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Main Authors: Grace, Elizabeth, Kelton, Molly L., Owen, Jeb P., Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria, White, Alison, Danielson, Robert W., Butterfield, Patricia, Fallon, Michaela, Schafer Medina, Georgia
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1305022
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author Grace, Elizabeth
Kelton, Molly L.
Owen, Jeb P.
Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria
White, Alison
Danielson, Robert W.
Butterfield, Patricia
Fallon, Michaela
Schafer Medina, Georgia
author_facet Grace, Elizabeth
Kelton, Molly L.
Owen, Jeb P.
Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria
White, Alison
Danielson, Robert W.
Butterfield, Patricia
Fallon, Michaela
Schafer Medina, Georgia
Grace, Elizabeth
Kelton, Molly L.
Owen, Jeb P.
Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria
White, Alison
Danielson, Robert W.
Butterfield, Patricia
Fallon, Michaela
Schafer Medina, Georgia
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Integrating Arts with STEM to Foster Systems Thinking Grace, Elizabeth Kelton, Molly L. Owen, Jeb P. Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria White, Alison Danielson, Robert W. Butterfield, Patricia Fallon, Michaela Schafer Medina, Georgia Art Education STEM Education Thinking Skills Integrated Curriculum Summer Programs Human Body Teaching Methods Figurative Language Art Activities Interest is growing among out-of-school time (OST) educators in integrating the arts into STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) programming (e.g., Kelton & Saraniero, 2018). Arts-integrated STEM--or STEAM--programming now takes place in a wide variety of OST environments, from relatively institutional learning settings, such as a library, to emergent or fluid settings, such as a pop-up program in a housing development community room. Educators often consider OST environments to be conducive to creative and conceptually ambitious STEAM programming because these spaces have the potential to deconstruct rigid boundaries between disciplines that formal education often reinforces. In this article, the authors discuss an OST STEAM program titled Zoom! that they designed and implemented in a summer camp in July 2019. Zoom! used visual arts strategies to support elementary-aged children in thinking about and communicating systems-level ideas related to the human microbiome--the community of single-celled organisms that live on and inside the human body.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1305022
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2021
record_format eric
spellingShingle Integrating Arts with STEM to Foster Systems Thinking
Grace, Elizabeth
Kelton, Molly L.
Owen, Jeb P.
Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria
White, Alison
Danielson, Robert W.
Butterfield, Patricia
Fallon, Michaela
Schafer Medina, Georgia
Art Education
STEM Education
Thinking Skills
Integrated Curriculum
Summer Programs
Human Body
Teaching Methods
Figurative Language
Art Activities
Integrating Arts with STEM to Foster Systems Thinking Grace, Elizabeth Kelton, Molly L. Owen, Jeb P. Diaz Martinez, AnaMaria White, Alison Danielson, Robert W. Butterfield, Patricia Fallon, Michaela Schafer Medina, Georgia Art Education STEM Education Thinking Skills Integrated Curriculum Summer Programs Human Body Teaching Methods Figurative Language Art Activities Interest is growing among out-of-school time (OST) educators in integrating the arts into STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) programming (e.g., Kelton & Saraniero, 2018). Arts-integrated STEM--or STEAM--programming now takes place in a wide variety of OST environments, from relatively institutional learning settings, such as a library, to emergent or fluid settings, such as a pop-up program in a housing development community room. Educators often consider OST environments to be conducive to creative and conceptually ambitious STEAM programming because these spaces have the potential to deconstruct rigid boundaries between disciplines that formal education often reinforces. In this article, the authors discuss an OST STEAM program titled Zoom! that they designed and implemented in a summer camp in July 2019. Zoom! used visual arts strategies to support elementary-aged children in thinking about and communicating systems-level ideas related to the human microbiome--the community of single-celled organisms that live on and inside the human body.
title Integrating Arts with STEM to Foster Systems Thinking
topic Art Education
STEM Education
Thinking Skills
Integrated Curriculum
Summer Programs
Human Body
Teaching Methods
Figurative Language
Art Activities
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1305022