Makerspace for Education
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    • About Trisha Roffey
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    • Curriculum Guide
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  • Events & Publications
    • ISTE 2018
    • FETC 2017
  • Why Makerspace?
  • Mechanisms of a Makerspace
    • Constructionism & Constructivism
    • Makerspace
    • Design Thinking
    • Media Literacy
    • Papert's Big Ideas
  • Materials of a Makerspace
    • Print Resources
    • Best of the Web
    • Maker Challenges
    • Bloxels
    • Raspberry Pi
    • Coding
    • Makey Makey
    • Robotics >
      • Dash and Dot
      • KIBO
      • Cubelets
    • Media Creation >
      • Green Screen Technology
      • Stop Motion Animation
      • Digital Storytelling
    • LilyPad
    • Inventions with Recycled Materials
    • Breaker Space
    • littleBits
    • 3D Printing and Design
  • Community of Practice
    • Edmonton Catholic Schools Maker Community
    • Teacher Contributed Lessons
    • Makerspace for Education Blog
    • Makerspace Gallery
    • Host a Staff Maker Day

Why Makerspace?

RULE NUMBER ONE

BE BRILLIANT

Why Makerspace?

Despite the popularity and trend of the term “makerspace”, educators have to search hundreds of articles, websites and books to determine what this term is, how to begin, where to locate materials and determine the educational significance. Another complication is that the resurgence of this DIY movement found its grassroots in the public population and is just starting to make its way back to education. This makes navigating materials from an educational lens even more challenging.  Makerspace for Education, is a collaborative digital space for educators to explore how to create and use makerspaces in their own environments and will help to transform pedagogies of individual educators through immersion in the context and the support of a community of practice.
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This illustration is a Sketchup of what a makerspace might look like in a converted classroom. Makerspace can be achieved in any school, on any budget. There is no "one way" to implement a makerspace!
The Maker Movement is a vehicle that will allow schools to be part of the necessary return to constructivist education. A movement that will allow students to be creative, innovative, independent, and technologically literate; not an “alternative” way to learn, but what modern learning should really look like (Stager, 2014).
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​The Maker Movement is a theoretical and physical embodiment of constructivism that will reform how we educate students. (Roffey, 2015)  Education grounded in “making” has the capacity to transform the way we think about pedagogy and learning (Kurti, Kurti, & Flemming, 2014). At the heart of this movement is the understanding that “learning happens best when learners construct their understanding through a process of constructing things to share with others” (Donaldson, 2014, p. 1).  Key to the success of the maker movement in education is the shift away from ready-made knowledge to a classroom environment ripe for exploration, creativity, innovation and collaboration (Donaldson, 2014; Papert & Harel, 1991; Schön, Ebner, & Kumar; Schrock, 2014) with hands on materials and real world problems (Hatch, 2013).
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​Makerspace builds on a constructivist ideology to form a constructivist and constructionist approach to education, as introduced by Jean Piaget and developed by Seymour Papert. The primary goal of both constructivism and constructionism is to have learners create their own knowledge by creating and interacting with physical objects. It has clear connections to media literacy as well as to self-directed learning. Innovative researchers, and those who wish to see schools develop 21st century learners with the skills to work in today’s multidimensional career settings, know constructivism and constructionism are necessary methods.
“Ultimately, the outcome of maker education and educational makerspaces leads to determination, independence and creative problem solving, and an authentic preparation for the real world through simulating real-world challenges. In short, an educational makerspace is less of a classroom and more of a motivational speech without words” (Kurti et al., 2014, p. 11).

Please continue on your adventure on the How to use this Site page!

How to use this Site

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  • Home
    • About Trisha Roffey
    • How to Use this Site
    • Curriculum Guide
    • References
  • Events & Publications
    • ISTE 2018
    • FETC 2017
  • Why Makerspace?
  • Mechanisms of a Makerspace
    • Constructionism & Constructivism
    • Makerspace
    • Design Thinking
    • Media Literacy
    • Papert's Big Ideas
  • Materials of a Makerspace
    • Print Resources
    • Best of the Web
    • Maker Challenges
    • Bloxels
    • Raspberry Pi
    • Coding
    • Makey Makey
    • Robotics >
      • Dash and Dot
      • KIBO
      • Cubelets
    • Media Creation >
      • Green Screen Technology
      • Stop Motion Animation
      • Digital Storytelling
    • LilyPad
    • Inventions with Recycled Materials
    • Breaker Space
    • littleBits
    • 3D Printing and Design
  • Community of Practice
    • Edmonton Catholic Schools Maker Community
    • Teacher Contributed Lessons
    • Makerspace for Education Blog
    • Makerspace Gallery
    • Host a Staff Maker Day