It came together very fast, but it worked out well.
Wed. Asked if I could teach the next week
Sat. fly in + continue to learn Scratch+ final orientation
Mon-Fri Teach Scratch Techie Camp (Tech Corps Texas)
Camp Week
Camp consisted of inner city (8-12) kids (ages 8-13), some encouraged by their parents wanting something better and some there because of the free lunch. The kids reaction to Scratch sold me. Some were obviously at the top of their class and others obviously not, but none had problems using Scratch. Give them an inch and they created a mile. We joked they never did what they were told. They expanded all exercises and Scratch cards into something more, without help. Something that was theirs, never exactly like what they were told to do.
By the end of the first day they used features to create short animated stories with effects and expanded on this the second day. The third day was a game using broadcast / receive. However due an all day storm Wed. some were missing and electricity went off at least 7 times. So the fourth day was mixture of catching some up and helping them chose project ideas.
The projects were mostly dress up games or stories. One made the shark scratch card in to a game with more fish and scoring. The Dress up games varied...Some dressed themselves up on stage, others included a baby and other characters with themselves in a room. Some had closet of clothes click on your dress of choice approach, and some changed colors of the clothes via a buttons. (no pictures since the children appear also in the stories)
After Camp
The day after camp, some kids were back in lab continuing on their projects.
Scratch spurred me on to explore. Besides exploring the best ways to use Scratch, I found other puzzle GUI tools: Enchanting, BYOB, Android App Inventor. The following mind map shows I came full circle to my robotic related tools / projects.
modified and optimized polygon robot |
Modified/optimized (left) and polygon robot (original)
Listening to Scratch 2011 Education Webinars helped me find references to explain project based learning uses the Constructivism learning theory and how it works with Scratch.
- Curious
- Language levels vs. pallets/blocks - do they fit together?
- Could BYOB be seen as the advanced language version of Scratch?
- Alice, 3D story-telling vs. Scratch 2D story telling.
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