West Virginia University College of Engineering and Mineral Resources and The EdVenture Group have partnered successfully over the past four years to increase the awareness and classroom applications of engineering curriculum through technology with 7 th-12 th grade students across the state of WV. Math and Science teachers from across the state have collaborated with education consultants, industry professionals, graduate students, and one another to gain knowledge and create units that focus on STEM careers and curriculum. The units, known as TIME (Tools for Integrating Math and Engineering) Kits, are stored electronically on a free teacher resource site for use in classrooms across the country. www.thesolutionsite.com The 12-hour units of instruction are developed during a week-long workshop that provides classroom teachers with the opportunity to work with engineering faculty, graduate assistants and industry experts. The model is based on providing time for teachers to learn, tools for teachers to use and strategies to assist them in focusing on and connecting engineering to STEM course work. By connecting university experts, industry experts and 7 th-12 th grade educators a new network has been created to link these groups and bring all areas of knowledge and application to classroom instructional units. All units are based on content standards, 21 st century skills, and a problem-based learning approach and translate regionally to other states Pre and post-assessments are administered to students who take part in a TIME Kit unit to gauge the acquisition of math and/or science concepts as well as attitudinal data concerning engineering as a career choice. This paper describes a sample TIME Kit for illustration. The paper also shows how, over three years, the partners have overcome roadblocks in teacher training, which teacher incentives to use and which to avoid, and how to ensure a solid program evaluation.
The NCTM's Curriculum and Evaluation Standards for School Mathematics (1989) encourages teachers to include activities that help students “construct and draw inferences from charts, tables, and graphs that summarize data from real-world situations” (p. 167) and “express mathematical ideas orally and in writing” (p. 140). The following activities combine data gathering and analysis with cooperative learning, mathematical connections, reasoning, problem solving, and communication.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.