STEM Burdett NEWS

Burdett Students Explore STEM to Create Fun and Games

event Published 2025-03-20 15:00:25.054 +0000 UTC

Using cardboard, the students in the STEM option at Burdett School are building games to create a one-day nickel arcade for the entire school.  

“The students like the design and building aspects of this project,” said teacher Angie Angle. “We did a project similar to this with a student teacher several years ago and the students requested to do something like it again.” 

Students must also create a promotional poster to market their game with the goal of having the highest number of students play their game. Along with considering the safety aspects of the game they are creating; students need to build a game that will work and be played numerous times. Before the bell rang to single the beginning of class, all students were already gathered in their groups and had retrieved the game they were making to continue working on their project. While the class progressed, all were engaged in their project, approaching Angle when they had questions or needed some guidance.  

Angle will be presenting at the upcoming Forge Futures conference at Senator Gershaw School on the topic of STEM in Space. She wants to promote the mindset that a teacher can do many things with few supplies, such as cardboard. Hanging in Angle’s classroom are two student-made models of the International Space Station (ISS) from previous projects about space.  

“Space exploration is part of the Grade 9 curriculum. At the end, the class does a project about current space exploration, such as the ISS.” Other projects include researching new types of space suits for sustained location on the moon, moon dust (because there is no moisture, it shreds the astronaut’s suits and tires), the Artemis program, Starlink, and eclipses, to name a few.  

“The topics are endless because space is changing so dramatically,” stated Angle. “The reason I chose space for the conference is because it is a new concept that shows up in Grade 4 while Earth is a focus in lower grades. My goal was to make it more accessible. Not STEM as a separate entity, but STEM within the daily curriculum at an elementary level and as an option in junior high. STEM can be taught by everyone, not just science teachers.”