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2017 EDUCATION MAGAZINE

LINCOLN DAILY NEWS MARCH 1, 2017 Page 13

back together. This version of reverse engineering is

highly engaging for students not typically motivated

by traditional seat work.

A large selection of screwdrivers and old computers

provide hours of engaged tinkering for several

students at the junior high level.

While this new approach to learning can easily

be integrated into every subject, none lends itself

more easily than Math or Science. In fact, due to

the forecast shortage of jobs in the STEM (Science

Technology Engineering Math) fields, NH-M has

created an exploratory course called STEAM (the A

stands for Art) that utilizes the maker space frequently.

Most notably, the students were assigned a project

to design a classroom by using the Floorplanner

application on their Chromebooks. The District’s

architect, Ms. Shanna Fish from Shive-Hattery,

provided the students with guidance as they began,

and informed them she would return to help grade the

final projects.

Other subjects have successfully incorporated “design

thinking” into the curriculum, such as music class. In

their enrichment class, Music Appreciation, students

were assigned to “make” a working instrument. One

student fashioned a clarinet mouthpiece on Tinkercad,

and 3-D printed a working mouthpiece!

With a new emphasis on deeper understanding of skills

as called for in the New Illinois Learning Standards

(previously Common Core), this new method of

instruction is one that NH-M’s Superintendent, Todd

Dugan, sees as “vitally important if we are to prepare

students for careers of the 21st Century. Too often, we

‘prepare’ students for a future that closely resembles

our own past instead of a future that does not exist yet.

Design thinking and the maker movement are

definitely steps in the right direction as educators seek

to prepare all students for careers and college.”