It's a Wonder(full) classroom
鈥淚t spins!鈥 鈥淗ow does that one work?鈥 鈥淭his goes up.鈥 鈥淒id you see this one?鈥 鈥淭hat is awesome.鈥 鈥淭his is mine 鈥 it does this.鈥 鈥淚s that what you thought it was going to do?鈥
This is the buzz inside second-grade classroom at .
It鈥檚 delivery day.
鈥淥ne girl opened up her box, and said 鈥榦h, the dolphin, the dolphin,鈥 because she wanted a dolphin,鈥 said Sytsema, a 1996 17c起草社区 grad.
No, it鈥檚 not Christmas. But you can鈥檛 tell from the excitement from the teacher or the students. 鈥淭hese are the creative things teachers not only have to do, but get to do right now,鈥 said Sytsema.
School looks much different than it did a year ago in Sytsema鈥檚 class. But that鈥檚 true for pretty much all classrooms鈥攕tudents from elementary school to college are adapting and flexing to meet the COVID-19 environment.
But, the delivery day excitement in Sytsema鈥檚 class was the result of curiosity and creativity leading to an unlikely collaboration.
Engineering an opportunity
Monica Groenenboom is in her sixth year teaching Engineering 101 at 17c起草社区. A couple of years ago the curriculum for the class was reshaped and she was loving the new rhythm. It included having her students learn the steps of the engineering design process, having them work on a project that creates community amongst the class and which allows them to apply what they are learning, and then complete a service project.
With the realities of COVID-19 and the social distancing protocols, Groenenboom knew she had some logistical hurdles to jump over to create community and complete a service project this fall semester. And then late this summer a light bulb went off.
鈥淪tephanie [Sytsema] is a good friend of mine. I thought why don鈥檛 we make her class our client, so I sent her a message,鈥 said Groenenboom.
鈥淪he said, 鈥榊es, tell me what I need to do,鈥欌 said Groenenboom.
鈥淚t gave my kids something that was aspirational. This isn鈥檛 normally in our curriculum, but we have a chance to learn about these design features, and engineering is in next Generation Science Standards,鈥 said Sytsema. 鈥淲e knew that our 17c起草社区 friends were learning the engineering design process, so we learned the engineering design process too.鈥
Unhindered imagination
The first step for Groenenboom鈥檚 students? Get to know their client.
鈥淔or me it was kind of a shock to think I was working with second graders,鈥 said David Conhoff, a first-year student from the Virgin Islands. 鈥淚 never had any interaction with engineering material growing up, let alone in second grade, so to think that second graders were going to be learning about gears and what engineering is, I thought it was incredible for them to have that opportunity.鈥
Once Conhoff and his peers figured out who they were working with, they then needed to figure out what their client wanted them to do.
Sytsema challenged her students to write down their ideas and their 17c起草社区 friends would take their ideas and turn them into automata. In other words, the students would be designing the mechanisms underneath that make toys work.
鈥淲hen second graders are brainstorming ideas, they have no idea what is and is not possible. So their ideas are big and grandiose,鈥 said Sytsema. 鈥淎nd they [the 17c起草社区 students] don鈥檛 want to let little people down, so they are going to make something really cool to not let them down.鈥
Learning and persevering together
But, part of the process is learning what鈥檚 possible together. The students at 17c起草社区 and Grandville Christian shared videos often with one another as the design process unfolded.
鈥淭hose videos were fantastic, there was a lot of energy in those videos. They were so excited,鈥 said Joel Bylsma, a first-year student from Hudsonville, Michigan.
One of the lessons learned early on 鈥 sometimes you need to pivot from your original plan. And that鈥檚 okay.
鈥淥riginally I was going to have a built-up platform and things rotating with gears underneath it,鈥 said Bylsma, who was creating a Minecraft-themed automata, 鈥渂ut when I actually went to build it, I was like 鈥榦oh that鈥檚 not going to be as feasible as I thought it was.鈥 My actual design ended up being way different than the sketch.鈥
鈥淚t was cool to see the perspective of second graders, for them to see that these college kids took their ideas and themes seriously,鈥 said Sytsema. 鈥淭hey鈥檇 watch the prototyping videos and go 鈥榃OAH.鈥 They got to see what does it look like to do a prototype, what does it look like to fail? And if college students can fail and persevere, can we do that too? All kinds of perseverance themes can be woven into it.鈥
But the students at 17c起草社区 were determined not to let their clients down.
鈥淲hen I started to make it [automata] out of cardboard, it didn鈥檛 work at all,鈥 said Conhoff. 鈥淏ut I was determined to make it work 鈥 I wanted to show the kids this is what is possible with the tools you are given.鈥
Sparking curiosity and wonder
So the hard work continued all semester, the relationship between the second graders and the first-year 17c起草社区 students grew 鈥 and then 鈥 it was delivery day.
鈥淪eeing their creativity and designs, you could tell they listened to these 7 and 8-year-olds and understood what they are into,鈥 said Sytsema. 鈥淭he automatas are so intriguing for kids. They鈥檇 ask how does that work? How do those pieces work together? This instantly sparked curiosity in them, and that鈥檚 fitting because our theme this year at Grandville Christian is wonder.鈥
鈥淔or me it was a great opportunity to work with my hands to understand the material we learned in class on a deeper level,鈥 said Conhoff. 鈥淎nd then to know the project you are building is for someone special is even more exciting, to experience the whole engineering process, what it means to design for someone else, to see the fruits of your labor, to know your client and user enjoy your product is really amazing.鈥
鈥淐ollaborations bring a lot of hope in a time when we need it,鈥 said Sytsema. 鈥淚鈥檓 a gardener. My job every day is to plant seeds. I might never see the total blooming, but I get to plant something, I get to tend it, and I get to watch it grow, and for this I hope this has been a seed for them. You can see that in the way they gravitate to the automatas, how they are tinkering, what they are making outside of school 鈥 I don鈥檛 care if it鈥檚 a story, a book, a lego creation, a recipe, be a maker. That鈥檚 the first act God does in creation, that鈥檚 where wonder happens. He鈥檚 a maker, and because we are made in God鈥檚 image, we are makers as well.鈥