ieee teacher in service program presentation to: canadian montessori academy oct. 9, 2009 by the

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IEEE Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the IEEE Ottawa Section http://www.ottawa.ieee.ca l I S P

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l I S P. IEEE Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the IEEE Ottawa Section http://www.ottawa.ieee.ca. Agenda. Introductions & Contacts TISP Objectives IEEE Overview TISP Overview Q&A. Introduction & Contacts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

IEEE Teacher In Service Program

Presentation to:Canadian Montessori Academy

Oct. 9, 2009

by theIEEE Ottawa Section

http://www.ottawa.ieee.ca

l I S P

Page 2: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

Agenda

Introductions & Contacts TISP Objectives IEEE Overview TISP Overview Q&A

Page 3: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

Introduction & Contacts

Jennifer Ng – TISP [email protected]

Raed Abdullah – Ottawa Section [email protected]

Page 4: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

TISP Objectives

Demonstrate the application of engineering concepts to support the teaching and learning of science, mathematics and technology disciplines

Page 5: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

TISP Objectives

by Developing challenging activities for pre-

university students Forming collaborative relationships with pre-

university /college educators Holding professional development workshops

aimed at helping teachers bring exciting hands-on engineering lessons into their classrooms

Page 6: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

About IEEE

world’s largest professional association advancing innovation and

technological excellence for the benefit of humanity.

Page 7: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

IEEE Quick Facts > 375,000 members (including > 80,000 university and college

students, in over 160 countries) 329 Sections in 10 geographic regions worldwide – Canada is

one region and Ottawa is one of the Sections in that region. 1,860 chapters amongst all the Sections that unite local

members with similar technical interests. Chapters represent one or more of the 38 societies and seven technical councils representing the wide range of technical interests.

> More than 1,750 student branches at colleges and universities in 80 countries that are part of a Section.

Publish 144 transactions, journals and magazines. Sponsors > 900 conferences annually Developing nearly 1,300 standards and projects

Stats as of Dec. 31/’08

Page 8: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

IEEE Ottawa Quick Facts

> 2,000 members across Gatineau and Greater Ottawa

18 Chapters 4 Affinities Most active section in the world.

Volunteerism is a core value of IEEE

Page 9: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

TISP OverviewWhy TISP?

Flat or declining sceince, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) enrollments in most developed nations

— + disappointing youth performance in mathematics Insufficient number of engineers and engineering educational

programs in most developing countries— Asia is accelerating no. of engineers per capita

Women & minority students still under-represented Public perception of engineers/ engineering/ technology is

largely misinformed— Results in early decisions that block the path of children to

STEM fields

Page 10: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

Percentage of Science Degrees Awarded

15.6

15

38.4

39.5

41.8

31

31.5

36

25.9

24.2

32.4

15.7

15.9

18.4

14.9

0 10 20 30 40 50

1999

2001

2002

NorwayUSACzech Rep.GermanySouth Korea

Science degrees include life sciences, physical sciences, mathematics, statistics, computer sciences, engineering, manufacturing, and building

Source: Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development

Page 11: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

BS Degrees Awarded (US)

Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics

Page 12: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

From Collegeboard.com: Broadcast Journalism

It helps to be… Are you ready to…

A fan of science and math who’s curious about the way things work

Spend hours building detailed, complicated systems Try, try, and try again when at first a project doesn’t succeed

From Collegeboard.com: Electrical Engineering

It helps to be… Are you ready to…

Sharp of mind and quick of tongue Learn how to find and interview sources?

Page 13: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

The Teacher In Service Program (TISP)

IEEE Section engineers develop and present technology-oriented projects to local pre-university educators

— Started at the Florida West Coast Section in 2001 — Lesson plans (most) now available in English, Spanish,

Portuguese, Chinese, French, Russian, German, and Japanese for use by teachers and engineers

— Lesson plans matched to educational standards URL

— http://www.ieee.org/web/education/preuniversity/tispt/index.html

— (or go to www.ieee.org and search “TISP”)

Page 14: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

TISP Metrics To Date 50+ presentations to date > 675 pre-university SMET educators have

participated These educators represent > 70,000 students Recent countries include South Africa, Peru, Canada

and China > 90% of the respondents agreed:

— They would use the concepts presented in their instruction

— Doing so would enhance the level of technological literacy of their students

Page 15: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

Suggested TISP Half Day Program Introduction / Background 15min

— Share objectives— Connections to state standards

Discussion / Presentation of concepts Activity #1 30min Group work/hands-on segment 45min Debrief and discuss applications 20min Discussion / Presentation of concepts Activity #2 30min Group work/hands-on segment 45min Debrief and discuss applications 20min Summarize concepts presented and objectives 20min Questions/comments 10min Housekeeping 5min

— Complete the teacher feedback questionnaire

Page 16: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

WEBSITE RESOURCES ACS- www.acs.org/edresources.htm ASCE- www.asce.org/kids Virginia Tech- www.teched.vt.edu/ctte Texas- www.texastechnology.com NASA-http://aesp.nasa.okstate.edu/florida NCTM- www.nctm.org ITEA- www.iteawww.org ASME- www.asme.org/education/precollege/ NAE- www.nae.edu/techlit Project Lead The Way- www.pltw.org APS- www.aps.org NSTA- www.nsta.org SAE- www.awim.sae.org www.gettech.org www.library.advanced.org/11686/

Also, rely onwww.ieee.org (search for “TSIP Lesson Plans,” and

“TryEngineering)

& IEEE Ottawa Section TISP

Representatives

Page 17: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

I n-Service Program Feedback

Dear Educator: Thank you for participating in today’s in-service program. The Florida West Coast Section of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers is interested in expanding our in-service programs. Your responses to the following items will assist us in planning additional in-service topics that will meet the needs of educators. 1. What is your current position?

_ _Teacher __School based administrator __District level personnel 2. I f you are a teacher please indicate what grade level you currently teach. ___K-2 ___3-5 ___6-8 ___9-12 ___other 3. Please indicate how many years you have taught in your current school district: (include the

current year as one) __3 years or less _ _4-10 years _ _11-20 years _ _21-30 years _ _31+ years

4. What is the primary subject area you currently teach?

___Science _ __Mathematics ___Technology ___English ___Social Studies _ __Foreign Language ___Art ___Music ___Physical Education ___Other

Please use the scale to the right of each statement to indicate the extent to which you agree or disagree. Please mark each statement with your response in the appropriate bracket []. SA= strongly agree A= agree D= disagree SD= strongly disagree SA A D SD 5. This program has added to my technical [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] knowledge base. 6. I will use the concepts presented in my [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] classroom instruction. 7. Today’s topic will increase my student’s level [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] of technological literacy. 8. The “hands-on” portions of the presentation have [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] been helpful to me in understanding the concepts discussed. 9. This presentation has increased my level of [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] technological literacy. 10. Please list additional in-service topics that would be of benefit to you. 11. What grade level should technologically oriented in-service programs be presented?

___K-2 ___3-5 ___6-8 ___9-12 ___all grades 12. How many technologically oriented in-service topics should be offered?

__1-2 per year _ _3-4 per year _ _5-6 per year __7+ per year Thank you for your feedback. I f you have additional thoughts or comments please include them here or contact Doug Gorham at [email protected]

We LISTEN!

Survey helps improve the program.

Page 18: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

IEEE TISP LESSON PLANSSimple Machines

Ages 4-9

(Lesson Focus: Simple machines: their principles and uses)

Insulators & Conductors

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate conductors and insulators)

Electric Switch

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate how switches control circuits) Design Candy Bag

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Evaluate, design, and build a better candy bag)

Series & Parallel circuits

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate parallel and serial circuit design)

Flashlights & Batteries

Ages 7-11

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate electrical circuits in a flashlight)

Page 19: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

IEEE TISP LESSON PLANS

Electric Motors

Ages 10-14

(Lesson Focus: Electric Motors: principles and everyday uses)

Light Waves & Spectroscopes

Ages 10-14

(Lesson Focus: Light and Spectrometry)

Robot Arm

Ages 10-18

(Lesson Focus: Develop a robot arm using common materials)

Ohm’s Law

Ages 10-18

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate Ohm's Law with digital multi-meter)

Buzzer Circuit

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate how two switches interact in an electrical circuit such as that used to sound a buzzer

Solid Conductors

Ages 8-14

(Lesson Focus: Demonstrate the concept of solid conductors)

Page 21: IEEE  Teacher In Service Program Presentation to: Canadian Montessori Academy Oct. 9, 2009 by the

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