Podstock 2015 was a great event as I worked towards many goals. Last year my team was lacking in spirit for the Make Create Do Teach Challenges. I remember dragging them out for the team events. So I made an honest effort to do EVERY individual challenge. I think the hardest one was connecting with every vendor. That took the longest for sure. The best one was stretching my photography background to create a collage spelling out STEAMPunk. If I could sum up Every Session I attended I would do it in so:
Don't just focus on STEAM Add in the Tinkering and Aesthetics for your students so they connect and fail with their work. "You WANT to kick them... with Love," @GingerLewman. "You have to let things go," @russkahle. You need to be able to rewind yourself so students can go at their own pace. Let students create without your control. "I don't teach this; They Explore It." @McCall_Kelley. #BeBrave and let the students set the pace (even in coding). "If you don't use an app, you won't remember it." @KSLibraryGuy Be problem solvers and find ways to use what you have like McGuyver! "Feel free to stalk the grantees and ask questions." @vperezy For that manner let your students have those same opportunities to ask questions. And no matter what it is about THEIR Future. Think about the changes we are undergoing what will it be like for the class of 2028 who is in Kindergarten right now. @glennw98
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I remember my first Ed conferences three years ago. It was a chance opening for another male so that we filled every room we were renting. That first year I was a wanderer just floating between sessions absorbing it like a sponge. I was handed an iPad to use for the conference only two weeks before it began. However, the conference (MACE) was hard to establish a bond. The 50-minute sessions were rushed and constantly changing. It wasn't until Podstock that summer that I started to blossom out of my introvert shell. I had no clue. I didn't know about the vendor dinner. The moonlight madness. Nothing. Last year was the first year I fully participated. I finally acted like family at the precon weighing in on topics, building a Batmobile for the pinewood derby, even dressing up as Superman and going to the dinner too. I get it now! I had so much more fun that this year I did tons of research with friends and made several Themed Accessories for the day. I applied to be a presenter and even was accepted! This year Podstock 2015 is Steampunk Themed. Think Wild Wild West - victorian with industrial - clothing. My Advice for Fellow Introverts1: Ask Questions.
This is the core of the Growth Mindset. You learn by doing and asking. If you just sit and get you won't maximize your learning. You can always ask afterwards too when eyes are off the presenter or exchange social media accounts. 2. Find a Friend. Do not be afraid to find someone new and talk. Your comfort level goes way up if you know who you sit next to. Don't be afraid to find new people, but don't latch on to the same crew every time. 3. Dabble in the NEW Last year I sat in on a great Vendor presentation from Two Trees on their 3D printers. They answered tons of questions about the process and design setup so I can dabble with it in the future. Experiment and study what is interesting! 4. Food There is a variety of drinks/snacks you can access but be prepared to roll out for lunch. If you have food allergies research ahead of time or you will get stuck in a restaurant with no REAL choices for lunch. I still had fun with the group I went with but I didn't have a real meal. |
AuthorI am a 2nd Grade teacher with years of experience in digital editing and film. I have a 2nd Degree Black Belt, am a professional wedding photographer, and instruct fine art painting classes. Archives
July 2017
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