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.

  • Welcome back to another episode of the

    CSK8 podcast my name is jared o'leary

    each week of the podcast alternates

    between a solo episode where i unpack

    some scholarship in relation to computer

    science education

    and an episode where i interview a guest

    or multiple guests

    in today's episode i'm interviewing

    grant smith oddly enough several years

    ago i went to one of those like job fair

    things at a district where you just kind

    of got to interview with somebody and

    then ask some general screening

    questions

    and i was talking about how it'd be

    really cool instead of doing like

    microsoft office suite you instead did

    like art space coding

    and interestingly grant happened to be

    sitting at the table next to me and was

    one of the hiring people

    and was like hey let's talk about what

    we're doing so i actually worked with

    grant for the first year that i was in

    cs education

    so it's been great to catch up with him

    and to discuss some different topics

    like the

    importance of continuing to learn from

    other educators

    what informal and formal learning spaces

    can learn from each other

    how covet has impacted grant's teaching

    philosophy are 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

    as always the show notes includes many

    links to the resources such as the

    podcasts publications and whatnot that

    we mentioned in this particular episode

    which you can find by clicking the link

    in the description that you're listening

    to this on or by going to

    jaredoleary.com

    which has hundreds if not thousands of

    free resources for cs educators

    including a link to boot up pd.org

    which is where i create the 100 free

    coding curriculum that i develop

    with that being said the interview now

    begin with an introduction by

    grant my name is grant smith i am a

    former elementary

    and middle school teacher i was briefly

    a district of admin

    i'm also the author of everything you

    need to ace computer science and coding

    in one big fat notebook

    i've been involved in some csta projects

    i've done teacher training with teachers

    across the country

    i've helped write curriculum for

    codespark code.org

    the nine new girl scout coding badges

    and a number of other school districts

    currently i'm the vp of education at

    code ninjas we're an after school

    program that's

    around the world we teach coding to kids

    ages 5 through 14.

    i know you have experience writing a

    book so this will probably be an easy

    question for you to answer

    but we're going to flip it instead of

    talking about content knowledge we'll

    talk about your journey into cs

    education so if you

    write like an autobiography of your

    journey through cs education

    what would the title of each chapter be

    i would title the first chapter

    fake it till you make it and then i

    think i know what i'm doing

    but looking back it's embarrassing clear

    that i have no idea what i'm doing

    and then the next chapter is i have a

    ton to learn but i'm here to jump in

    and the current chapter that i'm living

    would be it's clear

    i can't learn or do everything so it's

    time to focus

    yeah lots of snaps to that one that

    resonates with me

    what are some things that you've learned

    from each of those chapters yeah so

    you know in the beginning as the fake it

    till you make it i was actually supposed

    to be a science teacher

    my first principal said hey i noticed

    you can code why don't you teach coding

    instead

    i thought that there would be a ton of

    curriculum support out there

    other teachers doing it in the district

    at least and there really wasn't any of

    that support and so

    i really had to jump in and just start

    trying

    and baking that i knew what i was doing

    to my students

    and just trying to see what worked with

    them luckily i taught multiple periods

    so if you've done this before you know

    by the last period of the day your

    lesson has finally been refined and you

    can kind of tuck that one away

    and then i moved into training other

    teachers where i was still faking it

    you know you were there at avondale with

    me i was totally faking it and it was

    so embarrassing you know how much i

    thought i knew when i really knew

    nothing and that's where at avondale

    where i started to shift my mind to i

    thought i knew what i was doing but then

    i started to see

    other people doing amazing things across

    the country seeing

    that there are some amazing things

    happening at the k8 space

    and then i got embarrassed because i

    thought what i was doing was hot stuff

    and it really was nothing

    and that's where i kind of shifted my

    tune to wow i have a ton to learn

    and that's where my next chapter started

    that's kind of where

    i started to write my own book i was

    approached by

    workmen to write this book they already

    had the plan the idea for it they just

    needed someone to write it

    so i jumped in learned as much as i

    could about everything that they thought

    i knew already

    and put it into a book and started my

    own little teacher training

    business training other teachers eager

    to share what i had learned and to

    continue to learn

    from all the teachers that i had met

    that's where i really started to

    solidify the idea that you know

    a lot of people understand that you can

    learn something from everybody but

    that's where i really started to take

    that to heart and

    pay attention to everybody every

    classroom that i visited every person i

    spoke to every teacher

    regardless if it was their first pd

    they've ever been to and they'd never

    taught

    cs in their life or if they've been

    doing it for decades and

    have research papers you know about it

    and whatnot so everybody has something

    that you can

    learn from them and then now i feel like

    i've done

    so many different things that it's time

    to focus

    and you really got to hone in on

    something because

    i guess at that previous chapter like i

    said i've written a book

    i started my own little teacher training

    company my wife and i did an instagram

    thing i did curriculum development for

    various companies

    a chinese company called vipkid you know

    whoever wanted work done

    i was out there raising my hand and you

    just can't learn everything

    and i realized i need to start to

    actually get some mastery and not be a

    jack of all traits

    and so that's why i'm kind of focusing

    now and focusing on the space that i'm

    in now

    yeah a lot of what you just said

    resonates with me like i've also

    refined my focus at boot up so like i

    was

    spending a ton of time doing pd stuff so

    now i'm spending more time just focus on

    curriculum and research and

    content and whatnot but then even what

    you're saying with the like you can

    learn something from everybody

    one of the things that i've also

    realized early on is i can also learn

    what not to do from

    people because i've had some great

    educators in my life and some really bad

    ones and i go okay i will make sure i

    never do that thing

    yeah exactly i didn't say you had to be

    a positive person from everybody

    i'm curious so one of the things i like

    to think about

    is like something that i initially

    believed in when i was first in

    education and i no longer believe

    i'm curious what that would be for you

    like something related to cs education

    that you're like oh yeah this is great

    and then

    now you're like no i don't really agree

    with that yeah do you remember in the

    early days

    when it was popular to say you know as a

    teacher you don't need to know

    anything about cs to teach it i feel

    like i still hear people say that today

    but i've visited enough classrooms now

    to know that

    really you should know something about

    cs

    to be teaching it and it was a romantic

    idea so nice to be able to think about

    that like wow i can do this too even if

    i know nothing about it and i think

    everybody has to start somewhere so i'm

    not saying don't get started if you know

    nothing about it

    definitely get started but i don't think

    that's where it should end

    i think that phrase was overused to the

    point where people

    release themselves from the

    responsibility of continuing their

    education right

    and so the pd that is offered now

    is still not enough we have so much work

    to expand our own knowledge and we need

    mastery in computer science education

    yeah i totally agree i understand the

    sentiment but i

    also know like you said it can't be the

    end point is there a piece of advice

    related to education that has really

    resonated with you

    yeah i don't know if you remember flora

    from our school district that we worked

    together at

    but she was my boss and she would

    answer every difficult question with do

    whatever is best for the children

    actually have it behind me you're not

    going to see it on audio but

    i keep that sign with me everywhere i go

    and it's basically my answer and always

    my thoughts

    is my current role we do a lot of

    curriculum development so whatever

    content we create whatever i'm doing i

    want to think about

    how this will impact the child children

    as a whole

    too is this inclusive how will this

    impact their lives how will this improve

    their lives

    and make sure that i'm doing whatever's

    best for them so if somebody were to

    walk into

    like an ideal cs learning space or

    environment

    what would they see hear or experience

    i love this question because this is one

    of the reasons why i ended up joining

    code ninjas

    i love public education i loved my time

    training teachers i loved

    being a teacher one of the cool parts

    about being in an after school setting

    is we have different constraints

    and we have a little bit more freedom to

    kind of do what we want i wanted to join

    code ninjas because i saw the seedling

    company

    looking for how they can

    impact children's lives and help them

    learn coding but not knowing how to do

    it

    and ever since i was a teacher i had

    always thought about what does that

    ideal environment look like so i saw

    code ninjas as a place where i could go

    in

    and mold it to be what i had always

    hoped it would look like in

    and really i love mitch resnick i'm

    reading

    lifelong kindergarten for the third time

    right now because i feel like every time

    i read it i gather something new

    and so you know those four ps are really

    what i look for and that's kind of the

    simplest explanation i can dig a little

    bit deeper but you know the projects

    peers passion play

    are really what i'm looking for and what

    i'm trying to

    accomplish at code ninjas i strongly

    believe in all of those

    four ps i remember your podcast jared

    with

    mark guzdal where he talked about how he

    was a reformed constructionist i loved

    that

    because i always thought of myself as a

    practical constructionist right because

    it kind of in the same vein right where

    you can't and you too had talked about

    this where you can't just

    do full bore on something right you have

    to balance it

    and so that's something else that i

    think about when i want to think about

    the ideal experiences

    i do strongly believe in the

    constructionist

    learning theory and i love all the work

    that seymour paper has done however

    in the practical sense i think kids and

    students need to be supported in ways

    we have to think about who the teachers

    are how knowledgeable and skilled they

    are

    we have to think about where the kid is

    developmentally you know how old are

    they but you know how much time have

    they spent in this space

    everything like that and so you know

    when i think about that i think about

    kids

    building their own projects excitedly

    sharing them with their peers

    but also we're supporting them in ways

    that that we can

    i don't think of lectures when i think

    of the ideal learning environment for

    kids i'm in the k-8 space so maybe this

    is different for older kids but i don't

    think of

    walking in and seeing a teacher at the

    front of room lecturing the whole class

    i think of kids engaging in things that

    they want to learn and the teacher

    pulling small groups or helping

    one-on-one or better yet kids helping

    each other

    at some point kids do need access to

    knowledge that they can't just stumble

    upon themselves

    that's kind of my balancing act with

    constructionists but

    i don't think that's provided through a

    lecture environment right

    i loved visiting your classrooms jared

    where kids it looks like chaos and it

    was amazing because kids are all doing

    their own thing

    and they're teaching each other and you

    would sit there

    and help explain some really cool

    concept to kids and

    they'd go home thinking about it and you

    know with a deeper understanding of it

    but they were loving it and kids kind of

    learned at their own pace and

    like that a lot too and that's the other

    part that i would say is one of the nice

    things about not

    being in the public school setting is

    kids can go at their individually owned

    pace

    we don't have to conform to a semester

    we actually have different programs

    where you can come in once

    a week twice a week four times a week

    you know there are different

    time periods that you can come in you

    can stay for three five years and

    continue and keep learning

    and i think that's really cool and so i

    don't know those are kind of all my

    ideal environments along with just kids

    loving it well

    for context for people who haven't been

    in my former classroom so like

    if you were to walk in to like let's say

    a fourth grade class

    they'd be potentially working on a

    scratch project or

    they'd be coding music using ruby and

    sonic pi or they'd be creating art and

    animation with javascript and khan

    academy stuff or they'd be creating like

    some apps with like swift and xcode

    so my role in that 40 minutes was to

    just kind of walk around

    ask questions facilitate you personally

    have been into

    classes where i have literally spent all

    just asking questions guiding them

    through things and just kind of like

    looking up every now and then to make

    sure like nobody's on fire or anything

    like that and

    make sure that the rest of the class is

    going good but like your comment about

    the lectures

    it was always one on one and it was

    usually in the form of questions and

    asking

    and trying to guide and as opposed to

    like full group okay class we're all

    going to talk about this thing and i'm

    going to talk at you so

    yeah it's a very different approach

    personalized

    right it is definitely personalized but

    you're mentioning of like

    having experience in the k-8 like it's

    the same approach that i've also

    used in high school the same i've used

    with undergrads and with like graduate

    students like it works

    like across all of them so yeah i'm more

    biased to

    try and avoid full group instruction

    yeah i think it's definitely the way to

    go i mean we have to support our kids

    but i think there are better ways to do

    it

    so you have a wealth of experience that

    many cs educators don't have because of

    your background both

    in the classroom and then supporting

    classroom educators across the country

    and i also have had some interesting

    experiences like when i was

    doing music education stuff where i was

    teaching in the classroom but then

    working

    in like these outside groups that were

    independent from any kind of school and

    organization and whatnot

    and so like i too have seen the

    interesting contrast between these like

    formalized and informal learning spaces

    in different subject areas and what i'm

    curious from like your

    perspective like how does each inform

    the other like how does your experience

    in formalized learning inform the

    informal

    learning and then vice versa that's a

    great question because i actually think

    we have a lot to learn from each other

    and i think one thing i'm excited about

    is in the future

    bringing more to conferences like csta a

    couple of my team members that code

    ninjas are doing a presentation because

    i feel like we should share more i don't

    remember hearing a lot when i was on the

    teacher side the formal education side

    i don't remember hearing a lot from the

    informal and that may have been because

    i was ignoring them and so i kind of

    want to make sure that we do get this

    back and forth conversation

    because i think there's a lot to learn

    between the two sides one thing that was

    interesting that i have brought over

    from formal education into informal

    education is i know assessment

    is kind of a bad word for some people

    because of where state assessments have

    taken

    education but it's an important thing to

    know what your kids know

    right something that i brought into our

    informal space

    is i want to know what our kids know

    how much they know about it so that i

    know how they need to be supported so

    that they can continue to learn

    we're not going to do scantron tests or

    anything like that

    but we are trying to be creative about

    how we're approaching assessment

    so i mean we're working with you know

    we've talked with diana franklin

    about ways to assess computational

    thinking in block-based coding

    environments things like that right

    to try and understand how that's

    happening we actually are developing our

    own learning management system where

    we're trying to

    build in assessments that happen in the

    background so we're not even telling

    kids that we're assessing them

    but we want to know so that we as

    curriculum developers can provide more

    or less support or

    more or less training to our

    facilitators to help them know how to

    support the kids

    when needed then the other part about

    assessment is we have a different set of

    stakeholders now

    so before assessment was important to

    district admin who need to know

    where to support the schools and the

    kids that are in those schools

    for us we need to show parents progress

    they're not going to pay for their kid

    to come to this program if they don't

    believe that good things are happening

    and part of that is showing more than

    just the cool project

    and this happens all the time parents

    ask okay this is a cool project but what

    did my kid learn

    right and so we need to be able to show

    them that no

    we do know what they learned and here's

    what they ended up learning right so

    it's interesting i thought i would get

    away from assessment when i joined

    informal but it is something that i've

    kind of brought over and then on the

    other side

    you also interviewed dominick sanders

    he did a better job explaining this than

    me about

    personally connecting with kids that's

    something i feel like we do

    very well in the informal space and i

    know there are a lot of great teachers

    like

    him and you that do this and

    i'm sure the listeners of this podcast

    also do this but i feel like in the

    informal space we do this

    really well because we have to we have

    to have that personal

    connection with every child so that the

    parent feels safe dropping their kids

    off

    so we tell our facilitators you know the

    first thing you do

    is connect with the kids like i don't

    care what the kids know

    yet until you know their dog's name

    their favorite

    hobby you know all the things about the

    kid and then

    we want to work with the kid so that's

    something that's really fun

    yeah that's a really good point if we

    were to kind of generalize here and

    break things down

    into two categories in education there's

    like the mandatory

    education and then the education when

    you volunteer or even pay to attend

    and like you have to approach those two

    things very differently

    because if everybody is like forced to

    be there then you're going to have kids

    who are like i'm here but it doesn't

    mean i'm going to work

    but then if they're volunteering to be

    there or paying to be there then that's

    very different because like if you want

    them to keep coming back you have to

    really make it meaningful not to say

    that like you don't in the other one

    like having been in like music groups

    where i was literally paying thousands

    of dollars just to perform with it and

    to receive an education

    versus like a group where i was required

    to be there for a degree

    those were two very different

    experiences for me yeah exactly

    so you've been in education for a while

    and had a variety of experiences

    and knowing your educational philosophy

    and understanding

    like before covid i'm curious like

    personally like how

    has your philosophy kind of changed or

    been solidified

    since covid yeah i've had a weird

    relationship with

    virtual and online learning before and

    after covet

    i have a master's degree that was 100

    online and loved it

    the school i attended was amazing they

    practiced what they preached

    it was in educational technology and so

    they really did everything

    right i actually started another program

    a doctoral program that was also online

    and we would be reading the research on

    how to teach online and they would not

    be following the practices that

    anyway so it was really frustrating the

    masters program though was done right so

    i've seen both sides

    done right and done wrong i've also made

    an online professional development

    course right but i've also done a lot of

    in-person teacher training i've done

    in-person teaching with kids i've also

    developed and

    it was a synchronous course for vipkid

    in china

    and then i also worked for codespark for

    a short time as their director of

    education

    and they are a platform that

    teachers do use in their schools but the

    primary audience is parents at home

    who just let their kids go on the

    platform and there's no support

    you know the parents don't know what's

    going on it's just app

    driven right so kind of seeing a lot of

    these different experiences

    the culmination of seeing everything was

    why i was looking for an in-person

    experience because i had kind of dipped

    my toe in so many

    slightly different experiences so when i

    saw goodness just like oh this is great

    i really want in person and then covet

    happened

    a few months after i had joined code

    ninjas where just out of necessity

    obviously we had to do

    online learning we tried to replicate as

    much of the community some of the things

    that i like about in-person learning is

    that the community you know peers

    at one of the p's the kids coming

    together to be able to work with each

    other

    and so we try to emulate that it's very

    difficult to do

    and as we've been able to come out in

    some of our

    areas you know right now canada's just

    kind of coming out uk still kind of

    tough in the u.s a lot of our states are

    coming out so we're seeing more and more

    kids in our centers

    we're excited to have the kids back in

    centers is what it comes down to

    we had a great run doing virtual stuff

    but we'll not be pursuing that any

    further we may have some select

    activities or small add-on programs for

    kids who

    are taking the summer off from code

    ninjas sometimes we have kids who do

    that

    and maybe they want to keep engaging at

    home on their own but i

    strongly believe in the connectedness of

    an in-person experience

    being able to connect with their peers

    but also with our facilitators

    i view our facilitators as more like

    mentors someone who kids can kind of

    look up to and look forward to seeing

    and so you know i know there are going

    to be teachers out there that disagree

    with me

    but i'm willing to have a debate with

    them because i actually feel very

    strongly about the in-person experience

    especially for computer science

    education yeah i see both

    sides of or both like camps like yeah

    there's

    a ton of great things that can be done

    online but in our internal discussions

    with boot up we've been talking about

    this

    for multiple years now is do we want to

    have like an online component or what

    about like we're all schools where it's

    hard to go out and do an in-person pd do

    we offer like virtual

    etc so this is like covet didn't start

    those conversations

    but we have consistently been like in

    person is the best way to model things

    is the best way to

    make those connections communities et

    cetera so like i'm in agreement with you

    and i've done research on online like

    spaces and i love them like they're

    great you can learn a lot

    but still prefer the in person yeah and

    i think you know

    especially for kids because for example

    for pd i made an online course that was

    semi-synchronous so i actually would

    mail them there were eight

    modules in the course i mailed a box to

    the group and you had to form a group of

    four people in the group

    and i would mail the cute names for

    everybody i can't remember

    what the name was for the person who

    received the package but anyway they had

    their job they were supposed to receive

    the package

    and then they were supposed to meet

    somewhere someone's classroom

    i saw people meeting at panera you know

    whatever open up the box together

    and then they would look online on the

    course watch the short little videos i

    had made

    and then do the activities together so

    they were actually

    working on projects together and so in

    that way we were trying to like

    replicate the in-person experience so i

    think there are ways where you can

    leverage technology like you said to

    reach rural areas and whatnot

    but for kids i would prefer

    in person strongly over cure online i'm

    curious if we could expand upon

    like what you just mentioned that was a

    really creative idea

    very innovative you so you've had the

    experience doing something like that but

    you've also had experience like writing

    a book you also had experience like

    the project that you mentioned with your

    wife like on instagram like

    what have these different experiences

    like through the

    entrepreneurship around cs education

    taught you about cs education

    yeah there are a couple lessons that i

    learned some of them are lessons

    some of them just nice lessons one was

    progress happens when resources are

    allocated

    right but more resources does not always

    guarantee more progress

    so something you know that you have to

    consider

    is teacher training curriculum

    development

    hardware you know computers cool devices

    robots micro bits mickey mickey's things

    like that

    these all cost money and also

    time is a huge resource as well and so

    if you want to make something happen you

    have to pour resources into it

    the other thing is it's okay not to

    scale

    that's something that i learned later on

    is i was trying to scale things

    because i wanted to have a larger impact

    on more kids and so

    i kind of realized that it's actually

    okay

    just to do something cool for the people

    around you

    and do something small so for example my

    wife and i started an instagram account

    well it started out with i read a

    research article out of

    australia it was titled unraveling the

    cognition

    of coding in three to six year olds it's

    really interesting because the study was

    about you know

    trying to develop an assessment tool

    that assesses computational thinking in

    kids ages three through six

    and i thought wow what is this

    can you do that and it was just

    eye-opening and i had a three-year-old

    at the time

    and a one-year-old also but i started to

    think well okay they're trying to assess

    this

    can you teach it what does that look

    like and i'm also

    one of those believers that first i

    understand we have so many definitions

    of computational thinking i think we

    need one i agree

    i also believe that it has to happen

    with a computer but

    i started to think about are there

    precursors

    like what are the abcs of coding and

    computational thinking

    i have no idea if there's transfer this

    is not a real study

    but my wife and i decided to try and

    make

    activities for our three-year-old and to

    hold ourselves accountable

    we opened up an instagram account and i

    say we

    it really was 90 her i would kind of

    give ideas and then she would do it all

    and so i should probably just say she

    we would make these activities and then

    put them on instagram just to

    i don't know if you post it somewhere

    you're more accountable right

    we did not think anything would happen

    two years later she

    gained 15 000 followers most of which

    had no idea what this was

    had no background in coding instagram

    will give you the stats

    almost all of the followers were moms of

    small children

    and what was interesting is my wife has

    no background in computer science has

    never taken a computer science class in

    her life

    so our other little experiment was can i

    give some ideas and then

    someone who doesn't know as much can

    they make cute activities out of it

    i don't know what the results are i

    don't know we failed or if we succeeded

    i have no real assessment i didn't use

    this australian assessment on my own kid

    i probably should go back and see

    i also didn't have a lot of faith in the

    assessment that was well so

    i didn't quite know where to go with

    this but the whole idea was

    taking it back to it's okay to not scale

    big but also progress happens when

    resources are allocated

    for this instagram account little

    problem solvers if you want to go look

    it up it's still up the activities are

    still there

    they're all unplugged activities it's

    pretty cute and a lot of fun to do with

    kids regardless of if my kid

    learned anything or what not you know

    our one-year-old is now a three-year-old

    and we do the activities with her as

    well

    the point is it took a lot of time we

    didn't put money into it but it took a

    lot of time

    and if you want to make something happen

    you just got to jump in and start doing

    it

    and it was okay just to start with their

    own kids we didn't have plans to scale

    we ended up even doing a kickstarter

    where we had pixel blocks we developed a

    toy to teach specific concepts and that

    was a fun experience too

    and we just thought can we do this and

    then we jumped in and did it and

    i think that's what i would tell

    teachers is just jump in and try

    right i'm sure everyone listening to

    this podcast has some amazing idea

    is probably starting to think about how

    they can make it happen

    and i would encourage everyone to just

    go and try and make it happen

    there's a lot of cool things that still

    need to be done in computer science

    education

    and allocate your resources to it if you

    think it's worth it

    yeah i like that advice it actually

    resonates with

    me right now cause like having one foot

    in two different fields like

    it's been interesting like i've been

    doing all the cs content for a while now

    but now i'm also like on the weekends

    creating like percussion content which

    was like my original background

    in education was playing the drums and

    teaching people how to do that i like

    started sharing things on social media

    for like the first time

    in years related to percussion and like

    the anxiety that comes with that

    like it's it's been funny for me to like

    think through that and go wait i have a

    podcast that reached like

    hundreds and thousands of people like

    every single month

    and yet i'm nervous about like sharing

    something related to percussion on

    twitter like come on

    but this is also a great example of this

    podcast itself right

    you know you saw a need i don't know if

    you have podcast experience i've never

    heard of it from you but you just jumped

    in and did it right

    and and you learned what needed to learn

    we had no idea what instagram

    what it took to run an instagram account

    right but we jumped in and we learned

    and figured it out and i'm sure we

    failed in many ways but it was very cool

    because now we have that experience and

    can kind of tuck it away and

    it's just a cool life experience i

    wonder if your answer to this question

    will kind of relate to that but

    what do you feel is holding back

    educators or the field and what can we

    do i have a couple quotes in response to

    this because

    i love alan turing's quote we can only

    see a short distance ahead but we can

    see plenty there that needs to be done

    and that's how i felt education has been

    right

    there's still so much that we need to do

    it's almost like jared pick a category

    and then i will tell you how it's still

    holding teachers back you know

    everything

    is holding us back teachers need better

    and more training

    we need more robust curriculum schools

    need more teachers

    and more resources to offer this to

    their students governments need more

    data to

    convince them to allocate more resources

    to the schools you know it's just a huge

    thing and and it goes even to the

    parents parents don't understand on my

    side the informal education that's one

    of the things is like

    trying to help the parents understand

    what's going on a lot of parents want

    this for the kids but

    can they recognize good instruction or a

    good program do they know what their

    kids should be learning

    and so it's everything right and that's

    why i say allocate your resources let's

    all pitch in

    and let's make it happen that leads to

    my other favorite quote from

    catherine johnson everything was so new

    the whole idea of going into space

    was new and daring there were no

    textbooks we had to write them right

    and that's how i kind of felt that's

    what we're all doing all

    the time we all make our own lessons

    probably we all make our own

    programs and content and pd and whatever

    else needs to be done

    because it's also new we're not going to

    the moon but we're doing cool things

    regardless

    so that leads perfectly into the next

    question is so like how do you practice

    and iterate on your abilities as an

    educator

    there's definitely something to be said

    about just jumping in and putting

    yourself i know it's so cliche to say

    put yourself outside of your comfort

    zone

    but that's kind of how it goes put

    yourself outside your comfort zone do

    something

    you wouldn't normally do and then you

    know reflect on it and then try again

    it's funny because i studied information

    systems in college because

    i realized when i was looking at the

    classes and everything

    that i would never have to write an

    essay and

    i hated writing and i was so excited to

    just be able to create projects for my

    homework and then i was asked to write

    this book

    and it's 550 pages it's not

    insignificant

    and so i thought you know i hate writing

    but

    you got to do things that you're not

    comfortable with and i

    don't know that i would repeat a 550

    page book but i'm interested in shorter

    books

    i've learned a lot about that process

    that i would have never been exposed to

    and it was a really cool experience and

    i hope it helps a lot of kids talk to

    parents and

    kids who have bought it and they love it

    and so that makes it seem worth it even

    though it took

    three years and many weekends and nights

    and things like that

    and then if i were to do it again i

    would reflect

    get feedback and then iterate right and

    i think that's the same for everything

    like when i would make

    pd you jump in do it ask for feedback

    always make it better next time ask for

    feedback make it better next time

    yeah i like that approach of just kind

    of

    getting outside of your comfort zone for

    context like this podcast i'm an

    introvert and

    was like very nervous the first time i

    ever even did this

    and just happened to get elia kim for

    the very first interview

    and was like okay i'm jumping in here we

    go let's let's do this thing and like

    the very first class i ever taught on my

    own i had a panic attack right before

    it happened because it's just like oh my

    gosh like i hope i'm really good like

    i don't want to like teach this class

    very poorly et cetera and

    even the very first video that i made

    for boot up i've made like a few hundred

    now but the very first one it took me

    like a dozen retakes just to get the

    like

    the intro the first like five seconds

    because i was just i felt so

    uncomfortable being an introvert like

    putting myself

    out there and like sharing it what not

    so i like that think about now how much

    you've learned about video editing audio

    editing

    prepping people for calls you know all

    those things are great assets to add

    to your tool belt how do you do that

    without

    getting that burnout that can come with

    like pushing yourself too far or doing

    too many things

    that's true i've said one thing i've

    said go and do it and allocate your

    resources right

    i say no now there's a balance right

    and i'm now in a position where

    i can't take on many additional projects

    i wouldn't be able to write a 550 page

    book right now

    i wouldn't be able to make a whole pd

    course we've even put our instagram

    account

    on hold because of what i'm doing now in

    my current position it's just too much

    right and i want to have that balance i

    don't want to burn out i want to be able

    to see my kids

    and so there is a lot to be done there

    is so much ahead of us

    that needs to be done but we're no good

    to each other

    if we all burn out and we need to find

    that balance in our lives

    and we need to find out what works for

    us

    i know we've talked about teachers who

    end up leaving to go back into software

    development right because the pay is not

    good enough that's another form of

    burnout

    and we need to find places that we can

    feel impactful effective but also

    sustainable so yeah it's all about the

    sustainable got to take care of

    ourselves

    yeah looking at the long-term potential

    impact of what you're doing right now

    and how that might impact things like

    that is something that i

    too am having to look at and also learn

    how to say no still learning

    do you have recommendations for how to

    improve equity or inclusion in cs

    education

    i'm not an expert on this and there are

    far

    smarter better people i am in the

    learning and

    trying phase still on this personally

    what i try and do is just make sure that

    everything kids do

    is personally exciting to them beyond

    that i'm listening learning and trying

    my best

    what do you wish there's more research

    that could inform your own practices

    there are two things that i want more

    research on and honestly i need to do

    more reading and that's why i appreciate

    this podcast thank you for giving me the

    cliff's notes version

    and i wish i did more and so thank you

    for that but also what i would like to

    see more research in

    is developing assessments for k-8 in

    creative

    ways right what we're trying to do at

    code ninjas is creatively assess

    kids in the background and when i say

    creatively i mean they are working on

    creative projects we are not telling

    them

    a question or a prompt and then they

    have to make something we want them to

    make what they want to make but i want

    to assess if they've used the

    concepts that we want them to use right

    so i'd like some more

    research on that obviously there are

    bigger topics

    to be had like transfer and you know we

    transfer kids from blocks to text

    i want to know if there's transfer to

    bigger

    areas is coding useful for other areas

    in life

    i want more research on that i want one

    definition of computational thinking

    i want to know what that definition of

    computational thinking how that impacts

    everything it'd be helpful in talking to

    parents

    about what their kids are doing to know

    all of these things a lot of parents

    are excited about coding and they want

    their kids to know

    this you know this skill and and have

    this skill for the 21st century

    but i think we need to articulate the

    why better i think research would help

    us

    one of them that stood out was like the

    definition of computational thinking so

    i was involved in

    a summit that was trying to bring

    together

    researchers and practitioners to talk

    about and come to a definition of

    computational thinking

    and there was a lot of what i would

    probably describe as

    healthy debate it was very passionate

    in terms of what some people thought

    that was very different than others

    and ultimately there was no definition

    that came out of it that was

    a unified definition but it was at least

    good dialogue

    yeah i think that would be helpful right

    what about something that you're working

    on right now that you could potentially

    help with

    what if there's a listener out there who

    might be able to assist with that what

    would that be

    yeah we have big plans for code ninjas

    in what we'd like our curriculum

    and our programs and our what our kids

    do in our centers to look like

    we're at the beginning of a huge shift

    in how we reach kids and what we do with

    them

    we're excited about offering the best

    coding environment in the world in my

    opinion because this is why i'm here

    right i want to kind of make this the

    culmination of everything we know about

    practical application you know the

    practitioners but also looking at

    research

    and then pushing the envelope we've

    hired some pretty heavy hitters on our

    team that

    are also experts people on this call may

    recognize bill marslin from san

    francisco we have sarah smallovitz from

    the creative computing lab

    we have polly smith from nine dots and a

    few other people that have done pretty

    amazing things

    and we want to continue to add to that

    because we have such big plans for

    what our programs should look like it's

    not just selfish it's not just so that

    our centers are the best in the world or

    whatever i actually want to help

    push and help expand what we know about

    computer science education how it should

    be taught the pedagogy of it

    and everything like that so that we can

    then help inform the community too

    because we have fewer constraints

    because we can do what we want i feel

    like we're in a position

    to further the field but we need experts

    so

    we have been hiring for over a year now

    and continue to hire if you are someone

    who has experience

    in developing computer science

    curriculum for k-8

    kiddos and you love constructionism you

    love project-based learning you love

    kids having fun working in a self-paced

    environment

    then you should definitely join us we

    would love to have someone like that on

    our team you can work remotely

    and yeah we have a pretty amazing team

    we all get along we love each other

    yeah do you have any questions for

    myself or for the field

    yeah you've talked about heuristic

    learning that's something that i want to

    get into more at good ninjas too

    how do you make that practically happen

    right like what are your tips for making

    that happen

    in the classroom or in a classroom type

    setting so

    that approach is an approach how i

    generally

    take like conference presentations like

    the very first like session i ever did

    i sat down was like what kind of a

    session would i have wanted to attend

    and what i was seeing at a lot of the

    conference that i was going to is very

    how to do this very specific thing in a

    very specific context

    rather than how to think broadly and

    then be able to come up with your own

    steps for your own particular context

    and so in my presentations i have a

    tendency to give like two hours worth of

    content in an hour long session

    and so what i'll do is i'll like point

    to these resources and be like okay

    we're gonna spend two minutes talking

    about this thing that if you actually

    dive into it it'll probably take you

    like 20 minutes to do

    and so i will point to all these things

    and basically like

    a tree like branch out into all these

    different potentials

    but not necessarily go down each one of

    those specific branches

    and really focus on the what thoughts

    went behind

    the thing that i ultimately ended up

    doing and

    use that as a model but not as a mandate

    so like here's a thing and here's how i

    thought through and came up with this

    thing for this specific context

    but you in your class and with your own

    comfort in your own community and

    students and whatnot

    what are some things that you could

    think through to

    actually apply that in your context does

    that make sense

    yeah it makes sense so i just want to

    make sure that i knew where you were

    coming from because i've been

    incubating this idea where we would be

    able to provide resources like you're

    saying just point to them

    and for example at home just finished

    printing

    a ironman helmet for my six-year-old we

    printed it together

    we programmed the micro bit soldered the

    solders there soldered the servos in and

    everything and he loves wearing it

    around

    i want our kids at code ninjas to be

    able to come to our center and do

    something like that but

    not be told it's an ironman helmet right

    like

    i want to be able to provide them with

    the option of hey here's what you need

    to know about 3d printing

    and have you know various levels of

    depth that they can dive into here's

    what you need to know about the micro

    bit here's what you need to know about

    circuits and soldering and things like

    that right and then they theoretically

    could go and make their own thing so is

    that within that house of what you were

    saying if i were to

    point them to those resources like you

    do at conferences can you see that being

    applicable

    in a setting with kids yeah definitely

    so there have been a couple of things

    that

    formed that thought for me so i did an

    episode

    unpacking k anders erickson's like one

    of his seminal works

    on developing skills and expertise so

    i had a professor who working with

    pre-service

    educators was saying in that four years

    they're not going to get enough time and

    experience to become

    an expert in education or even really

    know how to do education

    very well no matter how good your

    program is there's just not enough time

    to do that because you need to actually

    get out there and try and fail

    and then learn from that so her

    particular approach was

    i'm getting them to think as educators

    so that way long

    term when they do come up to some kind

    of a

    use case scenario or experience that is

    outside of the scope or not talked about

    in any of the

    examples or projects or whatever in the

    pre-service education

    they'll at least know how to think

    through how to do that and so for me

    i'm trying to think of okay when i was

    working in a k-8 school i saw kids

    potentially for nine years in a row

    but what about after that and what about

    outside of that what about when they go

    home and they are away from anyone who

    can

    answer their questions how can you get

    them to think on their own so that way

    it can be like self-directed learning

    and so that was kind of like the overall

    things that really kind of guided that

    thought process because like in an

    hour or even a three hour long workshop

    with teachers like they're eventually

    going to run into more questions and so

    encouraging them to think rather than

    just how to do this very specific thing

    that's what i tend to focus on

    i like that because that's what my

    ultimate goal i want our kids to be able

    to be

    innovators and solve their own problems

    right surely code and they'll learn how

    to code

    but the bigger thing is i want them to

    be able to know how to

    make their own iron man helmet without

    instructions right and just know where

    to go

    what to ask things like that yeah i like

    that i will say

    there has been some pushback some people

    who see me present

    or see me facilitate or teach a class

    assume i don't know how to do it the way

    most people do it

    and so like they think that this is like

    a deficit and like i don't get it and

    it's like

    no no you don't understand because i've

    done it before i'm just choosing not to

    do that

    intentionally because i don't think it's

    as valuable and so like

    there has to be some dialogue usually

    around like why

    you're doing this and that can be

    helpful because otherwise people might

    look at it and go okay well the way

    jared just did this is different than

    the other like 10 people that came

    before them so clearly they don't know

    what they're doing

    it's like well to me it actually seems

    more difficult

    to accomplish successfully right because

    we have to

    anticipate where kids minds will be

    provide them with

    all the resources that they need which

    is much more difficult than providing

    them one resource that every kid has to

    use right

    and so yeah definitely i can see

    how this would balloon into a huge

    project well

    that's exciting though i think that is

    kind of part of the future of

    where we could take this kids becoming

    amazing thinkers right

    and solving their own problems yeah i

    mean

    i hope so especially that's one of the

    main points of like computational

    thinking whichever definition you go

    with most of it's around solving some

    kind of a problem

    so then where might people go to connect

    with you and the organizations that you

    work with

    yeah you can visit us at codeninjas.com

    you can find me on linkedin

    sadly i'm not on twitter anymore this

    last year has just been too much

    i'll be attending csta bill marslin and

    polly smith from my team will be

    presenting at csta

    sarah smallovitz will also be presenting

    but she won't be presenting as part of

    couldn't just she's doing her own thing

    yeah around the community

    we like to stay present and stay active

    because we still consider ourselves

    teachers and educators and

    want to be part of this community and

    with that that concludes this week's

    episode of the cska podcast

    make sure you visit jaredeliri.com to

    check out the show notes or by clicking

    the link in the app that you're

    listening to this on

    that way you can connect to grant and

    check out his book and see the resources

    that we mentioned in this particular

    episode

    stay tuned next week for another

    unpacking scholarship episode and two

    weeks from now for another interview

    hope you're all staying safe and having

    a wonderful week

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