Science - Technology - Engineering - Art - Mathematics
Saturday, May 20, 2017
Another successful STEAM year!
Thank you to all of the wonderful staff and volunteers who helped make this event a success - so many happy and engaged faces!
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
Only one more day until STEAM Night!
Thursday, May 18th, 5:15 - 7:30pm
Our students and staff have completed some great work over this year. Come celebrate their acheivements and participate in a STEAM challenges in each grade!
Friday, May 12, 2017
Only six more days until STEAM Night!
Yesterday I talked with the students during lunch about the upcoming solar eclipse. Thanks to the Robert D and Jessie L Stinnett Foundation and the Woodlawn PTA, we will be able to hand out free solar eclipse glasses at the event for safe viewing on August 21.
To learn more about solar eclipses, check out these sites:
Only 10 more days until Woodlawn STEAM Night - May 18th 5:15-7:30!
Our keynote speaker that evening will be Dr. Delia Grenville, an Industrial and Systems Engineer and Senior Research Scientist at Intel. Dr. Grenville is the inventor of six digital content technologies as well as the co-founder of Designing Me, an organization that advises professional women into leadership positions. She will be speaking to the community at 5:35pm that evening in the auditorium. Don't miss it!
Monday, May 1, 2017
Save the date for the 2nd annual Celebration of STEAM!
Friday, April 21, 2017
Happy Earth Day!
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Basic bridge Portland is known for it's many bridges and many 3rd grade classes in the region focus on these structures as an important part of our city's history. Did you know that Leonardo da Vinci designed a self supporting bridge in 1468 after being asked to create a simple bridge to cross rivers for troops to be able to assemble on site. Genius.
Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Woodlawn earned awards from Eco-School USA
Morgan Park, a representative from the National Wildlife Federation's Eco-Schools USA program, visited Woodlawn to recognize the students for their environmental work. The Green Team earned the Bronze Award for their work on waste reduction and the current 4th and 5th grade students earned the Silver Award for their work raising salmon for the last two years. Finally our student GLOBE team was recognized for their work collecting weather data for NASA and NOAA. Way to go Woodlawn Wildcats! Here is a video of the assembly:
P.S. Exciting news - Woodlawn's participation in the USFWS Salmon in the Schools program is being featured on the Eco-Schools USA website!
Monday, April 3, 2017
Food Waste, Wasted Food
Last month, the Green Team conducted a waste audit and found out that in a typical day in the cafeteria, the school created:
- 48 lbs of trash
- 5 lbs of plastic waste
- 112.5 lbs of food waste
While part of our lunch message to the students is that "the most important thing to do with food is eat it", we do have an option through the school district to collect food waste so that it doesn't go straight to the landfill. If we chose to start this program, we need some community members to help during the lunch hour for the first few weeks to help the students learn what can go into the food waste bin and what needs to go in the garbage. If you are interested in volunteering to help with this project, please contact me. Thank you!
Saturday, March 25, 2017
What can you do with a simple straw?
Friday, March 17, 2017
Shout out to the Batteries in Black Robotics Team
This weekend is the First Lego League State Championship. One of our STEAM partners, Batteries in Black Robotics Team from Washington Country 4-H, live streamed the event.
Batteries in Black goal is "to share our passion for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math with others in our community and beyond. Through our experiences, we gain exposure to valuable skills, strengthen academic and intellectual achievements, as well as develop character and identity.”
After their competitions, their team donated two new laptops to Woodlawn School to be used by our First Lego League teams. Thank you!
Thursday, March 2, 2017
Salmon anatomy - form and function
Our fourth grade classes were able to investigate salmon anatomy in the STEAM room today. Thank you US Fish and Wildlife and our Roosevelt HS volunteers for supporting this activity!
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
What is out there?
This may be the best place outside of our solar system to look for life.
BIG thank you to New Seasons and all of our parent volunteers - you helped make the citrus tasting today a great success. It was a close battle between the lime and the blood orange but the lime was the Woodlawn favorite. It was a great scientific experience - the students used their sense of touch, smell, and taste!
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Salmon Education
Class brainstorm on why salmon are important and what makes them unique
River anatomy and art (can you find the eggs and alevins?)
So much to learn about salmon in 4th grade! Today we discussed why salmon are important, the salmon life cycle, the anatomy of a river, and types of watershed pollution. Next week Mr. Jeffrey Johnson will meet with the classes to talk about fish adaptations!
Using the watershed table to learn about different types of pollution
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Little hearts beating
Our Kinders were able to watch the alevin's heart beat with the hand held 50x microscope. Even without the microscope you can view the heart beating (look for the small red dot in the far right alevin's throat above the egg sac). Bonus question - why do fish have their heart in their throat and not the chest like us?
Answer - Our heart in in our chest because it needs to be near our lungs to properly oxygenate the blood. In all animals, the cardiovascular (heart/blood) and the pulmonary (lungs) are closely linked. Since lungs don't work underwater, fish use their gills to capture oxygen from the water. Therefore, we would expect to find the salmon heart close to the gills.
Friday, January 20, 2017
The Woodlawn family has grown by 1!
The first egg hatched today!
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Salmon Success!
All of the Woodlawn salmon eggs survived the winter storm and are growing bigger! If we had lost power during the storm the tank water temperature would have started rising to unsafe levels for salmon development.
Thursday, January 5, 2017
First baby photos
We were able to take some photos of our salmon eggs with our 50x microscope - you can see there is room to grow in the eggs and how well developed their eyes are already!
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
The salmon eggs have arrived!
Thank you US Fish and Wildlife and Jeffrey Johnson.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Getting dirty with good soil
Our 2nd graders were able to meet worm friends from the Metro Composting with Worms program today. This is a free program for all schools in the Portland Metro region. The students were able to connect the steps of the compost cycle and were experts on how to create a healthy habitat for the worms!
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
The salmon are coming! the salmon are coming!
Have you heard about Salmon in the Classroom? Woodlawn is lucky to be able to participate in this program with the US Fish and Wildlife Service While it's mainly geared toward 4th graders, all Woodlawn kids have the opportunity to watch the salmon hatch and grow.
To learn more check out this video documenting last year's program.
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Woodlawn students travel to the moon!
OMSI's Portable Planetarium has arrived! The students are learning about the night sky, phases of the moon, planets, constellations the history/future of flight, and the race to go back to the moon.
Friday, November 18, 2016
First woman to command the International Space Station also becomes oldest women in space. Congrats NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson! #NoCeilings
It is strange to think that the moon is not always the same distance away from us. We see our world as a place of symmetry - circles, squares, ying/yang. However the natural world sometimes throws in ovals and ellipses. The term 'supermoon' was created in 1979 by Richard Nolle and is defined as a new or full moon phase that is within 90% of it's closest approach to the Earth (perigee). Today was a special 'supermoon', the closest to the Earth that the moon has been since 1948.
Last September, we were able to observe a supermoon that coincided with a total lunar eclipse. This caused the effect known
as the "Blood Moon" here in Portland. During this supermoon, the Earth's shadow was aligned with the moon for a short period of time. The Earth's shadow allowed only the longest wavelengths of light from the sun, reds and oranges, to bend through our atmosphere and reach the moon's surface.
Thursday, November 3, 2016
Apple Tasting
Did you know that certain types of apples are best for cooking, best for storing, best for eating raw? Thank you New Seasons and all of our volunteers, we were able to host the first annual Apple Tasting event at Woodlawn! Our Kinder/3rd grade classes were able to connect their studies of Tree (kindergarten) and Growing Things (3rd grade) to our apple tasting event. The students were able to taste five different apples, sample a cooked apple dish by the OSU Nutrition Educator, and read apple and tree books with their buddies.
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Composting with Worms
As part of Metro Elementary Outreach team, it has been so much fun to learn and teach about ways to use 'nature's recycling' to reduce food waste. We recently used a Proscope to video tape and photograph life from a worm's point of view. With this technology, we can watch the worms digesting the food scraps and observe other microscopic organisms in the worm bin.
Friday, October 21, 2016
Garden Math Today was our first school garden to cafeteria experience - we were able to harvest radishes and baby kale that Mrs. Willis' class planted last month! But we had a problem to solve, how can we equally share our harvest with all of the students? We would need to use math to find the answer!
The students enjoyed the new tastes and textures - using their sense of taste, touch, smell, and sight!
Friday, September 30, 2016
Back to School with STEAM! Last night was the Woodlawn Back to School evening and we had a great time at the STEAM table. The students were able to practice their engineering skills with solar panel challenges, count rings on wood cookies and sunflowers, and predicting if packages would be lighter or heavier on Mars compared to Earth. We were also able to run a fun relay race station so the students use up some of their energy and learn about ways we can recycle at our school!
Thanks you to my helpers at the STEAM table last night - it was wonderful to see the students teaching each other and coming up with new ways to solve a problem!
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Math and art
What better way to experiment and play with difficult math concepts than with knitting. This tactile project demonstrates Borromean Rings:
"Borromean rings consist of three topological circles which are linked and form a Brunnian link (i.e., removing any ring results in two unlinked rings). In other words, no two of the three rings are linked with each other as a Hopf link, but nonetheless all three are linked." [1]
The Borromean ring pattern was created by mathematician Sarah-Marie Belcastro and Madison Stuart
The second example is based on the Scientific American article "Knotting Needles Makes Knitted Knots". The pattern, designed by Sarah-Marie Belcastro, creates a Torus or Trefoil Knot, similar to a möbuis but with more twists. I cast on 100 stitches on circular needles, tied a loose square knot, and then started knitting in the round.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Recycling Art
We need your small plastic bottle caps! As part of our STEAM programing at Woodlawn this year, our students will be focusing on becoming Wildcat Warriors for our planet - reducing, reusing, and recycling. We've been recycling the landslide of water bottles, but what about the caps? Let's make art!
To make a super cool installation, though, we need lots more plastic caps. Caps off your milk jugs and peanut butter jars. Caps from juice bottles and soy sauce. . . all of them! We have one collection site located near the front office at Woodlawn in NE Portland and Rieke Elementary will be collecting for us in SW Portland
Below is just one of a hundred examples of bottle cap murals that can be found online, just to so you can get a general idea of awesomeness to come! (The sample artwork is from this site: http://www.methowarts.org/methow-valley-sunset-bottle-cap-…/)
Friday, June 17, 2016
Woodlawn's new team is going GREEN!
On Friday May 27, the Portland Public School district covered all of the drinking fountains until they could be tested for lead. Pallets and pallets of bottled water was delivered to each school, hundreds and thousands of plastic bottles. Over the next two days, concerned staff and parents at Woodlawn came up with a plan to start a recycling program throughout the school to collect, bag, and return the bottles. Our new green team created an account with the Delta Park BottleDrop Redemption Center, removed the caps for future art projects, and dropped off bag after bag of bottles. Thank you so much for setting a great example for our students and community!
Thursday, June 2, 2016
Mission Possible
Your mission, if you chose to accept it, create a device that can point to the sun. You will have:
4 solar modules
1 AC motor
craft sticks
glue gun
work lamp
The Rieke 5th graders were given a challenge to create a solar tracker as a conclusion to our engineering design unit. Each team had to figure out the correct way to connect the 8 leads from the four solar panels to the motor so that when the left side of the solar 'home' faced the light the motor would turn to the left, when the right side faced the light the motor would spin right, and when the unit was directly facing the light, the motor would stop. As one student remarked 'my group kept on trying and trying but after the 1,000th time we finally got it.' The students learned that there is knowledge earned in trying and failing as long as they keep trying. By the end of the session, each team completed their mission!
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Mammalian Engineering in Action
The Rieke Kinders had a special guest visitor from Tryon Creek State Park who taught them about an amazing mammalian engineer - beavers! The students were able to share what they knew about beaver like strong teeth, webbed feet, paddle tail and took a close look at these features on the visiting mounted animal. In the lesson we were able to connect these adaptations to how beavers can change a habitat and help many animals in the wild such as creating ponds and clearing trees to allow for new growth. The students were then asked to take the beaver engineering challenge - how would you design a mini dam with sticks and mud? What followed was muddy teamwork, fun, and a new appreciation for our local mammalian engineer!
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
STEAM Night
Last week Woodlawn celebrated it's first year as a STEAM-focused school. Around 300 students, families, and community members attended the evening STEAM event which included tinkering stations by the Studio-2-Schools program, music performances by the Right Brain Initiative, and robotics demonstration by two First Tech Challenge teams, including the world champion team Hot Wired. In addition, each grade offered the families an engineering challenge to complete that evening including 'What is the best design for a straw rocket?', 'Can you create a circuit to power a music box?', 'What is the best way to design a truss bridge?'
I want to send out a thank you to all who helped make our first STEAM Night a success - Woodlawn staff, Blueprint Foundation, Children's Museum, Viking Mars Missions Education and Preservation Project, Studio-2-Schools program, Batteries in Black Robotics Team, US Fish and Wildlife Services, Hot Wired Robotics Team, Right Brain Initiative, First Lego League, and EG Robotics. And a final BIG thank you to the wonderful Woodlawn community, your support and enthusiasm is amazing!
Thursday, May 12, 2016
First year as a STEAM-focused school
Over the 2015-16 school year, students and staff at Woodlawn were able to connect and add creativity, collaboration, hands-on experiences, and problem solving to our science units. In May, we celebrated our STEAM work by looking back at our students' experiences and planned ahead for the next year!
Monday, May 9, 2016
What planet would you create?
Our 2nd graders were asked the question - if you were able to discover a new planet, what would it be like? They learned about planets in our solar system as well as other exoplanets, and started drawing what their planet would look like from space. Each week they were able to connect their science studies with the project - weather, landforms, habitat, food chains. They were also able to draw from their own experience and dreams as they wrote about what type of house they would built for their families and what food they would like to eat on their planet. All of their ideas where eventually put together in a 'travel brochure' for their planet.
As an extension to the project was a planet art activity so they could touch, design, and see their special planet. Using paper mache over Starbucks plastic lids, each student had their own half dome to decorate.
Thursday, May 5, 2016
Here's a sneak peak at the plans for the Woodlawn STEAM Night - Thursday, May 12th from 5:45-8pm.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Waves, waves, everywhere - part II
The first grade finished their light wave exploration with an activity demonstrating the different types of light coming from the Sun. The lesson started with a discussion about why we see rainbows and moves into ways that we can break ‘white’ light into the different colors. The students were able to view sunlight, compact fluorescent light (CFL), and ‘black’ light in a homemade spectrometer and saw the different colors in the rainbow in these light source.
We also discussed light waves that we as humans can not see but that other animals can - snakes can sense infrared waves and bugs can see ultraviolet waves. To demonstrate these ‘invisible’ waves, we used UV reactive beads. I pulled out a clear container with white beads that said ‘RED’ on it. The students are asked, ‘what color are these beads?’. Most students said ‘red’ because of the label but eventually trusted their own observation that the beads were white. Each student was able to create a keychain with the beads before we started our science experiment - what would happen if we took these beads outside?’ We listed our hypothesis and then walked to the playground for the big reveal. They were so excited! When we came back in, one of the students stated “it’s not magic, it’s science!”
Thursday, April 28, 2016
STEAM Noche/Night is two weeks away!
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
The Magic School Bus is Real!
Lockheed Martin has created an amazing bus that can transport a class to the surface of Mars. Hopefully it will visit Portland soon!
When we started brainstorming the Woodlawn STEAM plan last year, we used the 'three dimensions' of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) as a guide. We saw STEM and the current educational method as covering the 'Practices' and 'Core Ideas' of the NGSS. What was missing was the 'Crosscutting Concepts'. Overall, it is the blending of science with the 'TEM' of STEM as well as allowing more right brain activity (arts). The Crosscutting Concepts include:
Patterns
Similarity and diversity
Cause and effect
Scale, proportion, and quantity
Systems and system models
Energy and matter
Structure and function
Stability and change
These concepts are related to the arts. Our concept of STEAM involves adding design, innovation, creativity, hands-on experiences, problem solving, and collaboration to our science units. As we become more comfortable with these cross-cutting concepts we can better connect art, dance, gym classes with the curriculum in the classroom, using the same vocabulary to reinforce the 'Core Ideas' but allowing the students to practice their design thinking skills in a more kinesthetic way.