Additional support provided by: Eastern Michigan University

Michigan

Project Lead the Way

122 Sill Hall

Eastern Michigan University

Ypsilanti, MI 48197

Lincoln Teachers Return to School

 

Three teachers from the Lincoln Consolidated School in Ypsilanti, MI
were among those at the 2007 Summer Training Institute.

            Each summer, faculty from the Eastern Michigan University College of Technology trains regional high school and middle school teachers in the national Project Lead the Way (PLTW) curriculum.

 

            The PLTW curriculum offers 5 courses to middle school students and 8 courses to high school students to help teach them science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) with the aim of preparing these students for college courses and future careers in engineering.

 

            “The teachers are learning a framework for success for students in STEM careers,” said Alvin Tessmer, EMU’s co-coordinator for PLTW.

 

            As part of their training to teach the “Principles of Engineering” course to their students, the middle school and high school teachers built a working vehicle from Legos and sensors, learned about force and motion by using a stress analyzer, applied trigonometry and linear algebra to solving real-world problems, and learned how to create PowerPoint presentations of their experiments.

Another Lincoln Consolidated School teacher project building at the 2007 Summer Training Institute.

            “The teachers said it was ‘the most in-depth greatest time they ever had’,” added Dr. Phil Cardon, an EMU associate professor of technology education and another EMU co-coordinator for PLTW.

 

            “We’re providing a series of activities and projects that will help kids take ownership of their education,” Tessmer said. “As a result, it will put more rigor in their work and they will find more relevance in it.”

 

            “Currently, approximately 40 middle and high schools in Genesee, Jackson, Macomb, Wayne, and Washtenaw counties, as well as schools from Indiana and Ohio, are on board to use the PLTW curriculum,” Cardon said.

 

            “We want these teachers empowered and the kids they teach to be empowered,” Tessmer concluded.