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PSCSTA Quarterly Open Meeting Mar 6 2024 Recap

  • 1.  PSCSTA Quarterly Open Meeting Mar 6 2024 Recap

    Posted 03-12-2024 02:56 PM

    Below are the minutes from the open part of the meeting (minutes from initial portion available to board members). 
    Please let us know if you have any questions. 

    • Introductions (10 mins, everyone)
      • Name, School/Organization, Favorite outdoor activity (Spring!)
    • Events (15 mins)
      • Equity in Action Summit - debrief from those who attended/participated
        • Jenny spoke on a panel (teaching diversity in homogenous classroom)
          • Spoke about identity and getting students to be more aware of class make-up and how to be an ally
        • Looking for 10 speakers to give 5 minute lightning talks
        • Folks who volunteered to present
          • Jenny - AI
          • Lawrence - Data
          • Adam - TEALS
          • Melanie - Minecraft
          • Adam would like to attend the Olympia. 
    • Elections (5 mins, Catherine Lauren)
      • Open Positions: President, Treasurer, At-Large members (2 year alternating terms)
      • For President position, optimally we'd find a nominee who has experience on the board
      • Lauren may be moving into a National Board position and transitioning off PSCSTA (we'll know by  May 20th)
      • Please nominate yourself or anyone to these open positions
      • We will send out the Board Manual out to general membership in the next month. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rlY1sgfo_ylf34aaUwfvPCKJXp8RN1KC/
        • Tracey & Jacqueline to help clean up
      • Board Manual specifies that elections are held at the beginning of June, and board positions run from July 1 - June 30
      • Josh nominated for Member-at-Large
    • Discussion (30 mins)
      • What's needed in K-5?
        • Jacqueline and Elizabeth talked to K-5 teachers and Librarians at NCCE. 
        • They don't know what to do with kids. Didn't know about hour of code. 
        • Curated content if you have devices at ___ age level. 
        • If you've done hour of code, what are other things you could do as turnkey curriculum. 
        • Real hunger for resources. Lessons in a box. 
        • Helpful to create a page of resources for K-5.? 
        • Iowa - fell on the librarians to teach coding. 
        • Adam: very challenging to find which elementary schools were offering STEM education/CS. 
        • What is the status of K-5 education? Equity issue. 
        • How can we promote more K-5 stem education opportunities? 
        • Lawrence: Kennewick WA. Visited an elementary school there (invited by Maya, VP for Mid-columbia). She said she's the only one who is teaching CS (6 STEM elementary schools). 
          • They got a grant from the state to help with training
          • Can't find people who will teach it in an affordable manner. 
        • Build a regional resource - small - relationships with districts - "5 things you can do with elementary CS"
        • Cory Martin - K-5 CS in Seattle. Talking to the woman in Bellevue. 
          • Asking if we could facilitate the district level coordinators across the region. 
          • Not direct to teacher support, next best thing. 
        • What level of interest is there for integrated CS work (CS+Math, CS+History)
          • Districts want to do it - think you can get "something for nothing" not messing with instructional minutes. 
          • Hard to get the district to get PD and support for every teacher in the district. 
          • Specialists are targeted. 
        • Admin folks think it's an easy solution, don't get into the mess. Integration is a harder route. 
        • Teachers who want to do integration are the folks who are already motivated. +1
        • Challenge with buy in: they have to give up what they're doing in their class. (in a school of 35 teachers, there were only 2 who were willing)
        • Can we harness all of the things that people are doing already - build community and support for what is already happening. 
        • Elizabeth: Where it has worked: when you have district support. 
        • Can't use perkins funding at K-5 (can do it for middle school)
        •  Could we lean on HS programs to help connect with elementary (they need to do volunteer hours). HS students would need training/background checks. 
        • Jacqueline: CS Ed week last year -Amazon, Code.org, Microsoft
          • Volunteer K-5 employees to do hour of code. 
          • Unfortunately a 1 time thing. Could it be done more regularly. Need funding to do something longer-term, more programmatic.
          • Exploring that at Google. 
        • Can PSCSTA help build relationships? Facilitate the relationships. 
        • Alec: A drop in thing, "in a box type development" - we need to understand that some kids are seeing this for the first time vs someone who has seen it before. Need to be cautious - want to make sure the new kids are included. 
        • Hour of code for 10 years: it hasn't sparked sustainable programs. Need to do something more structured to make it stick. We've been turning 
        • What's the next steps? 
          • Separate list of PD resources for district folks. 
          • Using that as a route to bring folks into the fold. 
          • Facilitating connections across districts (Special interest group meet up). (Gathering for brainstorming with districts/teachers). 
          • Work more with OSPI and ESDs to get cross pollination. 
          • Education/awareness of CS Ed landscape in WA for district admins
          • What was competency, 
          • Unfunded mandate. 
        • Lawrence spoke at the public hearings
        • Next step: those of us involved in policy, to figure out how to make this happen without it being a bill to force us to do it. 


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    Lawrence Tanimoto
    Treasurer/Advocacy Lead, CSTA Puget Sound (WA)
    Bellevue, WA
    K-12 Teacher CTE (retired)
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