steve coxon editorial assistant, journal for the education of the gifted ph.d. student, the college...

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Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education • http://stevecoxon.com • http://cfge.wm.edu/ [email protected] Activities to Challenge the Spatially Gifted

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Page 1: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Steve CoxonEditorial assistant,

Journal for the Education of the GiftedPh.D. Student,

The College of William and Mary’sCenter for Gifted Education

• http://stevecoxon.com • http://cfge.wm.edu/

[email protected]

Activities to Challenge the Spatially Gifted

Page 2: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

What is spatial ability?

Spatial ability is a construct that characterizes a human difference in “the ability to generate, retain, retrieve, and transform well-structured visual images”

(Lohman, 1994, p. 1000, as quoted in Wai, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2009).

Page 3: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Why does spatial ability matter?

• High spatial ability is predictive of STEM success (Webb, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2007)

• Innovations from STEM fields improve our quality of life and are responsible for the majority of economic growth in the U.S. (National Academy of Education, 2009),

• There is an ever-increasing need for highly-educated people capable of STEM innovation (Shea, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2001; Snow, 1999; Webb, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2007).

Page 4: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Why does spatial ability matter?

• While employers expect to hire 2.5 million STEM workers between 2004 and 2014 (Terrell, 2007), there is a national shortage of students graduating from institutions of higher education with degrees in many important STEM fields (American Competitiveness Initiative, 2006).

• People in STEM fields earned about 70% more than the U. S. average in 2005 (Terrell, 2007),

Page 5: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Need for Challenging theSpatially Gifted

• Students with spatial gifts are neglected in school curricula and instruction and thus are rarely challenged in their talent area (Silverman, 2005; Webb, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2007).

Page 6: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Need for Challenging theSpatially Gifted

• Students with spatial gifts tend to be undereducated and underemployed as adults compared to students with similar gifts in mathematical and verbal areas (Mann, 2006).

• Spatially gifted students tend to have lower educational aspirations and less motivation to perform than gifted math students (Webb, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2007).

Page 7: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Typical school subjects involving spatial ability

• Geometry

• Geography

• Physics

• Chemistry

Page 8: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Some occupations involving spatial ability

• The visual and performing arts• Design (from graphic to industrial)• Engineering• Surgery• Dentistry• Computer science• Surveying and cartography• Mechanics• Architecture• Physical sciences• Robotics(Shea, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2001; Snow, 1999; Wai, et al.,

2009; Webb, Lubinski, & Benbow, 2007)

Page 9: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Today’s Menu

Craft stick and binder clip towers

Google Maps

LEGO WeDo robotics

Page 10: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

• Take fifteen minutes to build the tallest freestanding tower that you can.

• You have 30 sticks and 15 small binder clips. You may not use any other items.

• You may not break sticks or dismantle clips.

• Two to three feet is a good start.

Page 11: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 12: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 13: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 14: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 15: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 16: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

What processes did this building activity require?

Page 17: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 18: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Google Maps

Page 19: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

LEGO WeDo

Page 20: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education
Page 21: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

LEGO WeDo

• Aimed at 6-9-year-olds to engineer and program

• Comes with step-by-step directions for a number of models, but, like other LEGO products, has unlimited room for creative building

• Can be tied in with other subjects, especially science

• Similar to NXT, but significantly scaled down for a younger user

• One motor, two sensors: tilt and motion• Now a part of the Junior FIRST LEGO League

Page 22: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

WeDo demonstration

Page 23: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

Resources• http://www.childrensengineering.com/ (based in

Richmond, hosts an annual conference in February)

• http://www.legoeducation.us/sharedimages/resources/WeDo%20User's%20Guide.pdf (a free, 41 page teacher’s guide to LEGO WeDo)

• http://maps.google.com/ • http://www.esri.com/industries/k-12/index.html

(GIS for schools)• http://makezine.com/ and http://

www.instructables.com/ (two Great sites for building just about anything)

* http://www.academicearth.org/ (free, online video classes from leading universities)

Page 24: Steve Coxon Editorial assistant, Journal for the Education of the Gifted Ph.D. Student, The College of William and Mary’s Center for Gifted Education

“Ninety-nine percent of the discoveries are made by one percent of the scientists.”

-Julius Axelrod (as cited in NAS, 2005, p. ix)