Scratch Encore: The Design and Pilot of a Culturally-Relevant Intermediate Scratch Curriculum

Scratch Encore: The Design and Pilot of a Culturally-relevant Intermediate Scratch Curriculum
Jared O'Leary

In this episode I unpack Franklin et al.’s (2020) publication titled “Scratch Encore: The design and pilot of a culturally-relevant intermediate Scratch curriculum,” which introduces the Scratch Encore curriculum and provides a quick summary of positive feedback from the teachers who used the curriculum during a pilot year.

Article

Franklin, D., Weintrop, D., Palmer, J., Coenraad, M., Cobian, M., Beck, K., Rasmussen, A., Krause, S., White, M., Anaya, M., & Crenshaw, Z. (2020). Scratch Encore: The Design and Pilot of a Culturally-Relevant Intermediate Scratch Curriculum. In Proceedings of the 51st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE ’20). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, 794–800. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1145/3328778.3366912


Abstract

“While several introductory computer science curricula exist for children in K-8, there are few options that go beyond sequence, loops, and basic conditionals. The goal of this project is to not only fill this gap with a high-quality curriculum supported by complete instructional materials, but to also do so with an equity-balanced curriculum. That is, a curriculum that values advancing equity equally with student learning outcomes. In this paper, we introduce barriers to equity in public school classrooms, pedagogical approaches to culturally-relevant curricula, and how our Scratch Encore curriculum is designed to support equity-balanced learning. Finally, we present results of our pilot year, including early evidence of students taking advantage of the culturally-relevant design aspects.”


Author Keywords

Computational thinking, Scratch, K-12 education, culturally-relevant instruction


My One Sentence Summary

This paper introduces the Scratch Encore curriculum and provides a quick summary of positive feedback from the teachers who used the curriculum during a pilot year.


Some Of My Lingering Questions/Thoughts

  • Who gets to determine what kids consider as part of their culture or identities?

    • In what ways might educators and curriculum developers unintentionally essentialize students by assuming identification with a culture?

  • Where is the line between culturally-relevant curricula and culturally-specific curricula?

  • How might CS educators and curriculum developers prevent efforts in culturally-relevant experiences from coming across as pandering to youth culture?

  • I find it interesting that a teacher mentioned "I also like having my students do an old school worksheet, because it helps them to think about what they just learned and I can use them as exit tickets/mini assessments" (p. 798).

    • In particular, I question if this is focusing on what teachers are more used to/comfortable with, rather than focusing on whether kids enjoy learning through this approach or if they consider it as "busy work."

  • What didn't teachers like about the curriculum?


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