An ICE SCULPTURE FAIR Integrated Elementary STEM Project

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An ICE SCULPTURE FAIR Integrated Elementary STEM Project The ITEEA Teaching Technology and Engineering STEM Showcase Washington, DC March 2, 2016 4:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Exhibit Hall Table # STEM PROJECT: ICE SCULPTURE FAIR STEM PROJECT: ENGINEERING BUILDING DAY Standards Addressed: K-2-ETS1-1 and K-PS2-1 Engineering Design: engage, explore, explain, elaborate, evaluate Model of Instruction: 5-E Presentation Kathleen B. Horstmeyer Presidential Awardee, 1996 khors3500@aol.com

Rubrics are distributed with each activity. Assessments include a variety of activities used with Ice Sculptures. Kathleen B. Horstmeyer Presidential Awardee, 1996 khors3500@aol.com

AN ICE SCULPTURE FAIR My ICE SCULPTURE FAIR is held at the completion of the theme. The exact date depends on availability of space within our building! There are many ways to hold science fairs with your students. The following pages explain the procedure and organization that works for me. All students participate in the science fairs! Students focus on a structure to be constructed for the Ice Sculpture Fair. Super Star Awards and ribbons are place at each presentation. Students receive award certificates during our class celebration. Students wear goggles, aprons and white lab jackets (which they have created from Dad s old white shirts). They design and illustrate

STEM symbols on these jackets with their permanent markers. There are numerous opportunities for students to participate in hands-on experiments and investigations. First semester is devoted to observations and writing details about what we have observed. Questioning and probing are naturally woven into all curiosity. Presentations are occuring within our classroom and building throughout the school year. Students are prepared to participate in their presentations and are extremely anxious to share their exciting results with the school community! Much time is spent on discussion of investigation topics before material is disseminated to parents. Students are required to prepare an outline of their ice sculpture before starting their STEM

project. The students share this outline with classmates. During this presentation, classmates question and suggest ideas when clarity is needed. Rubrics are included in the students Ice Sculpture Fair folders. The Ice Sculpture fairs provide a wonderful assessment of student understanding of the science process, the scientific method and STEM. This project integrates science, math, technology, language, engineering, music, and art allowing every child the opportunity to be successful while having fun and truly enjoying themselves. Objectives:

* Students will demonstrate understanding of the freezing point. * Students will investigate ways to build the ice sculpture structure. * Students will learn to read a thermometer while investigating the ice sculpture structure. * Students will understand how water turns into a solid during the freezing process. * Students will demonstrate learnings through integration of science, math, technology, engineering, language arts, music and art. ICE SCULPTURE FAIR RUBRIC

4. OUTSTANDING Ice Sculpture Project presentation ready before 9:00 A.M. Ice Sculpture Project follows safety protective measures, a covering for the table, deep pan to hold meltings, poster board which stands on its own, poster, ice sculpture, ice song, poem, ice book, pre-design, and the ice log journal. Ice Sculpture poster requires the graph, pre-design of the ice sculpture, ice palace sheet and poem. Ice Sculpture Presenter orally communicates his/her sculpture construction, graph, pre-design, poem. Voice is clear and expressive Presents project to other students and adults without fooling or playing. 3. GOOD

Everything for a 4, minus two items. Visible items must include the ice sculpture, safety measures and poster. 2. FAIR Everything for a 3, minus three items. 1. NO EFFORT Kathleen B. Horstmeyer Presidential Awardee 1996 khors3500@aol.com

Kathleen B. Horstmeyer khors3500@aol.com ICE SCULPTURE DAY Date: Location: Time: PREPARATIONS: KEEP AN ICE LOG JOURNAL. TAKE PHOTOS! THINK about your Ice Sculpture. COLLECT containers. PRE-DESIGN your Ice Sculpture on graph paper and/or using computer technology. COLOR your pre-design. FILL your CONTAINERS with WATER! Adding food coloring enhances your Ice Sculpture! Hold a Family Conference. Reserve freezer space. FREEZE your containers! PREDICT time it will take water to freeze! CREATE a GRAPH to be displayed with your Ice Sculpture. Your graph must demonstrate representation of your ice sculpture (number of shapes, containers, colors etc.) CREATE a POEM about your Ice Sculpture! Type it on the computer! Display on poster. CREATE AN ICE SONG about your ice sculpture! Type it on the computer! Display one copy on

your poster and give another copy to your teacher. Record your ice song and play it softly at your station! School Preparations: Design Poster including placement of items to be displayed (graph, poem, song, title of poster, your name, creative additions). Complete Ice Hard Covered Book in school. Home Preparations: Complete Organized Poster at home. Ice Sculpture Creation ICE Sculpture EXHIBIT must include: 1. POSTER 2. GRAPH 3. PRE-DESIGN 4. ICE Sculpture SHEET 5. POEM, SONG, LOG JOURNAL 6. ICE Sculpture Creation BRING TO SCHOOL! Container is required while building and displaying your Ice Sculpture CONTAINER SHOULD BE DEEP ENOUGH TO HOLD THE MELTINGS! PARENTS, PLEASE GUIDE YOUR CHILD WHILE HE/SHE TRANSPORTS THE ICE Sculpture to the Ice Sculpture Exhibit! BUILDING of ICE Sculpture MUST TAKE PLACE: Date BEFORE 9 A.M.

ICE SCULPTURE SHEET My ice sculpture has containers. These shapes were used to build it: 1. 2. 3. 4. I predict it will take to freeze my containers filled with water. I learned it actually took to freeze my containers filled with water. I predict removing frozen containers from the freezer will. I actually had to remove the freezer containers by. Building my ice sculpture involved the following steps: If I were to build an ice sculpture again, I would do the following:

I learned that building the ice sculpture was. PARENTS...PLEASE MAKE ARRANGEMENTS FOR ICE SCULPTURE PROJECT TO BE REMOVED FROM THE CAFETERIA AT 10:30 A.M. POSTERS WILL REMAIN IN SCHOOL. POSTERS should be placed in our hallway.

ASSESSMENT METHODS Student Interviews A student interview includes a planned sequence of questions, similar to a job interview. In contrast, a student conference suggests that a discussion with both student and teacher sharing ideas takes place. Portfolios A formal or informal collection of student work. A portfolio may be in many forms from photographs depicting student growth and understanding to a specialized electronic journal showing work completed over a period of time. Project/Product(s)

These may take many forms and are limited by time, resources, and imagination. Performance Task Involves presenting students with a technological task or project and then observing, interviewing, and looking at their solutions and products to assess what they actually know and can do. Demonstrations/Presentations Students explain and communicate their understanding of key ideas, concepts, and principles and abilities of processes, techniques, and skills. Informal Observations/Discussions/ Conferences Quite observations of students either individually or in groups for the

purpose of assessing and gathering information on their understanding of concepts, disposition to learning, abilities, and working in groups. Academic Prompts Open-ended statements or questions students may address either in writing or vocally. Examples of academic prompts may be questions such as: What is the technological problem we are trying to solve? Is that the only possible answer? What do you need to do next? Or, statements such as: How would you explain to an adult who doesn t understand? How would you explain to a younger student who doesn t understand? Reflect on your participation in class today and complete the following: I was surprised that I ; I discovered

that I ; The most important thing I learned today is ; I still have trouble with ; Something I would really like to know is. Other Evidence Observations, work samples, dialogues Student Self-Reflection/Assessment Often academic prompts are used to encourage students to look closely at their learning. Ask students to write about their effectiveness in a small group with questions such as, When I worked with my group, I was pleased with ; After working with this group, I now can improve by ; or When we work together again, we need to. Computerized Assessment

Sometimes commercial packages are used for computerized assessment. In addition, the computerized assessment may be self-developed and used as a tool to collect student attitudes, ideas, and concerns about technology. For example, students could complete a formal questionnaire or add comments to general statements such as the following: I usually give up when... I was surprised that I... Sometimes I don t know what to do when I start a project... I would rather work alone than in a group because... Put a mark on the scale of where you believe you are 1-----2----3----4----5----6----7----8----9----1 0 1. - I am not good with technologies.

10. I am good with technologies. Checklists These could be in forms from a simple listing to a formal progress report. Concept Mapping This assessment method allows teachers to gather data on students misconceptions. This is sometimes referred to as webbing. Performance Assessment This involves identifying the desired skills and abilities students will need and then checking for their level of performance. Paper and Pencil Tests These are quizzes and tests.

Individual and Group Work Rubric A rubric is based on the identified criteria taken from the content standards. Points or words are assigned to each phrase or level of accomplishment. This method gives feedback to the student about their work in key categories, and it can be used to communicate student performance to parents and administrators. The rubric example is designed to assess what and how well students understand the standards addressed in an activity. Rubrics are distributed with each activity. Assessments include a variety of activities used with Engineering Building Day and Ice Sculpture Day.

Kathleen B. Horstmeyer Presidential Awardee 1996 khors3500@aol.com