Preventing the Summer Slide with DIY Tech and Science Projects
June 13, 2011 | 10:57 AM | By Audrey Watters
Continuing our summer slide series, in which we’ve offered ideas on how to keep learners’ math and literacy skills sharpened, we now turn our focus to science and tech-related ideas. The summer months provide a great opportunity for students to work on projects that help extend some of the ideas they might have learned during the school year or to pursue ideas that they might not have had a chance to do in the classroom.
Here is just a short list of projects that could help prevent the summer slide in science and technology.
1. BECOME A CITIZEN SCIENTIST
Citizen science takes scientific inquiry and research out of the lab (and out of the sole purview of scientists and researchers) and puts it in the hand of those without formal scientific training — “citizens,” volunteers, and, yes, students. There are a number of ways that students can engage in citizen science projects over the summer, whether they’re spotting animals or identifying plants. Here are a few suggested apps and websites.
2. LEARN TO PROGRAM
Despite the explosion of the number of tech jobs, very few students actually have an opportunity to learn programming at the K-12 level. Programming remains a project that many students do outside the classroom, hacking on their home computers. There are a number of tools that can help even very young children learn how to program, including Scratch and Kodu. Here are a list of a few programming languages that make a good place for budding computer scientist to start.
3. BUILD A ROBOT
Summer vacation is only two or three months long, so the suggestion to build a robot might seem ambitious. But in addition to the new tools that make it easier for kids to learn how to build software, you can find tools that make it easier for them to learn how to build hardware — things like LEGO Mindstorms and Arduino. But even without any programming or electrical engineering skills, building a robot can be as easy as following step-by-side instructions from Instructables or assembling do-it-yourself kits like these Blinky Bugs.
What summer science and tech projects are on your To Do list?
FILED UNDER: Learning Methods, Teaching With Tech, Instructables, Kodu, LEGO Mindstorms, science, Scratch, STEM, summer slide
MORE POSTS ABOUT
- Learning Methods
- Teaching With Tech
- science
- Scratch
- STEM
- summer slide
-
Inquiry Learning Vs. Standardized Content: Can They Coexist?
By Thom Markham As Common Core State Standards are incorporated from school to school across the country, educators are discussing their value. It may seem that educators are arguing over whether the CCSS will roll out as a substitute No … Read More
- Can a Toy Spark Interest in Engineering for Girls?
- What It Takes to Become an All Project-Based School
-
What It Takes to Become an All Project-Based School
In many schools, project-based learning happens in isolated cases: in certain teachers’ classrooms here and there, or in the contexts of specific subjects. But for students to benefit from project-based learning, ideally it’s part of a school’s infrastructure — a … Read More
- With Tech Tools, How Should Teachers Tackle Multitasking In Class?
- Google Glass: Vision for Future of Learning?
-
New Science Standards Aim to Relate Concepts to Students' Lives
A consortium of science and education organizations has released the first set of science standards since the original set prepared by the National Research Council and the American Association for Advancement in Science 15 years ago. The Next Generation Science … Read More
- How Emotional Connections Can Trigger Creativity and Learning
- How Simple Ideas Lead to Scientific Discoveries
-
Introducing Programming to Preschoolers
Flickr: AngryJulieMonday By Heather Chaplin Since MIT’s Lifelong Kindergarten group released Scratch in 2007, kids ages 8 to 13 have built more than 2.2 million animations, games, music, videos and stories using the kid-friendly programming language. Scratch allows kids to … Read More
- A Case for Lifelong Kindergarten
- How Do We Prepare Our Children for What's Next?
-
Can a Toy Spark Interest in Engineering for Girls?
It’s a common refrain that there aren’t enough women in jobs that require math and science skills like engineering and computer science. Though more programs are cropping up geared towards girls involved in science through camps, rocketry clubs or with … Read More
- New Science Standards Aim to Relate Concepts to Students' Lives
- Allergic or Not? Middle School Students Design App That Tells You
-
74 Creative Ways to Stop Summer Brain Drain
Keep kids’ brain muscles flexed with fun learning exercises. This year’s Summer Learning Series features 10 Awesome Outdoor Learning Ideas, 10 Fun Indoor Learning Projects, Four Ways to Prepare for College This Summer, and to round out the numbered lists, … Read More
- Keep Learning and Making: 10 Fun Indoor Summer Projects
- 10 Awesome Outdoor Summer Learning Ideas


