将创客空间融入课程——教师发展努力

Maria-Isabel Carnasciali, S. Gillespie, Ahmed Muntasir Hossain
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇全文描述了纽黑文大学为支持和培训教师将创客空间整合到他们的课程内容中所采取的三种方法。作为促进工程专业学生动手学习的一种方式,许多教职员工支持将创客空间整合到高等教育教室中。鼓励学生使用创客空间可以增加非正式学习机会,为基于项目的学习的原型工作提供额外支持,提高自我效能,增强社区意识和归属感。由于创客空间在学术环境中相对较新,许多教师不熟悉这些空间中设备的功能,可能不太可能在他们的课程中使用这些工具。由于教师在自己的学习或职业发展中没有使用许多创客技术,因此需要额外的培训机会,为教师提供一个发展自己对新技术和与“制造”相关的特定课堂教学法的掌握的机会。对创客空间的教师培训不仅仅是新技术内容的专业发展。为了成功地融入课堂,教师应该考虑相关的教学方法、时间考虑、预算限制、设备限制以及创客元素对传统课堂内容的附加值。本研究概述了三种不同类型的教师发展创客空间培训工作:通过招募教师作为社区创客空间成员进行自我引导探索,以教学为重点的研讨会,以及动手设备培训课程。第一个项目为20名教职员工提供了位于康涅狄格州纽黑文市中心的MakeHaven。有了这个会员资格,就可以获得培训、导师、研讨会和一个支持性的社区。为了利用这些设备和资源,教师们被鼓励从事自己感兴趣的项目,并为自己的目的而工作。由于他们的项目各不相同,他们需要寻求专家用户的帮助;在这样做的过程中,他们通过实践,通过尝试和修改来学习。第二次努力请来了一位外部发言人,为大约18名教员主持了一个小型讲习班。演讲者介绍了将创客空间纳入课程的教学法,并提供了跨专业整合的实际例子。参与者完成了头脑风暴和规划练习,以确定要实施的课程和创客项目。第三项努力为10名教职员工提供了参加专门针对向纽黑文大学的教师介绍创客空间设备的研讨会的机会。教职员工了解了这些设备及其制造能力,讨论了课堂整合的技巧,然后使用这些设备设计并制作了自己的产品。在每次努力之后完成事件后调查,以突出优点、缺点和未来计划。对每种培训类型的选定参与者进行了后续调查和访谈,以收集有关课堂实施、教师知识差距和学生成功的信息。对这些结果进行分析,为以课堂整合为目的的创客空间教师培训提供最有效的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integrating Makerspaces into the Curriculum - Faculty Development Efforts
This full paper describes three approaches taken by the University of New Haven to support and train faculty to integrate the makerspace into their course content. As one way to promote hands-on learning with engineering students, many faculty and staff support the integration of makerspaces into higher education classrooms. Encouraging students to use a makerspace can result in an increase in informal learning opportunities, additional support for prototyping efforts for project-based learning, increased self-efficacy, and an enhanced sense of community and belonging. As makerspaces are relatively new in academic settings, many faculty are unfamiliar with the capabilities of the equipment in these spaces and may be unlikely to adopt usage of the tools into their courses. With many of the maker technologies not used by faculty during their own studies or career development, additional training opportunities are needed to provide faculty an opportunity to develop their own mastery of both the new technology and specific classroom pedagogy related to “making.” Faculty training for makerspaces is more than just professional development on new technical content. For a successful integration into the classroom, faculty members should consider relevant pedagogy, time considerations, budget constraints, equipment limitations, and the added-value of the maker element to the traditional classroom content. This study profiles three different types of faculty development makerspace training efforts: self-guided exploration by enrolling faculty as members of a community makerspace, pedagogy-focused workshops, and hands-on equipment training sessions. The first effort provided 20 faculty members access to MakeHaven, located in downtown New Haven, CT. With this membership came access to training, mentors, workshops, and a supportive community. To engage with the equipment and resources, faculty were encouraged to work on projects of their own interests and for their own purposes. As their projects were individually different, they needed to seek out the assistance of the expert user; in doing so, they learn by doing, by trying it out and revising. A second effort brought in an external speaker to host a mini-workshop for approximately 18 faculty. The speaker introduced the pedagogy for incorporating makerspaces into curriculum efforts and provided practical examples of incorporation across majors. Participants completed a brainstorming and planning exercise to identify a course and maker-project for implementation. The third effort provided 10 faculty and staff the opportunity to participate in workshops specifically targeted to introduce faculty to the University of New Haven makerspace equipment. Faculty and staff learned about the equipment and its manufacturing capabilities, discussed tips for classroom integration, and then designed and created a product of their own using the equipment. Post-event surveys were completed after each effort to highlight strengths, weaknesses, and future plans. Follow up surveys and interviews were conducted from selected participants of each training type to gather information on the classroom implementation, faculty knowledge gaps, and student successes. These results are analyzed to provide specific recommendations for the most effective methods of makerspace faculty training with the purpose of classroom integration.
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