Kids
enjoy learning at Atlanta Public Library S.T.E.A.M. Camp
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[July 03, 2018]
The
week of June 25th through the 29th, the Atlanta Public Library
offered the Full S.T.E.A.M. Ahead program, the first of its three
Summer Discovery Camps sponsored by the Illinois Prairie Community
Foundation. S.T.E.A.M. is an acronym for science, technology,
engineering, art, and math, so activities were connected to these
areas.
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This program was new this year. Led by Heather
Rogers, the 20 participants were able to explore creative S.T.E.A.M.
projects, use their imagination, and build skills.
Library Director Cathy Maciariello said some of the week’s
activities included planting hydroponic herbs using water, light,
and seed packets; painting flower pots and planting herbs in them;
using solar ovens to make s'mores; making pizza; and creating
skyscrapers, ziplines, and boats.
On Thursday, several stations were set up for children to do
math-related activities such as math games and geometric art.
At one station, children played a math card game where two children
held a card with a number on it against their forehead. A third
child would tell the sum, product, or difference between two
numbers, and the other two had to ask questions so they would guess
their numbers.
Another game was Contig, where children had a sheet with numbers,
then had to roll three dice and mark the number on them as a starter
number. As more dice are rolled, the goal is to add, subtract,
multiply, or divide the numbers on them and mark squares that
connect or are close to the original number square marked. Each
connected square earns a point and the one with the highest points
after eight rounds in the winner.
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The final game was an area and perimeter game in which children
rolled two dice, then drew a rectangle using the length and width of the dice
rolled. Once they drew the rectangle, the children had to figure out the area
and perimeter of the rectangle.
At another station, children made prisms using paper and filled them with
popcorn to measure the volume. They then compared the prisms and determined
which ones they thought would hold more popcorn. They were also able to eat the
popcorn, which added even more fun to their work.
At one station, children combined shapes and art to produce
geometric art. The children made circles, rectangles, and triangles, and glued
them to another sheet of paper to create the artwork.
Rogers, who is a fifth-grade math teacher, said using math and manipulatives
helps make math more fun and exposes children to new ways to learn.
The work at the station teaches them what Rogers referred to as twenty-first
century soft skills of collaboration, communication, and working as a team.
Rogers said she has learned these skills are more important to industries than
content.
Rogers said as they wrap up the week on Friday, she will teach the children
introductory coding with code boards. The children will create codes and see if
others can figure out the code.
[Angela Reiners] |