Drones and Education - Buzzing about STEM

Drones and Education – Buzzing about STEM

By Austin Lee — Posted on: Apr 15, 2015

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s Superma- no wait it’s a drone, and it might be coming to your local high school!
Drones, more formally known as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), are essentially flying robots that can be either be controlled remotely or fly on their own using computer software. Drones have made headlines in recent years on several topics, from dropping bombs to dropping packages, from taking photos of city skylines to your backyard. Despite their controversial status, people are exploring the huge potential of drones in several different applications, including education.

Drones have increasingly been appearing in schools as a way to get K-12 students excited STEM fields, and in particular, to incorporate more engineering education into the K-12 science curriculum. Educational programs like Drones for Schools believe that the best way to get students interested in sciences is to actually engage them in real-life applications. By learning how to pilot a drone, students learn about aerodynamics and aeronautics. By learning how to build drone parts, students learn about drafting and design. By learning how to assemble and program drones, students learn about electrical engineering and computer programming. Drone technology cuts across multiple disciplines, and when students have the opportunity to engage and explore with this kind of technology, they gain valuable training and experience to solve more complex challenges in the future and even find employment in high-tech industries. Employers are reaching out as well, offering immersive simulation training programs to local high-schools in the hope that students today will eventually become professional drone pilots and engineers.

With all the buzz about drones and enhancing STEM education, who knows where the technology will take us in the future?

Additional Resources


 

Technology in Transit: Google Cardboard

Session Information


Date: April 15th, 2015
Location: Scarfe Main Foyer
Time: 12:00pm – 1:00pm
Registration: Not required

Event Description

Come to Scarfe Foyer at lunchtime on April 15th to see this month’s Technology in Transit showcase, which features Google’s Cardboard virtual reality technology!

Google Cardboard is an affordable application from Google. Its headset can be assembled at home from an Android phone and ordinary material, but it shows the world in an extraordinary way. Cardboard allows the user to explore pictures and videos in an immersive setup. It offers enormous possibilities to teachers and educators, from visiting faraway locations, to experiencing demonstrations or simulations, to creating their own . It can even be used to view your own photos from Photosphere!

Raising technology awareness is an important part of what we do. On the second Wednesday of every month, Educational Technology Support (ETS) hosts Technology in Transit. Technology in Transit is a space for Teacher Candidates and graduate students to demonstrate different teaching and learning technologies that they have been actively using. The one-hour session offers passers-by the opportunity to engage with educational technology as they walk through Scarfe Foyer during their lunch break.


Presenters

Our Technology in Transit presenters this month are ETS’s Learning Technology Rovers.

Rearranging Learning Spaces

Event Description:

For the  NMC On the Horizon > Rearranging Learning Spaces event on September 3rd, we’re exploring an long-range Horizon Project trend. There is a focused movement to reinvent traditional learning spaces and rearrange the entire educational experience — a trend that is largely being driven by the influence of innovative learning approaches. Century-old practices in which students learn subject-by-subject, while uniformly facing the front of the classroom, are perceived by many as an antiquated approach to teaching and learning. The multidisciplinary nature of project-based learning, co-creation, and other contemporary approaches has brought attention to innovative designs of learning environments. At this March 13 webinar, we heard perspectives from a panel of thought leaders on how this theme is materializing across different learning sectors and how it can be successfully addressed.

 


Facilitator(s):