Teachers and Boeing Engineers Create NGSS-Aligned Lessons for Grades 4-8
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 08/10/16
Airplane maker Boeing has  teamed up with online community Teaching  Channel to create and distribute 10 science and innovation curriculum modules  that meet Next Generation Science Standards.  The modules were created by teachers in grades 4-8, each of whom were teamed up  with a Boeing engineer. All focus on design challenges, such as tuning blade  design to optimize a wind turbine, developing a glider payload to support a  mobile camera and adapting a skateboard to absorb maximum energy on impact.
Each module is intended to cover two weeks of classroom time  and emphasize engineering design thinking and problem-based learning.
The teams didn't go into their work unprepared. Before the  work began in 2014, both the teachers and the engineers were trained by  learning scientists at the University of  Washington's Institute for Science and Math Education. The institute also  created a design template used by participants to support development of the  curriculum to align to standards and current research on science learning and  teaching.
The resulting content was tested out in the classroom by the  teachers themselves in Puget Sound and Houston. In 2015 a second group of  teachers taught the lessons and gave feedback for improving the modules. Science  experts from Teaching Channel and other organizations were also brought in to  evaluate the modules and ensure alignment with the NGSS standards.
In a recent Teaching  Channel blog article describing the modules, Kate Cook Whitt, an assistant  professor of education at Thomas College in Maine, described the evolution the lessons went through to better fit the  science standards. For example, a module called "Soft Landing,"  started with a somewhat traditional egg drop challenge.
"Although the original design challenge was centered on  the authentic problem of protecting an astronaut during landing, the students  didn't spend much time thinking about or developing questions around this  authentic problem," Cook Whitt wrote. Eventually, she noted, the  curriculum underwent multiple forms of revision to better address performance  expectations and support student learning.
Teaching Channel has also developed companion videos for  lessons within many of the units. The purpose of those is to show teachers how  to shift their instructional practices to help students gain an understanding  of engineering practice and the design mindset.
The curriculum, including the videos, is available on the  Teaching Channel website.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.