some of the - stem...2018/02/06 · we are planning a pilot project of 1000 uk schools as part of...
TRANSCRIPT
Inspirational Technology for kids (of all ages) Adrian Oldknow [email protected] 6th Feb 2018
Good evening. I am very grateful to the IET and IMechE for inviting
me along this evening. It’s just a year since I met Hamish
McNaughton, David James and John Halliday in our local Wilke’s
Head pub to plan tonight’s talk. Of course much has changed in
that time, so maybe a better title now would be `Confessions of a
Volunteer Ambassador’. I just wonder if any of you are old enough
to remember James Burke and his Connections programmes from
1978? That’s really what my life has been all about: Only Connect!
I’ve brought along a few of my diaries to help steer my path through this talk. Going back to Saturday 3rd
December 2016 I find that is when my great friend Phil Moffitt, IET Schools Liaison Officer for Medway and
Kent, took me along as his partner to the SE IMechE Christmas lunch in Tunbridge Wells! Phil gave a
presentation on the iSTEM+ approach, of which more later, and we ran a hands-on workshop using a variety
of kit with the BBC micro:bit. Another of the guests at the meeting was last year’s IET President, Prof Jeremy
Watson, who lives in Worthing. On Tuesday 13th December I was the warm act before Christmas lunch with
our local retirees’ `Beta Plus Computer Club’ where I talked introduced some of the current commercial
robotic toys: Edison, Sphero & Ollie, OhBot and Meccanoid.
I also went on to talk a bit about the sorts of technology such as
Raspberry Pi, Crumble and BBC micro:bit which are being used in the
Primary and Secondary schools I am working in. We also did some
programming using `Make Code’ blocks. So that is the background to
how I come to be with you here in Crawley tonight. This is the latest gig
in what has been a very frenetic and rewarding few weeks.
So I thought I’d begin with a report on what I’m up to at the moment. Then I’ll take a look back to what got
me into all this. Then take a look forward to where it might all be heading. And from there, to have a
discussion about how we can all make a contribution to helping schools better prepare their students for a
very exciting technological future.
On 15th January I was at a workshop hosted by the Worshipful
Company of Information Technologists (where I am a Liveryman)
for the parliamentary Digital Policy Alliance (DPA). One of the
planks of Tony Blair’s `Education, Education, Education’ programme
was an `Educational Super Highway’, which went on to become the
`National Grid for Learning’. Many of the regional `Grids for
Learning’ have struggled on and are still providing connections and
services to half the schools in the country. The commercial
operators like BT, EasyNet, EE and Virgin are seeing value in having
direct connections in the educational community and the
Government is now considering investing in the newly renamed
National Educational Network (NEN) as an effective means to get
careers advice and other information into schools. I am now
working on ways to use it to help support STEM teachers in primary
and secondary schools do more to inspire their students.
The DPA secured a partnership deal in Plymouth last year to develop a digital/STEM/careers/21stC skills
centre to serve schools in and around the city, with an emphasis on cyber security. I am now facilitating
similar agreements in Portsmouth, Reading and the East of England. As part of this work I am now involved
with an educational initiative supporting the new Cisco UK `Smarter Rural and Coastal Towns’ development.
On 23rd January, I was at the University of Chichester, my
former employer, discussing the development of a centre to
serve schools in and around Chichester and Bognor – now the
home of Roll-Royce cars! The University has secured a large
investment from the Coast to Capital LEP to develop a STEM
Park at the Bognor campus, opposite Butlins. This involves an
ambitious programme of degree-apprenticeships for local
employers, starting with Software Engineering.
Along with many other potential providers, the University of Chichester has just had their application to
provide apprentice-degrees for non-Levy paying SMEs turned down.
On 24th January I made my annual pilgrimage to the BETT 2018 show at Excel, London. This was opened by
the Skills Minister, Ann Milton, and followed by a keynote on changing education by Anthony Salcito,
Microsoft’s global VP for education. I was there to meet the new CEO of the Micro:bit Educational
Foundation (MEF), Gareth Stockdale, seconded from the BBC. The Foundation has ARM, BBC, IET, Microsoft
and Nominet among its partners. I am one of the first bunch of Micro:bit Ambassadors just appointed, and
was there to present ideas about projects to get micro:bits used to stimulate STEM education in Primary and
Secondary schools. This also involved meeting the DfE’s EdTech & Digital Skills Policy team on their stand.
One of the projects we are discussing is code-named ROM: Robotics On Micro:bits. The idea is that every
primary school should teach students to write code for simple sensing and control applications on the
micro:bit using the powerful free Microsoft `MakeCode’ block editor. Then small groups of students would
create their own robotics projects, and present them to their teachers, parents and peers. That’s called
PROM: Primary Robotics On Micro:bits. Key Stage 3 (11-14) students in Secondary schools could then build
on the ideas with more sophistication through EPROM: `Extended Projects for Robotics On Micro:bits’.
We are planning a pilot project of 1000 UK schools as part of the Government’s `2018 Year of Engineering’,
supported by prestigious partners, including Rotary UK & Ireland. We reckon £1k would equip any primary
school with the necessary materials, micro:bits, electronics and other resources. So £20m would equip
every primary school in the UK. We are also discussing making this a global STEM education project,
supported by multinational partners including Rotary International.
At BETT 2017, Microsoft had a very big stand promoting
their new initiative called `Hacking STEM’. This was built
around a free plug-in for Excel, called Project Cordoba, to
interface it with Arduino micro-controllers. Just before
Christmas I managed to get it to work with micro:bits
using both serial and radio connections for data-logging
and control.
So I also met with Cordoba’s chief developer from
Microsoft US, David Myka – where we also discussed
using micro:bits with other Windows Applications, such as Scratch, Small Basic, GeoGebra and Logger Pro –
and encouraging GCSE/A-level/BTech students to develop their own educational apps with micro:bits using
professional tools such as Azure. This is an extension of our current Student Digital Ambassador
programme, which is built on the success of our Erasmus+ `Kids Inspiring Kids in STEM’ project in Finland,
Hungary, Spain and UK, directed by ex-BT CCITE colleague, Dr. Tony Houghton.
The Department for Education hosts Ministers of Education from around
the world at the Education World Forum. This was addressed on
January 22nd by Damian Hinds, the new Secretary of State for Education
and MP for East Hampshire. “… preparing students for success in the
fourth industrial revolution, can hardly be more apt or more timely. If
you think about all the changes going on all over the world, whether
that’s artificial intelligence, advanced robotics, face recognition, voice
computing, autonomous vehicles – any one of these things on their own
has the power to be revolutionary. Taken together, they certainly do
constitute something of the sort of magnitude to turn a revolution.”
On January 26th I was at the `Shaping Portsmouth 2018’ conference with
colleagues from Airbus Defence & Space. The final address was a tour-de-force
from the Council Leader, Donna Jones, on the future developments envisaged in
and around Portsmouth, with an emphasis on `Inspiring the Next Generation’.
I began working in the area in 2014 with Ian Potter, Head of Bay
House School, Gosport. Ian had been engaged by the Hampshire
14-19 Careers Service to lead a project to improve the educational
attainment of school-leavers through inspirational STEM activities.
Part of this was to prepare a bid to the Solent Local Enterprise
Partnership for a STEM Centre on the HMS Daedalus Enterprise
Zone to support local schools. The LEP had already funded the
development of the state-of-the-art CEMAST centre there by
Fareham College (Centre of Excellence in Engineering, Manufacturing and Advanced Skills Training).
I had already worked with Derek Peaple, Head of Park House School, to develop what we call an `iSTEM+
cluster’ of schools in Newbury to embed integrated STEM learning into the Curriculum. Derek and I were
members of the development group established by the British Interplanetary Society for a cross-curricular
`Space, Science & Technology A-level’ with DfE funding. Ian called together a group of schools, academies
and colleges in Gosport, who took the decision to launch their own `Gosport iSTEM+ cluster’ in May 2014.
There is an IET.TV video on the iSTEM+ approach and a
YouTube presentation. In July 2015 I made contact with the
Gosport MP, Caroline Dinenage, who was then Equalities
Minister in Nicky Morgan’s DfE. We met in September
when she agreed to promote the iSTEM+ approach within
the Government. Gomer Junior School developed its own
gSTEM curriculum in which every class spends one morning
a week on practical problem-solving cross-curricular STEM
projects around a variety of inspiring themes. This has had
a significant impact on the quality of learning in the school,
as well as learners’ resilience and independence.
There is a video of Caroline seeing gSTEM in action made by GCSE visual arts students from Bay House.
At the core of the approach is the Skilful
School which we have chosen to represent by
the 3D solid called a `Cuboctahedron’. You can
make this by cutting out and gluing together
the net, or by 3D printing the shape with
software such as TinkerCAD. Towards the end
of 2016 the schools in the Gosport cluster
decided to form their own Gosport & Fareham
Multi-Academy Trust (GFM).
Roy Haworth, Engineering Integration
Manager for Airbus Defence & Space, is now
the C&EC Enterprise Adviser for the Trust, and
I am its STEM Consultant. Roy is pictured giving the
Royal Aeronautical Society’s lecture `The Next Space
Race’ at CEMAST on 24th January.
In January 2017, I was fortunate enough to secure
sponsorship from the Micro:bit Education
Foundation to provide Gomer Junior with 60
micro:bits.
Caroline timed a press release to coincide with BETT 2017:
“The iSTEM+ approach is an initiative to enable schools to respond to UK employers' needs
by equipping learners with STEM, digital and employability skills. It has been developed by a
team from the Cambridge Centre for Innovation in Technological Education led by Professor
Adrian Oldknow. The first iSTEM+ local cluster was established in a group of schools,
academies and colleges in the Gosport constituency in May 2015. The lead schools are Bay
House School and 6th Form and Gomer Junior School. These schools are two of the founding schools of the
new Gosport & Fareham Multi Academy Trust which opens this year. Gomer Junior School, one of the
schools in the Gosport & Fareham Multi Academy Trust, has developed its own 'gSTEM' Key Stage 2 version
of the iSTEM+ approach. School leaders will be showcasing this model at the UK's leading tech education
roadshow, BETT 2017, on 25th January at 17.10 in the STEAM village. Commenting on the announcement,
Caroline said: "It is vital that we equip our young people with STEM skills. This boosts aspiration and
broadens horizons for pupils leaving school, as well as responding to the tech skills-gap in our economy. I am
proud to have schools innovating on the STEM agenda in my constituency. This support from the Micro:bit
education foundation will help Gosport schools continue to inspire their pupils through an exciting STEM
curriculum."
In March 2017 Gomer Junior took part in the Bloodhound SCC `Race For
The Line’ model rocket car competition. Five of its teams qualified for
the Regional Finals which took place at RAF Odiham, home of the
Chinook helicopters. The cars carry micro:bits for data-logging.
Two of Gomer Junior’s Year 5 teams qualified for the
National Finals at the Santa Pod raceway in June.
Unfortunately due to transport and weather issues, they
weren’t able to get there. But some swift phone calls
redirected them to the Festival of Speed at Goodwood
instead. So they, and their teacher, Karen Digby, spent
the day teaching members of the public how to design,
build and race their own model rocket cars.
Two of the Park House School’s Year 10 Student Digital
Ambassador teams did take part in the finals. One pair was
asked to run the `Race For The Line’ workshop for Computing
teachers at the Computing At School conference in Reading in
July. Adam and Ben are shown here with the winning
teachers. Ray Buckland and I are STEM Ambassadors through
the Winchester Science Centre. Aulden Dunipace was the
Director of Education for Bloodhound SSC, and we also have a
couple of Army rocketeers.
This year the `Race for the Line’ competition is only open to schools entering their whole Y7 intake. Nearly
500 schools will be competing with over 10,000 students. The schools have been provided with STEM
learning materials for use in Science, D&T, Computing and Maths lessons alongside the practical project. Bay
House and Brune Park have entered, and their race day will be organised by the Royal Navy in Portsmouth
Dockyard on March 6th. The project for 2018/9 will be for schools entering all Y8 classes for a lighter-than-air
drone project sponsored by Airlander. For 2019/20 it will be on robotic handling of materials for Y9 classes
sponsored by the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy. So the students will be learning about TOKAMAKs.
Similar projects are under development for Primary Schools. The first celebrates 100 years of the RAF and
involves designing gliders inspired by the Tornado Eurofighter. These are among the first large scale projects
designed to embed STEM across the KS2/3 curriculum to enhance teaching and learning for all students.
Through Roy, and the Solent LEP’s Enterprise Coordinator, Jade Fuller, the GFM has recently been awarded a
prestigious Enthuse Partnership award by STEM Learning. So on Thursday I took Gomer’s Head, Georgina
Mulhall, out to lunch to celebrate. This involves working with STEM Learning and Tomorrow’s Engineers
colleagues. Ian, Georgina and I are meeting with BAE Systems on Friday to discuss
support for the iSTEM+ Innovation Hub at Bay House. The GFM already has a Lego
Innovation Studio. Airbus is sponsoring IET Faraday Challenge events in the Solent,
and Bay House is hosting one of these this term. This will bring in some of the
Fareham Schools including Cams Hill and Henry Cort. In October, I met the Fareham
MP, Suella Fernandes who was then PPS to Treasury Ministers. She is very keen to
see an iSTEM+ Hub established in Fareham. Roy and I are now leading discussions in
Portsmouth with the City Council, University, UTC and others about forming a DPA
digital/STEM/careers/21stC skills centre to support Portsmouth schools.
In November, Pete Marshman launched the Thames Valley/Reading
iSTEM+ Hub at Leighton Park School. He assembled a star-studded
cast of inspirational speakers including Clare Riley from Microsoft,
John Abel from Oracle, Rohini Beavon from Pfizer, Tom Varley from
Enabling Enterprise, Aulden Dunipace from the Learning
Partnership, Alex Warner from Activate Learning and Eme Dean-
Lewis from Cisco. John Abel is leading a major big-data project for
schools sponsored by Oracle in connection with the upcoming runs of the Bloodhound Super-Sonic Car in
South Africa as it prepares for its 1000mph world land speed record. This will stream live data from sensors
on the car, together with 3D video, geographical and environmental data. I have been a Bloodhound SSC
Education Ambassador since the outset and met John with Richard Noble at our briefing in Avonmouth on
3rd September as Bloodhound was being prepared for its first public outing at Newquay.
Another of the speakers at the launch was Annie Beglin, who is one the national network of industry
sponsored Teacher Coordinators for the Royal Academy of Engineering’s
`Connecting STEM Teachers’ initiative. She showed some of the very high quality
project resources for STEM which the Academy is developing, such as one on
Drones. We discussed their intention to develop more resources to support
embedded STEM at Key Stage 2. Shortly afterwards I was asked by one of the CAT
primary schools in Portsmouth, Flying Bull, to help them resource some work on
drones. So Annie kindly put me in touch with the RAEng’s Education Programme
Manager, Scott Atkinson. Scott had been a Teacher Coordinator himself while he
ran the DT department at Midhurst Rother Academy in West Sussex. He joined the
RAEng full-time in May. We met for lunch at IET HQ in Savoy Place on December
14th. It turned out we already had one connection in common.
The RAEng had commissioned a report called `Thinking Like An Engineer’ from the Centre for Real-world
Learning at the University of Winchester, led by Bill Lucas. Rhys Morgan, Director of Education and
Engineering at the RAEng invited me to its launch in May 2014 to meet Bill. Soon afterwards, the RAEng
funded a research project to put the report’s findings into practice in groups of schools around Winchester
and Manchester. I joined the Winchester group which included schools and colleges in East Hampshire,
Portsmouth, Reading and West Sussex. The project’s report `Learning To Be An Engineer’ was launched on
March 30th 2017. “The report finds that by creating a culture in which engineering habits of mind flourish,
learners across all subjects demonstrated improved literacy, numeracy and communication skills, deemed
vital for an engineering career. By equipping teachers with ways to better engage children as engineers, the
methods outlined in `Learning to be an Engineer’ could help inspire more students into the profession and
address the well-documented shortage of professional engineers faced by the UK.
My main role across the project was to be the techie guy to provide input on promising new technological
developments, such as Raspberry Pi, Crumble and the BBC micro:bit, and to support teachers using them in
the classroom. The Manchester group took this fully on board and created their own primary school project
called `Tinker, Tailor, Robot, Pi’. In Gosport in Autumn 2015, Georgina raised the funding for every teacher
and pupil at Gomer Junior to be equipped with a Crumble micro-controller, and I provided professional
development for all the teachers to be able to program Crumbles for simple control applications.
In 2015, Rhys hosted a workshop at the Royal Academy of Engineering for members of the Computing At
School Group CAS and the Design & Technology Association DATA to produce guidance on `Applying
Computing in D&T at KS2 and KS3’ to which I contributed.
On 5th May 2017 Rhys hosted a workshop for school
leaders to consider management issues in embedding
Engineering Habits of Mind (EHoMS) into the
curriculum. That’s where Scott and Georgina met.
Here is Georgina’s visual account of Gomer Junior’s
gSTEM Journey. This is adapted from the presentation
which Karen Digby and Sharon Toone gave at BETT
2017 that January when gSTEM was showcased in the
STEAM Village.
On 29th January I drove up to Wokingham
for a workshop Annie had set up at
Evendons Primary School. The school is a
new Free school, which had an
Outstanding Ofsted inspection report in
the Summer. A new STEM block has just
been completed and will be in
commission before the end of the month. The Head, Patrick Pritchett, is a former military vehicle mechanic!
Annie has recruited a group of 25 Wokingham STEM teachers from both primary and secondary schools. She
had invited me along to head up a workshop on micro:bits. The school provided a set of wireless
Chromebooks, and Annie bought along enough micro:bits from her own school for every teacher to have
one. A decided to try to put across some of the things I have recently been learning myself about `Event-
driven computing’.
We started with a `thought experiment’ about the variety of noises we might hear around the house, and
what actions they might trigger. “What do you do when you hear the doorbell?”, “What do you do when the
phone rings?”, “What do you do when the cooker’s buzzer sounds?”… These are all actions triggered by a
particular human sensor – the ear. We could put these into a standard sort of code such as “On hearing
doorbell, shout for someone to open the door”, “On hearing phone ring, pick up phone and answer it”, “On
hearing cooker buzzer, switch off oven”…
We then discussed some of the sensor systems on modern cars which perform functions automatically, like
turning on the lights, wiping the windscreen, checking your seatbelt, warning when the fuel tank is low,
making sounds as you reverse, adjusting the temperature... We then had a quick look at the back of the
micro:bit to locate some of its on-board sensors, such as light, temperature, accelerometers and
magnetometers. Then some of the key blocks in the `MakeCode’ editor such as Basic, Input, Music, Loops,
Logic, Variables, Math, Functions. My challenge was to create some simple smart devices for their bikes.
I showed a few simple templates to give some clues using the micro:bit emulator.
Tomorrow I am back with the Technical Studies Group of our local retirees’ `Beta Plus Computer Club’ near
Chichester where we will be working at extending these templates.
On the drive home, Scott and I discussed a whole range of collaborative work involving the Royal Academy of
Engineering, the Micro:bit Education Foundation and STEM teachers’ professional associations, such as the
Design & Technology Association, where I am also an Ambassador. My Bio there gives some of the
background to how I come to be doing what I’m doing, and talking to you about it tonight.
“Adrian studied mathematics at Oxford and Computer Science at Brunel Universities. He worked in
secondary schools, FE colleges and HE between 1967 and 1996, when he retired as Emeritus Professor of
STEM Education at the University of Chichester. Between 1996 and 2010 he worked as a freelance
consultant. He advised Tech companies including Casio, HP, Intel, Promethean, RM, SMART and TI, as well as
organisations such as Becta, DfE, Ofqual, QCA, SSAT, TTA and the World Bank. He plays an active part in
professional organisations including the ASE, ATM, BCS, BIS, CAS, DATA, IET, IMA, IoP, MA, RSS and WCIT. His
research interests are in the fields of computer graphics and pure geometry. He was part of the research
team for the Royal Academy of Engineering’s `Thinking like an Engineer’ project which enabled him to
develop his passion for playing with gadgets like Arduino, Crumble, micro:bits and Raspberry Pi. As well as a
being a DATA Ambassador, Adrian works in schools as a Bloodhound Ambassador, STEM Ambassador,
Micro:bit Ambassador and IET volunteer. He founded the Cambridge Centre for Innovation in Technological
Education https://ccite.org which has been the incubator for the iSTEM+ approach, Skilful Schools, Student
Digital Ambassadors and iSTEM+ local networks and Innovation Hubs https://tv.theiet.org/?videoid=10786.
What it doesn’t say is that I went up to Oxford with an Open Scholarship in Maths and came down with a 3rd,
with no idea about possible careers! As a kid I played with my father’s wind-up HMV portable gramophone,
a Meccano set 8, Dinky toy cars, Triang 00 electric trains and maintained my E F Russ lightweight racing bike.
While I did Maths and Physics to S-level, no-one ever suggested engineering as a career. First degrees in
Computing didn’t exist It wasn’t until I had a sabbatical at the Computer Aided Design centre (CADC) in
1981 that I actually did any work in industry. I wrote papers on bi-arc splines for CADCAM, on set operations
on polygons for 2D computer graphics and on volume modelling for 3D computer graphics. I was even
offered a job with Malcolm Sabin at Finite-Element Graphics Systems (FEGS), but chose to return to the
security of my HE post (and pension). That was during the period when Acorn won the contract for the BBC
micro, and I worked with members of the team including David Johnson-Davis of Acornsoft.
I had already become an overnight expert on micro-electronics in education – “In the land of the blind, the
one-eyed man is king!” I ran a course for 50 Heads and Deputies in the South from Kent to Dorset and the
IoW to Oxfordshire in 1978/9 on the `Educational Implications of Micro-electronics’ where we learned about
the Mighty Micro (Chris Evans) and were informed by experts from BBC, BT, GEC, IBM, Mullard, Schools
Council, SPRU etc. At the end of the course in March 1979 we had a discussion with a senior official in the
Department for Education who told us that Shirley Williams was about to announce a Microelectronics
Education Programme (MEP) in which we would be at the
cutting edge! In May 1979 Margaret Thatcher became Prime
Minister and the MEP was axed! But Sir Keith Joseph, then
Industry Secretary, persuaded her to take positive
intervention to encourage growth in the UK microelectronics
sector and to do a U-turn! So, by December 1979 the MEP
had been relaunched with a longer time span and larger
budget. When Sir Keith became Secretary of State for
Education he set up an Advisory Board for the MEP and
invited me to join. I’m the one with the beard!
Ken Baker had been appointed the first Minister for IT in the Department for Industry. Research Machines,
set up by Mike Fischer and Mike O’Regan in Oxford, was already supplying their 380Z computers to schools
in authorities such as ILEA and Birmingham. Acorn Computers had been established in Cambridge by
Hermann Hauser and Chris Currie, alongside Clive Sinclair’s Sinclair Research. In 1982 the BBC launched its
`Computer Programme’ based on the BBC Micro and aimed at (better off) families. Ken Baker was
responsible for the `Computers In Schools’ initiative which gave secondary schools half the cost of buying a
BBC Model B, an RM 380Z or a Sinclair ZX-Spectrum computer. He commissioned the National Council for
Educational Technology (NCET) to produce the `Input Pack’ to help schools introduce computers across the
curriculum.
I had written some software called `Glass’ based on a program which the
CADC wrote for glass designers at Dartington. The original version used
graphics terminals and light-pens, but mine just required the user to enter
(x,y) coordinates for the control points for the cubic natural splines. So it
was a DT application which made kids use maths skills to control the
shape. Needless to say I was pretty chuffed when it got included in the
Input Pack.
I was then approached by Tony Hill of Heinemann who asked if it could be developed as a CADCAM
application by Tony Clements for Fiveways Software. They used it drive a hot-wire cutter to shape a cylinder
of expanded polystyrene – a primitive lathe. Unfortunately arsenic was released into the air in the process,
so the apparatus had to be housed in a fume cupboard. It was not a commercial success!
The other major milestone of the period was the Government’s Technical & Vocational Educational Initiative
(TVEI) of 1982 from Lord Young, then Chairman of the Manpower Services Commission (MSC) in Norman
Tebbit’s Department of Employment. Lord Young is still actively involved in education through the Careers &
Enterprise Company (C&EC), and Lord Baker through his Baker-Dearing Educational Trust (BDET) and the
University Technical Colleges (UTC).
The BBC has continued its engagement with education following the `Micro Programme’ of the 80s. It set up
its `BBC Bitesize’ site initially with GCSE revision guides in many subjects. This has been massively expanded
at all levels and now includes up to date internet security advice as well, under the `OWN IT’ brand. In 2005
the BBC announced its new `Digital Curriculum’ under the brand `BBC Jam’. I was part of the group which
won the contract for the Key Stage 3 Maths curriculum. Sadly we had not long got underway when the
whole project was axed in 2007 after several UK publishers threatened legal action.
In Autumn 2009 I was invited by the British Education
& Communication Technology Agency (Becta) to join
its `Fit For The Future’ programme and to be a
member of its `Future Skills’ think-tank. After the
2010 election, Becta was scrapped, as was the
`Building Schools for the Future’ programme.
Effectively STEM and digital skills in schools then went
on the back-burner for 5 years. I was on the Council
of the Mathematical Association MA at that time, and
we decided to form a working group with the
Association of School & College Leaders ASCL,
Association for Science Education ASE, the
Association of Teachers of Mathematics ATM,
Computing at School CAS, the Design & Technology Association DATA, the National Society for Education in
Art & Design NSEAD and the Youth Sports Trust YST to create our own grass-roots approach for schools to
respond to the STEM and Digital Skills crisis.
We networked widely and wildly to be able to find out what was
happening on the ground to bring together sustainable examples
of best practice as well as information on upcoming
developments. That is how I first met Howard Baker, BBC’s
Innovations Commissioner in 2010 at BBC White City. He told me
about their plans for a new programme `Make IT Digital’
influenced by the success of the BBC micro in the 1980s
accompanied by a new, cheap and user-friendly programmable
device. The service was launched in 2015.
“Nicknamed the ‘Micro Bit’ as a working title, the BBC has
partnered with over 25 organisations to create a small
programmable hardware device for every year 7 child (age 11-12)
in the UK. Building on the legacy of the BBC Micro, the Micro Bit
aims to help transform a new generation from passive consumers
of technology to creators and innovators in the digital world. The Micro Bit helps younger children to start
learning basic coding and programming, acting as a springboard for further learning and more advanced
products like Arduino, Galileo, Kano and Raspberry Pi. It is still in development and will become available
from autumn 2015, with 1 million devices given away freely, including to each child in year 7 across the UK.
More information is available here.”
One of the pilot schools where the micro:bit was trialled was Park House School in Newbury which is the
lead school in the Newbury iSTEM+ Hub. At the time there was little documentation about many of the
features of the micro:bit or how to access them. The main editing tool was the on-line `Microsoft Touch
Developer’ editor which had originally been created to support App development for Windows 8 phones.
This did not then support many of the micro:bits’s functions such as sensors and I/O pins. So the level of
coding was pretty much restricted to the 5x5 LED display for text, numbers and graphics, and the push
buttons A and B. I have to admit I was not greatly impressed by what I saw, and formed the incorrect
assumption that the micro:bit would not have anything resembling the impact of its BBC micro predecessor.
The aim was to get a micro:bit in the hands of every 11-year old pupil in state education by the end of
summer term 2016. But there were inevitable delays due to redesign for safety, as well as logistics. In the
event, many secondary schools received boxes of micro:bits with just a week or two left of the summer
term. So, many schools did not pass on the micro:bits to their students. They had not received any advice or
resources on how they might be used to support teaching and learning in the STEM subjects. Consequently
many of the schools I work with in Kent, Surrey, Sussex and Hampshire still have stocks of micro:bits in
cupboards which just get used for the odd Computing lesson.
Immediately after the educational units were finally shipped, the product came on general sale for c£15
including batteries, VAT and delivery. Microsoft also released the new `Programming eXperience Toolkit’
PXT editor for the micro:bit, with frequent updates revealing blocks of code for more advanced functions
such as Input, I/O pins and Radio. As these came online I started learning a lot more about the potential of
the micro:bit as a catalyst for technology-enhanced teaching, learning and doing in the STEM subjects of
Science, Computing, DT and Maths – and became an enthusiastic convert. I wrote a series of `First Steps’
guides which are on the BBC Micro:bit group’s pages at STEM Learning. The IET has been a partner in the
Micro:bit project since the beginning, and there are some great video case studies such as of Abbie Hutton,
an engineer in the Airbus Defence and Space’s ExoMars
Rover project team.
So that more or less takes us back to where I began the talk. Here is the proposed menu to use the micro:bit
as a catalyst for promoting cross-curricular STEM learning, teaching and doing at KS2/3/4. So far I have
illustrated some examples from the ROM section. There is also an exciting new resource just published by
two lady authors from Hampshire, Elbrie de Kock and Tracy Gardner: `micro:bit In Wonderland’. This will be
followed by Looking-glass and Jabberwocky resources which will cover PROM and EPROM across KS2/3.
In order to develop control applications it is helpful to use some of the
excellent ready-packaged kits and components now available from
suppliers such as Kitronik.
Using Bluetooth, the micro:bit can
be paired with mobile devices such
as tablets and smart-phones to
provide remote control. The `Blog’
contains many helpful examples of
ideas and techniques for developing
control and robotics applications for
micro:bits. Suppliers, such as
Kitronik, also develop their own
blocks for devices not included in
`MakeCode’ such as NeoPixel arrays.
There is already a range of tools for data-logging, such as
Martin Woolley’s excellent `Bitty data-logger’ for Android
and Apple. My own `First Steps with Micro:bits for data-
logging and modelling’ collects several of these ideas
together. More recently I have been exploring how to
exchange data between micro:bits and Windows Excel using
a serial cable. Microsoft’s `Garage Project’ has developed a
number of interesting ideas to support STEM education.
One of these is a free plug-in for Excel called Project
Cordoba.
I mentioned earlier that Microsoft introduced its `Hacking STEM’ project at BETT 2016 using Arduinos. Since
then it has been updated to support the micro:bit.
`First steps in using micro:bits with PCs’ explains how to connect a single micro:bit for data-logging and
control via a serial cable. Also how to connect a second micro:bit to the first using Radio commands
(Bluetooth Low Energy BLE) for wireless telemetry.
These are examples of what we have code-named MIDAS: Micro:bits In Data-Analysis for Science. So
between ROM (Robotics On Micro:bits) and MIDAS we can cover Computing/DT at KS2/3 and Science/Maths
at KS3/4. Excel is not the only Windows application which can work with data gathered from micro:bits
using internal or external sensors. Once the data is in Excel, it can be copied and pasted into other modelling
software such as GeoGebra or Logger Pro.
In the Computing Programme of Study at KS1/2/3 students are expected to create programs in two
languages. The most common language for Primary Schools is MIT’s Scratch which can be run through a
browser or via an offline editor. Clive Seager of Revolution Education (PicAxe) has developed a free App to
connect micro:bits wirelessly with Scratch, called `S2Bot’. This is also documented in the First steps in using
micro:bits with PCs guide.
Secondary schools vary widely in the text-based language they choose which can include JavaScript, Python
and C++. Quite a few Hampshire schools have chosen Microsoft’s free `Small Basic’. The latest version
includes support for the Kinect sensor bar. So we are currently discussing with Microsoft developers in the
US whether it can be modified to support input from, and output to, micro:bits. There is already a free
version of Basic, `Fuze Basic’ which supports micro:bits.
Of course there is plenty of scope for 3rd party developers to produce Apps for Windows and/or mobile
devices to extend the ways in which micro:bits can be used by learners and teachers inside and outside
schools – preferably free ones. Maybe some of you here tonight could take up that challenge?
Schools and colleges catering for learners 14-19 may well have students interested in careers as software
developers and who are taking courses such as GCSE, A-level and BTech (and soon T-level). An idea we are
also discussing is supporting `Students Creating Applications for Micro:bits’ (SCAM). This could involve using
professional developer tools such as Microsoft’s Azure. Again there could well be scope for some of you
here tonight to help mentor such students who are developing their own skills while giving something back
to their peers at school.
It is widely recognised that schools have great difficulty recruiting and retaining staff with up-to-date skills in
the key technological subjects of Science (especially Physics), DT, Computing and Maths. So we are keen to
develop and support a community of `STEM Teachers Using Micro:bits’ STUM. I very much hope that the IET
and IMechE can collaborate (maybe with STEM Ambassadors and RAEng Teacher Coordinators) to help STEM
teachers gain confidence and improve their own technological skills to the benefit of future generations.
Yesterday I heard from Phil Moffitt and Hellen Ward, who runs the STEM Ambassador Programme for Kent,
Sussex, Surrey and Essex, that we will soon have new iSTEM+ Hubs in Dover and Medway. We already have
iSTEM+ Hubs running in Banbury, Gosport, Newbury and Reading, supported by Emily Thorpe-Smith and the
STEM Ambassador Programme for Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Isle of Wight,
Oxfordshire, Portsmouth and Southampton. New iSTEM+ Hubs are being formed in Basingstoke, Chichester,
East Hampshire, Fareham, Farnborough, Guildford and Portsmouth. While put the finishing touches to the
talk this morning, I had an e-mail to tell me that Microsoft in Reading has agreed to host our first iSTEM+
Conference on 12th June.
A year ago, when I first discussed tonight’s talk with Hamish, David and John I had no idea just what lay
ahead in the intervening year. I had just planned to show a few of the toys which I’d brought along to the
Beta Plus’ Christmas talk in 2016. But I am absolutely surprised, amazed and delighted just how things have
moved on in the intervening 12 months.
Whatever else happens, it is clear that we have the inspirational technology to revolutionise the educational
experience of our young people.
We just need to figure out how to help them get the greatest possible benefit from it.
Once that’s sorted, maybe Tony and I will have a bit more time to spend with our wives, and our Jags?