife there she was a

    kindergarten teacher so speed up the

    chapter six

    get married seven start at this school

    and i've been here now for five years so

    half a decade and and now i'm here now

    i'm where i am and when i was at the

    previous school

    i had started going down this cs path

    just because i started seeing so much

    opportunity there it was a passion of

    mine that was outside of school and i

    started doing things like robotics clubs

    and engineering programs and then i i

    did develop their engineering and

    computer science program at that school

    and implemented that two years before i

    left so they had then the curriculum and

    that was driven by

    standards within the state but also just

    kind of how i saw it impacting

    sciences and the environment and then

    now i'm here still doing all the fun

    stuff the stuff that i teach

    they are the things that i do outside of

    school as well just for fun i was

    talking to my colleague and she said

    yeah

    pd for us professional development for

    us is a little strange because for a

    computer science teacher sometimes it's

    just as important to sit in a session

    listen to a presenter as it is to

    stumble through

    learning this new language or or trying

    to program this new thing to do this

    specific and she said i think i do a lot

    of pd but it's not technically pd

    per se you know that's an interesting

    thing in computer science if somebody

    wanted to jump into the cs but they were

    unsure

    where or how to start what might you

    recommend for them if they're an

    educator focus on your interests that

    would be my first statement i often have

    parents ask the same question like where

    would be a good place for my student to

    get started in cs i think it goes the

    same for a teacher ask yourself why do

    you want to get into cs what is cs going

    to do for you why are you trying to get

    into you know game design is that

    something that's fun to you and you want

    to add that to your curriculum and you

    want to start you know creating games

    and doing that do you want to teach a

    specific type of coding language because

    you see that as something that's

    important for them to know just as

    another foreign languages so i would ask

    why and then i would say you know there

    are so many resources out there right

    now and there are so many ways to be a

    self-starter in this field many of the

    people that are in the field they're

    either self-starters they started in

    some classroom and they fell in love and

    then they just kept going outside of the

    classroom why not now though why not do

    it explore it what's the worst that can

    happen you can have some fun yeah that

    answer definitely resonates that was the

    approach that i took so it was largely

    making music and art through computer

    science programming etc that's what

    really got me into it exploring those

    questions and those interests and i've

    had multiple guests mention similar

    things i am curious so you mentioned how

    you try to infuse environmental sciences

    into what you're doing what about the

    intersections of cs and environmental

    sciences yeah

    i gave you a little pause there we can

    keep that in because

    first of all cs is basically everywhere

    but cs and environmental science there

    is such a clear connection with what

    computer science can do for the

    environment it can predict things it can

    use

    sensors to show us what we can't see

    in the environment these are exciting

    things for me we had a pond and there

    was a culvert that was underground that

    ran from the top of the hill down to the

    bottom and this water was kind of

    recycled and

    it was blocked it got blocked by debris

    and the culvert couldn't run and luckily

    it was the winter time so it wasn't

    going to be running anyway because it

    would have likely had frozen once we

    needed it to start running again we

    would have had a big problem with algae

    if we hadn't got it back running so what

    did we do well i posed this problem to

    the students and i said well what could

    we do we don't know where this

    issue is we don't know what's happening

    we just know that when we turn the pump

    on none of the water is getting back

    down where it should go they said well

    mr oh we gotta find the smallest student

    in the class and send them up that pipe

    and i said although

    that sounds like a fantastically safe

    idea

    can we find an alternative and they did

    obviously they said well why don't we

    build a robot stand it up there and

    that's what we did and we took a ton of

    river rocks from the pond brought them

    into the classroom so we could set up

    the testing site so we didn't have to go

    all the way down there every single time

    and we started programming robots to see

    if we couldn't build a robot engineer

    the the actual physical thing and get it

    to move just in one direction they were

    like well how can we see hook up a

    camera to it oh okay so

    you have a cell phone yeah throw that on

    there so creative ideas finding

    solutions and showing the students these

    real world connections between cs a

    problem that needs to be solved and

    connecting it and making it very clear

    the connection to these other

    disciplines like environmental science

    here is the connection just so you know

    this literally is there and there are

    people in their mid 40s

    in this role working and getting paid

    for this so making those connections for

    the kids when i like your connection

    with engineering as well one of the

    projects that you mentioned before we

    spoke was another csn engineering

    connection that you made in is the

    arcade cabinet could you elaborate on

    that project the arcade cabinet was

    an undertaking that

    i was uncertain about there were two

    arcade cabinets the first arcade cabinet

    was built by my students in an

    engineering class in the dream lab they

    wanted to build a full-scale size arcade

    cabinet using a raspberry pi zero a

    display i had sitting around and then

    they wanted to learn some power tools

    and you know figured out the plans we

    made a scale model out of cardboard

    and then we really got into the weeds

    and got this thing up right and they

    thought this was really cool and you

    could upload retropie to it and be able

    to play any game from you know

    playstation down then what ended up

    spawning from this arcade cabinet was

    the fact that my computer science

    students were designing their own video

    games

    using a platform called make code arcade

    which is by microsoft well turns out

    they have a version of retropie for

    their games so what you were able to do

    is flash the image to be able to play

    any of their games

    so now the students started designing

    their games they finished their games

    they create their games we upload their

    games to the arcade cabinet now there is

    no retro pie on there there's only

    student made games and a splash screen

    that i put on

    but it just shows like to be able to go

    into an arcade and play a game it wasn't

    just the person making the box and the

    full upright it wasn't just the

    programmers

    a lot of people second one i made i

    tweaked it and i love using this term

    iteration with the students i said to

    myself i don't want to use as much wood

    and how can i do that so i wanted to be

    able to do this without one sheet of

    plywood i had a mini fridge so i used

    that as the base built two sides and i

    was able to fit the whole thing make it

    out of one sheet of plywood and then i

    brought that picture in to show the

    students i continually want to show them

    i'm doing this stuff too with you right

    and we can partner on this stuff i mean

    i assign teams all the time i say i'm

    the team member of all and i'm happy to

    help but i'm not doing all the work and

    neither should one person in any of your

    group so i'm curious like in both the

    arcade project and then even the

    project where you're clearing out like

    some rocks and whatnot there's a breadth

    of understanding that like concepts and

    practices and standards that would go

    across many different disciplines but

    then there's also the depth of like

    creating and diving really deep into

    something for you like when you are

    designing a project where do you like

    land in terms of conceiving of the

    breadth versus depth argument that often

    occurs i'll start with cs because when

    we were developing the curriculum as a

    department for the middle school this

    was a question we asked ourselves do we

    want to go really deep into let's just

    say one specific language or do we want

    to expose the students to a whole bunch

    of really neat really cool really real

    world of applicable things happening in

    cs right now and into the future well we

    opted for that and that's our approach

    right now to

    cs so we do not just focus on one

    language and we don't even focus on

    solely languages i mean we get into

    cyber security ai machine learning web

    design of course but robotics game

    design i mean there's a lot that we

    touch on but then if i can spark the

    interest

    in those few classes we have together in

    that one specific area now that's good

    because if they're interested in it i

    can give them additional resources this

    is something i always do i always

    at the end of a unit here's a whole

    bunch more that this is not homework

    absolutely not homework don't do this if

    you don't want to do this but for

    anybody that wants to go a little

    further and keep playing and keep

    tinkering and keep making check this

    stuff out you're gonna have fun and then

    the hope is so seventh to eighth grade

    then they can keep dabbling in eighth

    grade in interdisciplinary design where

    they can if they're into the cs stuff

    bring it in you'll be the cs people then

    they can start to go deeper in when they

    get into high school it's all

    scaffolding so

    it's growth over time we try to have a

    growth mindset in the things we do

    computer science it's just so broad so

    if we just focused it on one aspect of

    it personally i think it's a disservice

    for them i'm curious if we're to zoom

    out so what do you feel is holding back

    educators or the field and then what's

    something that we can do about that i

    think what's holding us back

    as educators working in the field i

    think i'm privileged to have the

    opportunity to honestly not feel held

    back i'm given the chance to really

    approach education in a different way

    and my department as a whole i think we

    all do the same thing more so from a

    holistic view of what are the students

    coming away with at the end of the day

    there are a lot of life lessons that

    occur in these years these formative

    years i think to my own daughter and

    think about all of the points that she

    mentions from her day when i get home

    and i think about that for all the

    students when they go home and what

    would hold me back from making that the

    best experience time time holds us back

    the opportunity to collaborate i think

    if you give

    people these these chances of

    opportunity the results become greater

    the ability to redefine

    how assessment looks there are a lot of

    different ways to look at success and

    track success define

    success i'm hopeful

    that education on the whole is going to

    be okay i'm hoping that cs becomes

    as important in schools as it is in

    everyday life and as ubiquitous in

    schools as it is in everyday life yeah

    who can predict with what's happened

    over the last couple of years like my

    magic eight ball has not been very great

    lately

    with what you're just saying you use the

    word redefining and that stood out as

    something that it sounds like you have

    done several times when you're talking

    about your different chapters in your

    life like redefining what direction

    you're heading in life how you're going

    to explore etc being a musician i'm a

    bit of a practice nerd i really nerd out

    on practice techniques and how to do it

    how to iterate on abilities i'm curious

    how do you iterate on your abilities

    either in computer science in your

    understandings or as an educator there

    are so many similarities with music and

    computer science every time i'm doing

    things in code or just in the field in

    general i'm finding these connections

    and i'm like oh my gosh loops i

    continually seek to get better though

    i'll find the way so it's kind of this

    individual instinct to keep going keep

    learning new things

    i mean i make it a point every day once

    my kids go to bed to learn something in

    one of these

    areas of interest and it's not like a

    long amount of time it's like 15 minutes

    or whatever read a book go online check

    something out try something new on the

    computer watch a youtube video do it all

    and i've just gotten to this constant

    rhythm of trying to learn new things and

    how what i'll often end up doing and it

    drives me crazy i'll learn something new

    at night and i'll think about it and

    then i'll you know go to bed and i'll be

    thinking about it in my mind i'll fall

    asleep eventually sometimes it keeps me

    up sometimes i even have to take a note

    about it because i'll come up with some

    idea and the next day i'm like looking

    forward to trying that thing that's

    exciting it just keeps perpetuating the

    fun and stuff we do here but as an

    educator checking and seeing all the

    other educators here that teach other

    stuff but also in our department too the

    more teachers you can watch the better

    yeah good practice to do yeah because to

    see

    a good teacher in action there's

    something to be said about those

    teachers it's always impressive yeah i

    really appreciate that answer i think

    it's helpful for other people to hear

    how

    educators iterate on their abilities i

    think it's good to be public about that

    and it's something that i have struggled

    with and

    i actually have started streaming myself

    practicing the drums

    and intentionally playing things that

    i've never done before and i'm really

    bad at and like as somebody who's been

    playing for 20 years

    over 20 years like it is very

    uncomfortable still to share something

    that doesn't sound good because like

    everything that i have been conditioned

    to do

    over the years is like you only share

    the final take you share the best

    recording etc and to go publicly and

    share here's me trying something and i'm

    gonna fail over this next hour

    repeatedly and it's been an interesting

    learning experience and it's getting me

    even more comfortable with failure than

    i was previously jared if you were in

    middle school you would be a fantastic

    student in a dreamland

    because

    what you just said it's exactly the

    vulnerability that we look for and try

    to demonstrate and emulate from a

    day-to-day basis with the students and i

    can imagine if you felt my palms right

    now they're not dry because i can just

    picture myself putting that type of

    video up and putting it on public

    display of me bombing basically and it's

    just like wow that's gutsy but okay it's

    up it's done now what you just learned

    so much in that experience and now

    you're getting even more comfortable

    with it yeah that's huge because that

    comfortability that confidence it's just

    gonna it doesn't just stay in that place

    it does transfer over over time into

    other areas such a valuable thing

    vulnerability yeah i had monday off and

    so i did a stream and i was playing drum

    kit which is not something that i'm like

    super comfortable on and i

    did terrible on it like there's so many

    things that i just was completely

    messing up on and i was just like

    laughing it off like while going through

    it but like the fact that i'm leaving

    that up and still like gonna publish it

    on my youtube channel as well later like

    is night and day from where i was a year

    ago where i would never have shared

    something like that and now my plan is

    to like revisit it

    like a year from now and go back to that

    recording and play the same thing and be

    like look here's where i was and here's

    where i am one year later after

    consistent effort on this area and i

    think it's beneficial for the musicians

    that i'm trying to help with this to see

    like look i've been playing

    longer than most like people have been

    alive like on the drums and to show like

    i am still terrible at some things and

    really good at other things and it's all

    about the work that you put into it so i

    think it's helpful to have these

    conversations and be public about like

    here's how you actually improve and

    here's where i was and here's where i'm

    going to be it's huge it brings you to

    their level it shows that you can

    empathize with them in those experiences

    you have to be willing to be able to put

    yourself out there though and i don't

    know that everybody's there i don't know

    that everybody is willing to do that

    because it is uncomfortable it doesn't

    feel good in that moment yeah

    now the real question

    is

    are you going to leave the comment

    section up or are you going to turn it

    off oh i'll keep it up yeah like i

    encourage people ask questions and i

    mean if people want to comment on the

    playing about how bad it was you're

    right it was and yet i'm still an

    accomplished musician like you can have

    both those things in the same space see

    there you go you can be good and you can

    mess up sometimes

    yeah as long as nobody gets hurt like in

    my space there are times right like you

    can't mess up on the table saw yeah

    that's true but that's why we have

    people there to show how to use it and

    help and we demonstrate the

    vulnerability of asking for help or

    saying i don't know because if you're

    not comfortable with being able to say

    those things in those moments you're now

    putting yourself in danger we can't have

    that but that's specific to the

    engineering world so i'm curious you

    have

    a lot of interest and appear to always

    be learning about education and about

    the content area and whatnot how do you

    stave off that burnout that can come

    with working in the field of education

    and working what appears to be almost

    non-stop luckily very luckily the

    content that i focus on in my classroom

    it's

    continually changing because of what cs

    is things like ai and machine learning

    but i'm covering that i was covering

    this a few years ago it's different now

    and i've expanded that unit to include

    things like unintended bias in

    artificial intelligence and talking

    about why why does that exist and i have

    the students create their own biased

    models by accident and then show them

    how why they did that and then fix it

    and they all fix it immediately they

    know exactly how to do it they get

    somebody else in take a new picture and

    what i think keeps me from burning out

    is seeing those moments of like whoa

    aha moments beyond like

    but

    i

    also really like the stuff that i teach

    i'm really they always say like oh

    passionate teacher i just find the

    content that i cover to be fun it's fun

    for me to do and same with music i love

    playing music and i have fun playing

    music i might be able to teach it to be

    honest but i wouldn't keep doing it in

    my off time if i didn't truly enjoy the

    stuff that i do in the classroom so i

    think that keeps me from burning out i'm

    lucky there's no doubt about it i'm very

    lucky to be able to say that in the

    interview that i did with dan schneider

    and then with jason bohr they talked

    about how being able to switch between

    different aspects help them to not get

    burnt out just teaching the same thing

    over and over so like being a

    percussionist like if i got bored

    playing snare drum cool i could learn

    the marimba if i got bored playing

    marimba cool i could learn the drum kit

    i get bored with that like i could keep

    switching to different things when i

    started to get burned out in one area

    it's still all learning the same

    umbrella of whether it's like percussion

    or computer science but you're learning

    different aspects of it so i don't know

    if that also resonates with you totally

    sometimes if i know that i'm going to be

    teaching the same content like basic

    html fundamentals let's just say it's

    that what i'll typically do is instead

    of like just going through that whole

    unit again for myself

    i'll go over it but i'll go down that

    path a little deeper into some other

    area that i'm not even going to cover in

    the class and it keeps me like oh yeah

    this is kind of neat and it gives me

    that edge like oh whoa i remember what

    it was like to start learning this stuff

    because now i'm learning this new part

    of it right that seems to help me i like

    that yeah like with cyber security i

    love it because

    man but that log 4j

    thing came out recently i'm like oh my

    gosh what is this this sounds really

    terrible you know it's impacting so many

    users so i start looking into it and i

    start like experimenting with it on my

    own virtual machine

    and i

    finally like get it set up in my own

    environment and i do it i run it and

    this is before i'm about to teach my

    cyber security unit which i already had

    planned no mention of vlog for jay that

    day one of my students

    asks me now about a zero day and she

    says yeah my dad was talking about this

    thing and i said wait a minute are you

    talking about log for j which has been

    in the news she's like yeah log4j i'm

    like you won't believe this

    but i have this running in the back she

    goes oh my gosh i can't wait to go home

    and tell my dad i was like well i could

    show you what it is i was like okay

    so i'm curious what that conversation

    was like when she got home but it's just

    one of those examples where

    it got everybody excited and that really

    had nothing to do with what we were

    covering in that class that day but it

    just so happened it worked out i'm

    always happy when it does yeah that's

    really interesting i just had like a

    mini little reflection on what you're

    just saying like

    the teachers who were best at pulling in

    current day topics and relating it to

    the class were the government and social

    studies teachers they'd have like every

    wednesday was like current event day

    where you talk about like what's going

    on the news how does that relate to

    social studies government etc we had

    some of that in

    a couple of the cs classes that i've

    done online or like people like on

    youtubers who will talk about that but

    like very rarely would any of that occur

    in the music education classes that i

    take or the music performance classes

    because like there's such a disconnect

    between in-school music and

    all of the music that is made outside of

    school so that is an interesting idea of

    like well why can't cs be more topical

    and why couldn't we bring that into the

    class more like i would bring in like

    when assassin's creed unity came out

    they had this like no face bug where

    like it would not load the texture of

    your skin so it's throw like the

    eyeballs in the mouth moving without

    like skin covering it and it was

    hilarious and horrifying looking so like

    i would pull that up for like the middle

    schoolers and be like look here's what

    this bug is doing and here's what that

    would look like if you did that in

    scratch and like what is going on with

    that and so we talk about that but yeah

    i don't know that's just me kind of

    reflecting out loud how it would be nice

    to be more topical when connecting

    things with current events yeah i mean

    either current events or student

    interests in my situations because i had

    another student just the other day who

    said hey i didn't see at the beginning

    of the year

    a unit covering cryptocurrencies i said

    that's because we don't have one

    and i said but wait a minute are you

    interested in cryptocurrencies and she

    said yes i said okay well this sounds

    exciting well what am i gonna do i'm

    gonna go study some crypto so i ended up

    building my own token on solana i had to

    create like a whole cloud server and all

    this stuff i was going back and forth

    linux it was wild i didn't know if i was

    going to be able to do it i had to buy

    some soul

    this is all like new stuff to me because

    i was never dabbling around in this

    crypto world and then i'm going down

    this rabbit hole into the nft stuff and

    it was so much fun and i don't know if i

    would have done it if i didn't get that

    question i don't even know if we're

    gonna cover cryptocurrency still i'd

    like to or at least like say

    hey you know what let's have lunch we're

    gonna talk crypto i'm gonna show you how

    to do it it's funny how things kind of i

    would probably fit it into some of the

    command line stuff that i do currently a

    lot of times what i'll have to do when i

    get into these situations is okay so

    where does cryptocurrency fit into

    the big overarching picture of what i

    want all the students that graduate from

    seventh grade yes what are they walking

    away with right so do they need to know

    deeply about how cryptocurrencies are

    exchanged and how to mint tokens in

    blockchain and all this stuff what do

    you wish there's more research on that

    could inform

    your own practices in in the classroom

    i'd like to know effective

    methods or

    truly effective with data backing it

    methods of getting minorities of

    basically any minority into the field of

    computer science through education

    because there's this disparity and there

    has been and it's changing in the grand

    scheme of things now granted i'm in an

    all-girls school so they're all getting

    this but why

    is there a lot of programs more boys

    than girls going into these cs electives

    not everywhere but in general and what

    effective strategies are mitigating that

    and then going deeper for black and

    brown what is an effective strategy for

    engaging that community the thing about

    computer science and the biases that are

    built into it it comes from this

    non-diverse collective of people making

    the stuff that's part of it it's just

    one piece but if we had really great

    strategies to bring everybody in i don't

    know the most effective strategies and i

    would love to because i would be

    implementing them every day i don't know

    if there's research out there do you

    know there's some but not enough so

    it's a question that's under explored at

    the moment yeah i think it's a valuable

    question to explore

    yeah what's something that you're

    working on that you need help with one

    of the things i do often in my classes

    is bring experts from the field into the

    classroom either physically or resume

    and i am always looking

    for guest speakers in any of my classes

    whether it's an expert in the field of

    any area of engineering or any area of

    cs and

    being that it's an all-girls school to

    have a female

    presence as

    that voice

    is always great because it's such a

    great method of representation for

    everyone here and i always enjoy hearing

    from them too because i'm always

    learning when they're in the room with

    me and then i get to ask the questions

    it's a lot of fun but that would be the

    one ask if anybody ever wants to partner

    up or know somebody that might want to

    see what it's like

    talking to a bunch of youngsters

    about what you do that would be great

    cool at the end we'll make sure to share

    your contact information like in the

    show notes and whatnot so people can

    reach out to you do you have any

    questions for myself or for the field

    well i am curious jared about the

    chapters that led you to this podcast

    yes so specifically to the podcast i've

    have a bit of an obsessive nature in

    that when i'm passionate about something

    i will just

    non-stop learn about it so i'm really

    interested in different topics like

    productivity or i'm interested in like

    real estate as an investment

    strategy so

    i listen to a ton of podcasts on like

    those topics so i dive deep into them

    and listen to them at like three times

    speed so i can get through more

    information etc so i've really been

    interested in podcasts for years and i

    felt like there wasn't enough discussion

    in computer science education on some

    topics that i think we should discuss

    like there's not enough conversation on

    okay here's this research

    but how do we actually

    do it in practice what does this look

    like in the classroom what are the

    implications etc so that disconnect

    between practitioner and scholar and the

    fact that i felt like the field wasn't

    discussing equity enough or like other

    areas like interest-driven learning like

    instead we were focusing on future jobs

    as opposed to like well what are kids

    interested in can't we explore that some

    more so because i wasn't seeing enough

    of those discussions in various

    conferences and webinars there's like

    wait i'm really interested in a podcast

    i have like a good like set up to record

    things and whatnot and i want to bridge

    this gap between practitioner and

    scholar and i am a practitioner and have

    a phd so like i can merge all these

    things together and then create the

    podcast and so it was really my attempt

    to help advance or shape the discourse

    in cs education towards topics that i

    felt like the field should be discussing

    more but it's also been a way of like

    holding myself accountable to staying up

    on latest research like if i'm gonna be

    releasing an episode that where i unpack

    some scholarship then i need to know not

    only like the seminal works from years

    ago but also what's going on today and

    that helps me with the research grants

    that i work on but then conversations

    like this allow me to learn from the

    guests that i interview and it allows me

    to make great connections so like

    overall like i'm learning a ton through

    the process but then it's also like

    fulfilling my own interests and wanting

    to do a podcast it's pretty neat and i'm

    sure that you've gotten a lot out of

    each one yeah but i think the best part

    about it is you can share it with

    everybody and then other people can get

    the same amount of it yeah and the

    connection snowball so like what i will

    do after each interview and like after

    we get the episode like ready to go is

    all just like hey now that this is

    scheduled for publication do you have

    any recommendations of future guests and

    then i'll get like one or two

    introductions and then that leads to

    more conversations with people i might

    not have ever connected with had i not

    had that initial introduction and so

    snowballs to like meeting more people

    and having interesting conversations so

    it's a really good networking thing it's

    a really good way of staying on top of

    research but then as an introvert it's

    also really good for me to get used to

    being more public with my own thinking

    and getting feedback on that in a much

    faster way than i do with all the

    publications i've done like some of them

    had a publication come out a year ago

    that i wrote three years prior like it

    takes that long sometimes for like a

    book to come out so wow i didn't realize

    the publication process can take that

    amount of time and i guess longer too at

    times yeah so that one was for an edited

    handbook and that publication it just

    takes a long time when the editors are

    trying to corral like 40 academics to

    all write 40 different chapters around a

    topic area like many academics are very

    slow to respond or to fulfill their

    obligations so like sometimes it just

    takes forever because you send out your

    first draft and then

    several people will be late on those and

    then that delays the reviews and the

    reviewers are going to be late on those

    reviews so then that delay is when you

    can actually start working on your next

    draft of it and like it just keeps

    snowballing so some of those take

    forever like the fastest journal article

    i think i wrote was like published in

    about a year but most of times it takes

    longer than that at least it depends on

    the field and the journal or publication

    like a podcast episode i could record

    today and have it out tomorrow if i

    wanted to and get feedback on yeah yeah

    yeah i typically do reflection just you

    know after something or in my mind or if

    i need to i'll write something now

    that's a whole nother world when you're

    saying it out loud if you're going out

    and asking for others to join on a

    podcast it's a very cathartic and

    therapeutic experience

    [Laughter]

    yeah it's been a fun experience i

    am curious like down the road at some

    point when am i going to get some

    backlash especially when i talk about

    like equity and cs education there are

    some people who think we should not talk

    about that and because i am i'm still

    waiting for that moment where somebody

    tries to cancel me because i bring up

    equity discussions the equity piece

    needs to be discussed now because

    it needs to become more equitable

    because the longer it takes for it to

    not be equitable the deeper the hull

    we're digging right and that has some

    really heavy

    future ramifications down the line it's

    worth talking about yeah which is why

    i'm putting it out there so where might

    people go to connect with you and the

    organizations that you work with i

    would be able to be connected most

    easily via my email address which

    is

    a-l-i-l-h-o-l-t

    baldwin school dot org you can also

    reach me at my twitter handle at maker

    underscore things so and with that that

    concludes this week's episode of the

    csk8 podcast i hope you enjoyed this

    conversation with addison and i hope you

    check out the show notes at

    jaredlery.com where there's a bunch of

    computer science coding gaming and even

    drumming content on my website stay

    tuned next week for another episode and

    until then i hope you are staying safe

    and are having a wonderful week

Guest Bio

Addison Lilholt is currently the Middle School DREAM Lab Coordinator, Chair of the Computer Science & Engineering department, and teacher of CS and Interdisciplinary Design at the Baldwin School. With a background in Project Based Learning and multiple disciplines, he's been teaching for 10+ years in public and private settings. When the pandemic led him to remote learning, he had the chance to re-think classroom structure and gained notoriety among students, parents, and colleagues regarding these new innovative approaches including the gamification of his classes. He turned his computer science class into "The CS Show" which made the screens more acceptable during this challenging time in education. In this podcast he shares the chapters that led him to the path he is on today and has fun discussing many topics around CS in his classroom and beyond.


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    • 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.

    • James Fester on What Works with PBL

      • In this interview with James Fester, we discuss using informal learning approaches within formal learning spaces, what makes a learning experience engaging, how James’ experience in the National Parks Service’s Teacher Ranger Teacher program informed how he taught in the classroom, unpacking nuances of project-based learning, debunking common misconceptions of PBL, and so much more.

    • Lessons Learned From CSTA Chapters Across the United States with Jason Bohrer

      • In this interview with Jason Bohrer, we discuss lessons learned coming into computer science education from another subject area, lessons learned working with CSTA chapters across the country (and during a pandemic), how CSTA has impacted the field and continues to evolve over time, how Jason continued to learn about CS without getting burned out, considering equity and inclusion when recruiting for CS education, CSTA’s new CS Teacher Standards, and much more.

    • Lessons Learned from (In)Formal CS Education with Grant Smith

      • In this interview with Grant Smith, we discuss the importance of continuing to learn from other educators, what informal and formal learning spaces can learn from each other, how COVID has impacted Grant’s teaching philosophy, our preferences for in-person or virtual professional development and classroom instruction, lessons learned from entrepreneurial adventures in CS education, learning by jumping in and trying new things, heuristic-based learning, and so much more.

    • Project-based Learning in Computer Science with Justin Cannady

      • In this interview with Justin Cannady, we discuss project-based learning in CS, encouraging debugging and working through failure as students and teachers, considerations for integrating CS, lessons learned working on NMSI’s CS AlignEd, and much more.

    • Situated Language and Learning with Bryan Brown

      • In this interview Bryan Brown, we discuss the importance of language in education. In particular, we discuss the role of language in teaching and learning, discursive identity, situated language and learning, the importance of representation in education, the role of language on stress, how smartphones and virtual communication platforms (e.g., Zoom) could change learning, and many other topics relevant to CS education and learning.

    • The Place for Joy in Teaching and Learning with Sara Lev

      • In this interview with Sara Lev, we discuss the place for joy in teaching and learning, the impact of remote learning on PBL in early childhood, misconceptions around PBL in early childhood, encouraging curiosity by responding to questions with questions, social and emotional learning, the impact of yoga and meditation on teaching, and so much more.

    • The Pulse of PBL with Mike Kaechele

      • In this interview with Mike Kaechele, we discuss dismantling prejudices through projects, how to situate project-based learning within the community and for local impact, what can be learned when a project fails, the difference between projects and recipes, why social and emotional learning (SEL) is important, lessons learned teaching a variety of subject areas, differences between equity and equality in education, and so much more.

    • Unpacking Various Entry Points into Innovative Teaching with Jorge Valenzuela

      • In this interview with Jorge Valenzuela, we discuss the importance of engineering in STEM, situating computational thinking within a problem, getting started with computational thinking and computer science, project-based learning, incorporating social and emotional learning (SEL) in the classroom, Jorge’s approach to professional development, and much more.

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  • Connect with Addison

  • Find other CS educators and resources by using the #CSK8 hashtag on Twitter



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