Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Whole Stole the Crayons in Silicon Valley?

FourSquare's Tristan Walker on race & Silicon Valley @NPR
On Tuesdays I go to Dallas' best tech networking event, hands down. We talk about difficult stuff like mergers, Bitcoin banks and trend-lines in the world of entrepreneurship.  

Today, we got up close with an even more difficult topic--who stole the multi-colored Crayons from the coloring book that is high tech?  Where are women in the workforce? African Americans? Latinos?  Forget about hide and seek. It's more like "King of the Hill." Some folks get to the top. Others get pushed away. Why?

There was a polite intensity in the room, and a real sense that we need to talk more about this.  Not as academics, not as politicians, but as the real people who create companies, hire staff and make actual decisions to either mentor or ignore talented up and comers.  The stats are pretty grim.  Three percent of Silicon Valley engineers are Latino and only two percent African American.  And women, over 70% of whom express interest in STEM during middle school...less then half of one percent study computer science.  Of all engineers, only 12% are women.

In the last few weeks, there has been a geyser of coverage about race in Tech.  From the American Society for Engineering Education, to Fast Company to NPR-Morning Edition's profile of Tristan Walker, the heat is on about race in the Valley.  The bottom line is that young talent gets into tech when people see role models from their own communities and when people reach out to mentor others.  No big initiatives, programs or grants will be as impactful as your contribution.  

The takeaway?  If you really believe in the values of tech and entrepreneurship, then start by disrupting what you see every day.  Upside for entrepreneurs?  More talent.  More human resources.  More intellectual and social capital under your roof or in your shop. Ready to be that change?

Allen Selis, Founding Director  
Tech EdVentures

Like what you see?  
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Tech EdVentures brings STEM skills to children in grades K-8.
We're committed to disrupting the world, one young inventor at a time!

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Would Schools Please Stop Killing Creativity?

On my way to teaching a group of 7th graders today, I overheard the math teacher lecturing his/her kids.  Quote:

"Would you please stop running your own probability simulations on the calculators?  It messes up the settings and makes it harder to set up for my next class."

Friends, this is what's wrong with schools.  We're too task-centered, too worried about losing pace and not excited enough to let kids drive the action.  

Those of us who study schools believe that the power of schooling to shape attitudes is even greater than its ability to convey knowledge. The takeaway from this class was "don't think too much. Just follow directions!" I am a fan of traditional schooling when it's done well.  But done poorly, it's a mess.  Please, teachers, let your kids hack.  Let them invent. Let them guide the learning flow.  And by all means, jump for joy when they decide to run their own probability simulations on the TI Calcs, OK?  

Allen Selis, Founding Director  
Tech EdVentures

Like what you see?  
Then like us on Facebook, too!

Tech EdVentures brings STEM skills to children in grades K-8.
We're committed to disrupting the world, one young inventor at a time!

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Missing the Point on STEM Shortages

Someone has to shoot down Hal Salzman’s recent opinion piece in US News, if just for the sake of good policy debate.  Here goes…

Under the headline “STEM Grads Are at a Loss,” Salzman argues that the United States is actually over training for STEM careers, and that graduates with PhD’s and engineering degrees increasingly face limited job prospects.  His figures show “ample supply (of workers), stagnant wages and, by industry accounts, thousands of applicants for any advertised job.”  


Salzman’s data (see Issues in Science and Technology) is valuable, but the conclusions are misleading.  Salzman takes sides in a debate about immigration policy regarding guest worker visas, which many tech companies rely upon to access a lower cost, international hiring pool.  Salzman’s claim is that the US provides enough skilled STEM employees, and should not dilute its workforce with expanded parameters for H-1B visas. 

Salzman’s conclusion on immigration might or might not be true, but his argument is overly aggressive and risks damage to American efforts to educate young engineers and scientists.  In my last post (WhyYour Child Needs A STEM Class In Elementary School) I argued that schools are not doing enough to train students for STEM careers, and that high-tech education should start as young as possible.  Like Second Grade!  

Based upon Salzman’s conclusions, educational leaders might rest contented that they are providing enough trained workers.  No need for additional programs, teacher training or materials.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

As the founder of Tech EdVentures, I’ve met front-line educators in dozens of Dallas area public schools that are well managed and superbly funded.  Most of the schools I’ve visited offer STEM education as an add-on, a club or a once-a-week elective.  Think of this as “a sprinkling of STEM” to season the main course of language arts, math and science.  But what if STEM should be the main course, the meat and potatoes of our children’s education?  We are rationing access to skills that have the potential to change lives and drive economic advancement.  We need to double our knowledge base several times over, not hold steady, as Salzman’s argument might imply.

The biggest problem of Salzman’s argument is his mindset about how individuals create value.  He assumes that large companies and public institutions are the engine that drives economic success.  Not so!  Our economic future is brightest when we cultivate a large cadre of inventors and entrepreneurs.  Design and programming skills help shape a mindset in which individuals are empowered to make disruptive changes.  The heart of STEM education is the belief that individuals and small teams have the power to re-shape their world.  And that is precisely why we need aggressive efforts to train young students to build, design, engineer and code.  These students won’t go off to private companies to seek work.  They will found their own startups.  And then they’ll hire others.

When all is said and done, Salzman’s addition to the policy debate is helpful.  But the take-away for educators is off key.  We still need engineering labs for second graders, and we need them yesterday.

Take me to Tech EdVentures.com

Allen Selis, Founding Director
Tech EdVentures

Support Tech EdVentures 

By like-ing our FB page.      
Cross posted from the Addison Treehouse blog.

The Treehouse is a new co-working space, geared towards 
startups and young companies.  Check them out...

Friday, October 3, 2014

STEM Studies: Elementary Schools Need Engineering Labs

If your daughter's second grade did not have a reading curriculum or a math program, odds are you would be out the door tomorrow.  You would say, "Hey, reading and math are survival skills.  My daughter won't be very successful or happy unless she can read great books, write expressively and solve the kind of quantitative problems she'll encounter in daily life.  I would be crazy to send her on the journey to adulthood unskilled and unprepared."  You'd be right.

What if her school had all of the above, but didn’t teach coding, engineering and robotics in second grade. Would you still be satisfied? Let’s hope you answered “No” to that question, too. You should expect to see your second grader writing code, building machines and developing prototypes. If not, then it’s time to look for a new school.
Here are four reasons why.
1: IT is the new plumbing
The degree to which information technology has become embedded in our professional lives is at the level of saturation. When I ran a school, we would not hire receptionists unless they could update the web site and upload CSV files to Mail Chimp. In the world of trades, it’s impossible to gain better than unskilled labor unless you can work with data and diagnostics. Plumbers don’t show up at your door today without scanners and ROV’s sporting video cameras. If you want to be a part of the working world today, you need to know how to use complex machines. End of story.
2: STEM skills are empowering
Societies are funny things. They allocate status, power and privilege in fascinating ways. Once upon a time, poets and theologians made decisions that shaped the destiny of whole societies. Today that entrĂ©e is increasingly reserved for people who know how to analyze, build, design and create. Adults who lack these skills will increasingly be the un-empowered whose voices are not heard and who do not get to make their mark upon the world. While we have yet to see our first “startup President”, just wait. It’s coming.
3: Your child should be a developer, not a consumer
The economic world is about to break down between two different categories of actors. Consumers and developers. We are currently awash in a market full of devices that don’t require much expertise for consumers to use. That’s on purpose. The simpler it is to use an app, the easier it will be to sell, monetize, market and data-mine its users. But there is a clear power-differential to this equation. Simple consumers are giving up valuable information, content and hard cash. The developers are the ones who benefit. Which one do you want your child to be?
4: Teach your child to make things. Not buy them.
As part of my business, I teach nine year olds how to code. During our first class session, I point out the golden rule of things. It goes like this: “Whatever you own, if it came from a store, then someone designed it and manufactured it. If you don’t like the way it works, then get out there and reprogram it, hack it or just make your own.” The kids nod their heads and say, “sure, no problem.” That single lesson could be a life-changer if it succeeds in shifting basic attitudes about the economics of need and consumption. And that is the most important reason why your second grader should have an engineering lab in her school. What we learn at the age of eight or nine goes beyond skills. We learn attitudes, mindsets, habits of work and patterns of thinking. When we teach kids to make things themselves, not buy them, we empower them to assume responsibility for the shape of their world.
Now that is a kid whom I would like to see in the oval office one day. One who reads poetry AND has an engineering degree.
Take me to Tech EdVentures.com

Allen Selis, Founding Director
Tech EdVentures - Robotics and Coding for Kids

Support Tech EdVentures by 
like-ing our FB page.
Cross posted from the Addison Treehouse blog.
Thanks, Paula, for inviting me to write this post!

The Treehouse is a new co-working space, geared towards startups and young companies.  Check them out...

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

The Rising Tide of Tech Education for Kids

The last leg of our travels home to Dallas took the Tech EdVentures road trip to Los Angeles, where I visited an amazing company named U-Code.  
Here is their story.



Scott Mueller, U-Code's founder, is blessed with a very sharp son who was looking for a bigger mental challenge than school work provided.  Scott began teaching coding to his son and immediately realized easy it was for kids to learn coding skills...and how that experience was transformative for his son's learning.  Scott, himself a good entrepreneur, took off with the idea.  A store-front computer learning center followed.  Then another.  And another.  Scott knew that he was on to something big, and kept going.

When I visited Scott's learning center in Hermosa Beach, it was packed with nearly two dozen kids in the midst of creating Minecraft universes.  The kids shifted easily from the graphics of their games to the root code of their creations.  Some kids called out questions, and Scott's kid-savvy tech staff jumped in seamlessly to help students over any difficult spots.

In the waiting area outside of the programming mosh-pit, I met the mother of one student.  Her child is on the Autism spectrum and had, in her words, a miserable time in school.  The she found U-Code.  According to this mom, a chance to learn coding gave her son an incredible boost of self confidence.  Not only did he make great strides in computer programming, but he also turned to his other schoolwork with a better attitude, greater persistence in the face of challenges and a more resilient sense of himself as a successful learner.  Scott and I keep hearing these stories as we teach kids.

As Tech EdVentures and U-Code both grow, the question that we all should be asking ourselves is this:  At what point do schools become irrelevant?  At what point do small, nimble entrepreneurs add greater value to our children's future than larger educational systems?  

This is what small, focused learning spaces can do for kids.  And it's why this venue for education is destined to grow steadily over the next several decades.

Take me to Tech EdVentures.com
Allen Selis, Founding Director
Tech EdVentures - Robotics and Coding for Kids

Tech EdVentures is blogging from the road as part of our recent visit to Silicon Valley. All that effort, just to bring cool content to you.  We know you're grateful...
You can thank us by like-ing our FB page, OK?


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Programming Just for Kids


Sharon Marzouk, Founder of Techy Kids
I have to start this post with a public statement:  Sharon, you were right.

Sharon who?

Meet Sharon Marzouk, whom I have dubbed the Duchess of Thymio.  (JK...Sharon is more of a mentor to me, and one I'm grateful to have.)

Sharon is the founder of Techy Kids, a Menlo Park based company that creates amazing lesson plans for kids to design, collaborate, code and present their inventions just like adult startup leaders do. Sharon is also the person who convinced me (and Tech EdVentures!) to make Thymio II the foundation of our early-elementary coding program.

There are two reasons.
First, the Thymio II is a great robot which comes equipped with sensors, speakers, a microphone and even an accelerometer.  It's a tremendous collection of technology that is presented in a friendly, well constructed package that appeals to kids.


Kids drag and drop icons...while the code auto-populates!
Second, Thymio uses a little-known platform called ASEBA.  Kids as young as Kindergarten age can program Thymio by moving drag and drop icons within a friendly user interface.  At the same time, ASEBA's interface is writing actual computer code.  Kids quickly see that for every icon they manipulate that have written a new line of code.  This makes it easy for kids to scaffold up to their next level of skills by typing precise directions with a keyboard.  ASEBA's combination of a simple interface and a sophisticated program environment sets Thymio head and shoulders above many 'bots including Legos Mindstorms, and helps kids learn to code sooner than they would otherwise.

That, in the end, is the shared mission of Techy Kids and Tech EdVentures.  We want to see young kids develop sophisticated skills so that they can take their place as leaders, inventors and entrepreneurs.   Just like Sharon! 


 Take me to Tech EdVentures.com
Allen Selis, 
Founding Director
Tech EdVentures

Tech EdVentures is blogging from the road as part of our recent visit to Silicon Valley. All that effort, just to bring cool content to you.  You can thank us by like-ing our FB page, OK?



Friday, August 22, 2014

What is Educational Entrepreneurship?

Kate Allison of First Focus
Demos the brain-wave copter!
How can small organizations create amazing learning environments?  That was the conversation Tech EdVentures had with Jim Connor of First Focus Learning Systems in Mountain View, CA.

First Focus is a very cool place.  They do things like teaching a whole year of reading skills in six months.  Or fast-tracking English language fluency for kids that are newly arrived to the US.  It's amazing stuff.  

Tech EdVentures and First Focus share some powerful core beliefs about how education should work.  For instance?

It's all about individual teaching.
Many schools are run for efficiency, teaching to the middle of the class or moving kids along at a pace which is manageable for 35 students at once.  We believe that the best learning experiences are custom-tailored to the needs of one student at at time.  Our vision puts kids at the center, and we individualize the learning experience for each and every student.

Exciting content motivates kids.
When kids engage in a hands-on activity, they are excited and motivated to work hard.  First Focus does this by incorporating some very neat high-tech toys which spark discussion, generate writing prompts and energize kids to achieve.  Similarly, Tech EdVentures builds every class session as a project-based learning experience, in which kids see, touch and interact with something that they built.  The result is excitement, motivation, curiosity and persistence in the face of challenges.  The results are incredible.

Kids need to move at their own pace.
Many kids who under-perform do so because their classes move too slowly!  By allowing kids to move on instead of waiting for the group, success builds upon success and kids maximize their learning.

One final idea is at the core of educational entrepreneurship:  
Small, nimble institutions will always teach better than large bureaucracies.  
I'll offer Tech EdVentures as an example.  Our most important focus is on the learning experience of individual students.  We update and modify our content and methods constantly.  And we are immediately responsive to the the feedback of our students.  

This kind of entrepreneurial approach to learning is the difference between good enough and best of class.  We applaud First Focus, and hope that others will join us in truly, boldly, teaching out of the box.

Allen




Thursday, August 21, 2014

Tech EdVentures in Silicon Valley


Tech EdVentures is spending the next few days in Silicon Valley, meeting with friends who design web sites and create platforms for learning.  Before we share the details, two pictures will give you some "local flavor" of one of my favorite neighborhood in the Valley.

First stop was Whole Foods in Los Altos, where I went to grab some goji berries and fresh hummus.  Those of us with battery powered rides had an easier time parking!

Still on the high-tech-car theme, I finished lunch and pulled into traffic heading for Palo Alto.  Driving north I made my way past not one, not two but three of Google's funky self-driving cars.  It's a normal car until you get to the roof, which is decked out with laser sensors, cameras and satellite measurement gear.  Very, very cool. 

BOTH of these photos remind us of how fast the most basic technologies in our lives are adapting.  In this environment, Tech EdVentures believes it's essential for kids to have some critical skills for high tech success.  
These include the ability to collaborate, experience with problem solving and (of course) the tools to create computer code in order to automate work that would otherwise be tedious and repetitive.

Brave new world?  Here we come! 

Allen

Monday, August 18, 2014

Tech EdVentures Brings STEM Skills to School

So what did you do on your first day of class?

At Akiba Academy of Dallas, Sixth grade students took a break from their first day of school to wire circuit boards, power up low-voltage LED's and connect a PC-based integrated development environment to a microprocessor.  They'll be programming it in C++ starting next week, lead by staff from Tech EdVentures.

Did you say "first day of school?"

Our first day experience with the kids from Akiba confirms what national thought leaders are saying about STEM education.  Younger kids have tremendous aptitude and interest in technology.  The hands-on approach that we takes appeals to adolescents' natural curiosity. And once kids get their hands on a problem, they tune in to the finer points of math and science and are motivated to work hard.


Today's group of sixth grade boys and girls discussed the difference between anode and cathode leads as well as the physics that make LED's work in the first place.  Next week we'll bring resistors into the circuit, and students will start to adapt C++ sketches for the microprocessor that is illuminating their creations.

It's clearly going to be an exciting year for both Akiba and for Tech EdVentures.

Allen


Thursday, August 14, 2014

Are we illiterate?

It's official.  Coding is now a literacy skill.  At least that's what the folks at Ed Week are suggesting.  They have highlighted resources from MIT that allow families to learn computer coding skills together.  The amazing thing to note is that important leaders in the Ed community have begun to see technology as a fundamental literacy, not just a "special," not an add-on and not an elective.  


It's a success skill that we need to give our kids.  Way to go, Ed Week.  

While our schools have not yet caught up, there are still places to learn tech and coding skills.  

Code.org is a great resource.  


My project, Tech EdVentures, is of course the local favorite!


Allen

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Subtle Little Lessons

Last week, I was certain that the new Tech EdVentures web site was ready to launch.  I had worked for nearly six days non-stop drafting style sheets, tweaking graphic elements that my designer had created.  In preview mode, it looked awesome.  It looked invincible.  Even more importantly, it looked like I would finally be able to start advertising!  Think again.  

I opened the graphical page editor that Go Daddy provides.  I hit publish.  The site crashed.  I'll spare you the details, but five hours and three increasingly heated phone calls to tech support later, a sweet guy named George from Go Daddy set me straight.

"Sir, you looped around our graphic interface to write your own html, right?
"Yes, pretty impressive, huh?"
"Sir, you missed a single closing bracket on your main page.  That was enough to crash your entire site."
"Oh.  Um, oops."

OK--long story short--there are so many lessons to be learned from this.  About humility.  About knowing the limits of one's technical skills.  About treating tech support nicely.  Always!  I'll simply state the obvious.  Small things can be really powerful sometimes.  In this case, my entire educational program had ground to a halt because of a single missing keystroke.  I was impressed, for sure.

Allen

Monday, March 17, 2014

Hello, World

This month, I took the first few steps to combining my love of education, my passion for social change and my long standing interest in the way that technology shapes our lives.

The answer is a startup project called Tech EdVentures.

My working premise is that children as young as Kindergarten age can acquire the critical thinking skills that spiral towards a career in science, engineering, coding and design.  The starting place is not technology itself, rather, hands-on experiences that are well designed.  Yes, it's all about curiosity and curriculum...and code!

Some milestones- EdVentures, LLC was incorporated in TX in March of 2014.
We began creating program and advertising "Tech EdVentures" with clients that month.
There is a lot to build...including the web site.
If you're curious in the meantime,  leave a comment on this page.

Allen