Page 38 - Standards for K-12 Engineering Education
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Standards for K-12 Engineering Education?

               LEVERAGING EXISTING STANDARDS                                                               25



               expected to inform the development of new science standards by Achieve, Inc. (www.achieve.
               org), which has worked with ACT and The College Board in developing common core standards
               for English language arts and mathematics (Box 3-3).

                                                           BOX 3-2
                                 Selected Engineering-Related Concepts, Skills, and Dispositions
                                          in the National Science Education Standards

                      Students should make proposals to build something or get something to work better; they should
                   be able to  describe and communicate their ideas.   Students should recognize that designing a
                   solution might have constraints, such as cost, materials, time, space, or safety. (Grades K–4, p. 137)

                      Children should develop abilities to work individually and collaboratively and to use suitable
                   tools, techniques, and quantitative measurements when appropriate.  Students should demonstrate
                   the ability to balance simple constraints in problem solving.  (Grades K–4, p. 137)
                      Scientific inquiry and technological design have similarities and differences. Scientists propose
                   explanations  for questions about the natural world, and engineers propose solutions relating to
                   human problems, needs, and aspirations. (Grades 5–8, p. 166)
                      Perfectly designed solutions do not exist. All technological solutions have trade-offs, such as
                   safety, cost, efficiency, and appearance. Engineers often build in back-up systems to provide safety.
                   (Grades 5–8, p. 166)
                      Students should demonstrate thoughtful planning  for a piece  of technology or technique.
                   Students should be introduced to the roles of models and simulations in these processes (Grades 9–
                   12, p. 192)

                      The daily work of science and engineering results in incremental advances in our understanding
                   of the world and our ability to meet human needs and aspirations. (Grades 9–12, p. 203)

                   SOURCE:  NRC, 1996.



                                                           BOX 3-3
                                      K–12 Engineering Education and the Common Core
                       The goal of the common core initiative, coordinated by the National Governors Association
                    and the Council of Chief State School Officers, is to increase the rigor and narrow the content of
                    standards for core subjects in grades K–12, as well as to encourage consistent  implementation of
                    standards among the states.  Although the vast majority of states have indicated a willingness to
                    consider adopting the core standards, the fate of the initiative is still uncertain.  Attempts to set
                    common performance  measures for  student achievement could reveal dramatic differences that
                    have been largely obscured until now by variations among state student assessments.
                       Participating states will  be allowed to add as much as 15 percent  more content of their
                    choosing to  the common standards.  This could  be an opening for engineering, especially if
                    science is the next subject taken up in the common core process.  However, one goal of the com-
                    mon core effort is to restrict the number of student learning goals, which could limit how much
                    engineering content can  be added.  Even if common core science education standards are not
                    forthcoming, the NRC framework for a new generation of science education standards is expected
                    to include engineering content.
                       Interestingly, one of the states that have indicated they may not participate in the common
                    core initiative is Massachusetts, a leader in K–12 engineering education.







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