From a dazzling drone display (above) to discus-fetching cleanup robots and ultra-vivid 5G video enhancements, engineering triumphed at the Tokyo Olympics. So did the engineer-athletes who vied for medals. The 2020 Summer Games, delayed for a year and devoid of fans due to the COVID-19 pandemic, featured skateboarding and other new sports. Your designers will know no bounds doing this month's activities. Watch them go for the gold!
|
|
BONUS: Explore the science and engineering of the Olympics and Paralympics - including the athletes who compete in them - with Changing the Games, NBC Learn's latest series of nine videos featuring beach volleyball and other sports from the Tokyo Games.
|
|
Students in grades 3 to 5 learn about basic principles of engineering through a series of 12 hands-on activities and lessons related to the Olympics and sports, including designing venues and protective gear.
|
|
|
|
|
A homegrown humanoid hoopster was the riveting rookie at the Tokyo Olympics. Built by Toyota engineers for fun, CUE5 stole the show by nailing free shots and three pointers during half-time at the opening USA-France basketball game.
|
|
|
Don't wait for the next Olympics - whether the 2020 Summer Paralympics that start later this month or the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing - to engage your STEM students through sports.
Beyond instilling fundamental principles such as forces and motion, sports-focused engineering design challenges can improve teamwork and other crucial professional skills, according to the Institute of Competition Sciences.
These eGFI Teachers activities and other resources will help you up your game, no matter what season!
.
|
|
Planning a road trip this summer? Whether you're heading to a beach, national park, or grandma's house, there are plenty of engineering landmarks to admire along the way — including the interstate highway system along which most travelers must pass. Check out eGFI's list of engineering destinations worth braking for!
|
|
Student Contests & Summer STEM Programs
|
|
U.S. middle and high school students in congressional districts nationwide gain hands-on practice with coding and computer science by designing apps. Apps due Nov. 1, 2021.
|
|
U.S. high school students 16 years old and up have an opportunity to work on a real research project with scientists and engineers over the summer at one of several Naval Research Labs around the country, receiving a stipend of $3,500 to $4,000. Applications are due Nov. 1, 2021.
|
|
Billed as the largest annual hackathon in the world, NASA's 10th annual International Space Apps Challenge invites students, educators, scientists, technicians, artists, and other interested parties to develop apps using open-source data. Nine other space agencies, including in Japan, Bahrain, and Europe, are participating. This year's challenge will be held virtually on October 2-3, 2021.
|
|
Registration is now open for this global technology competition in which students aged 16 and older vie to create an innovative software solution that involves at least one Microsoft Azure component.
|
|
Educator Resources, Grants & Opportunities
|
|
LAST CALL: Learn skills to integrate engineering and design in your PreK-12 STEM classes with digital. ASEE-endorsed professional development workshops from TeachEngineering, the University of Colorado Boulder's digital library of teacher-tested, research-based engineering curricula.
Final two-day workshop covers engineering prototyping and pedagogy skills and tools August 11-12.
Sign up and learn more HERE.
|
|
Bring the excitement of future lunar expeditions to your middle school classroom.
“Landing Humans on the Moon” features four standards-aligned activities to help students learn about the Moon and create a model of a human landing system for lunar expeditions.
Visit the site to download the guide and watch video demonstrations of the activities.
|
|
NSTA's Daily Do Playlists are instructional sequences of two or more lessons that help students coherently build science ideas over time. Lessons have been updated to facilitate remote learning.
|
|
The National Energy Educational Development Project (NEED) offers free, live virtual energy education workshops and other professional learning opportunities for P-12 teachers in subjects from electricity to climate science to solar, wind, and nuclear energy.
|
|
Engineering Career-Exploration Resources
|
|
STEM Careers. -- Show students what engineers do with Discovering You: Engineering Your World, a new video series from NBCLearn, Chevron, and ASEE.
Chemical Engineering Careers. -- YouTube series launched by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation aims to convey the major positive impact that chemical engineers and scientists have on society. Each video includes a proposed lesson for incorporating the cutting edge research into the classroom.
NASA Internships. -- High school, college, and grad students can work with engineers and scientists on sending the first woman to the moon and other missions.
|
|
|
|
ASEE-eGFI Engineering Education @ Home
|
|
|
Explore eGFI: Helpful Links
|
|
Whether you seek timely, authentic engineering activities, teaching resources, or professional development opportunities, ASEE's free eGFI Teachers newsletter is your go-to source for STEM!
|
|
Engineering, Go For It (eGFI) is part of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), a non-profit organization committed to enhancing efforts to improve STEM and engineering education.
1818 N Street, N.W., Suite 600
Washington, DC, District of Columbia 20036
|
|
|
|
|
|
|