1 / 17

Jr.FLL C ore Values • We are a team.

Jr.FLL C ore Values • We are a team. • We do the work. Our coaches and mentors help us learn, but we find the answers ourselves. • We share our experiences and discoveries with others.

nikki
Download Presentation

Jr.FLL C ore Values • We are a team.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jr.FLLCore Values • We are a team. • We do the work. Our coaches and mentors help us learn, but we find the answers ourselves. • We share our experiences and discoveries with others. • We are helpful, kind, and show respect when we work, play, and share. We call this Gracious Professionalism®. • We are all winners. • We have fun.

  2. Components of a Junior FLL program Build to Express Research Show Me Poster Model Team Building

  3. Components of a Show Me Poster

  4. Helpful websites www.usfirst.org Team Registration: https://my.usfirst.org/jr.fll/tims/site.lasso

  5. After you register a team, and receive your team number, • you will need to download the following documents: • Coaches’ Guide • Coaches’ Resources • Challenge • NEW – Challenge Pack

  6. Some Guidelines to Consider • In Jr.FLL, kids make all critical decisions in the building and project development processes. If you find yourself pushing a solution, you are doing your team a disservice. Remember, you want your team to think for themselves—and you don’t want to suppress any revolutionary ideas. • A mutual foundation of trust and respect is critical for a supportive learning environment. Everyone’s voice must be heard, and all ideas should be listened to with a patient and open mind. • Encourage your team to experiment; allow them to explore options. • As much as you might enjoy building, remember that the kids on the team must design and build the model—not you or any other adult. • When a coach or mentor does the work, it sends the kids a strong message—you are not capable.

  7. Does this mean you should stand idly by while your team struggles with the challenge? Absolutely not! You must be involved, but your role is to mentor and encourage the young ones to do the thinking. Instead of directing your team to “add a pulley here using rubber bands and a wheel,” ask questions. Present options (ranging from practical to the wildly absurd) to start the brainstorming process—allow your team to find the solution. One useful method is to reply to a question with another carefully considered question that encourages team members to use their knowledge of science and hypothesize logical outcomes: • What would happen if . . . • And then . . . • How will that work? Coaches differ in the amount of instruction they give their teams. Some give very little; others give much more. A successful Jr.FLL coach controls the process, not the content. Coaches facilitate, help the team complete its work, and improve the way it works together. Kids become problem solvers by solving problems themselves! We understand that adults can be just as passionate about Jr.FLL as kids, but adults must always remember: THE KIDS COME FIRST.

  8. Social Studies Curriculum Overview

  9. Media Literacy • Rules for students at schools about safe websites • Better to have looked at the websites yourself before using with children

  10. Language Using modeled, shared, interactive and guided experiences Grade One – simple text, lots of illustrations Grade Two – exploring less familiar topics Grade Three – access to texts that require more background knowledge and engage the student in interpretation

  11. Questions? Contact Peggy Scott at Peggy.scott@firstroboticscanada.org Or jrfllontario@gmail.com

More Related