Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2015 V45 No 1 | Page 36
tus. With Program Status approval, high
schools can readily and easily add the “a-g
approved ” rigorous C-STEM curriculum integrated with computing and robotics
to their own school’s a-g course lists to satisfy the UC/CSU admission requirements.
Through cutting-edge research with
funding from the National Science Foundation and California Department of Education, the C-STEM Center, in collaboration
with industry partners, has developed innovative computing and robotics for K-14
hands-on learning, aligned with California
standards. This integration helps students
make meaningful connections between
regular STEM topics and their relevance to
real-life applications, as well as help develop
students’ critical thinking and problemsolving skills.
The center focuses on algebra, a gatekeeper for high-school graduation, university education and careers in STEM fields,
to help close the achievement gap, and engage traditionally underrepresented groups
and at-risk students in learning STEM sub-
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Leadership
jects while preparing all students to be career
and college ready.
The C-STEM Center offers formal integrated STEM courses and provides unique
professional development for STEM teachers to integrate them into their classroom
teaching, including elementary, middle
and high school curriculum that integrates
math, computing, robotics, algebra and programming.
For more information about C-STEM,
contact C-STEM Center Director Harry
Cheng, [email protected].
3.
Project Lead the Way courses.
Project Lead the Way California
network has six regional hubs, six
affiliate universities and nearly 700 schools.
PLTW offers five programs that create K-12
curricular pathways for students in the areas
of engineering, biomedical science, and now,
computer science.
PLTW’s comprehensive K-12 computer
science pathway includes computer science
lessons in the PLTW Launch (K-5) and
PLTW Gateway (6-8) programs and a full
high school Computer Science program.
The pathway approach helps students build
on their knowledge and skills and engages
students at the earliest levels – a proven
strategy for growing the number of girls and
underrepresented minority students in the
field.
PLTW Computer Science focuses on
computational thinking, not just learning
how to code. Activities are age appropriate
and many are “unplugged,” meaning they
do not use computers, particularly in the elementary grades.
Like PLTW’s other pathways, the computer science pathway includes face-to-face
professional development for teachers, as
well as day-to-day support through lesson
plans, assessment tools, and on-call school
and technical support. PLTW has also partnered with the College Board to develop a
college and career pathway.
For more information about PLTW,
please contact: [email protected] or visit
www.pltw.org.