MCLA, Williams to Partner with North Adams Schools on Science

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts has received an $810,876 grant from the National Science Foundation for a collaborative venture with North Adams Public Schools and Williams College.

The four-year project, which runs from Sept. 1 through Aug. 18, 2018, allows undergraduates at MCLA and Williams to work with college science professors and teachers in North Adams Public Schools to develop science units based on the Next Generation Science Standards, and to teach curriculum to students in grades K-7.

"This grant is yet another evidence of the strong partnerships that exists between institutions, and I am grateful to NSF for recognizing the value of this proposal as we continue to work with Williams and NAPS to fuel the STEM pipeline," said Monica Joslin, dean of academic affairs at MCLA. "Through this program, we will engage science, education and liberal arts students in a year-long experience to develop and teach science lessons in North Adams elementary school classrooms, which will benefit not only the undergraduates, but the teachers and students in our local community."

"We are grateful to NSF for this opportunity to work on yet another collaborative project, especially as we adjust our curriculum to meet the new standards of the Next Generation Science Standards," North Adams Public Schools Superintendent James Montepare said. "We could not ask for better partners than MCLA and Williams College."

This collaborative effort, "Teaching to Learn: Improving Undergraduate Science Education Through Engagement in K-7 Science," is under the direction of  Nicholas Stroud, assistant professor of science/technology education at MCLA, who is the project’s principal investigator, and co-principal investigators Jennifer Swoap, director of elementary outreach at Williams; Jean Bacon, administrator of teaching and learning at North Adams Public Schools; and Christopher Himes, STEM program manager and the Evelyn H. and Arlindo Jorge Endowed Chair in the Education Department at MCLA.

"We are very excited to get this grant," Stroud said. "We've got a really dynamic team put together who are energized and dedicated to do some great work over the next four years as we expand on work done by Williams and North Adams Public Schools, and build on the relationship that North Adams Public Schools and MCLA have had for many years.

"This project certainly fits well with the institutional goals of MCLA, as we think about all the new programming we have around STEM and some of the great work we’ve done, including the new science building," Stroud continued. "All around campus, there’s certainly a great momentum and excitement about STEM. We are filling another niche as we connect college students with the elementary schools, and allow them to learn science through teaching it."


Swoap said Stroud and Bacon were instrumental in establishing connections among the three communities of educators.

"We're delighted that this collaboration will enable Williams students to work and learn alongside local teachers in district-wide professional development around best practices for elementary science teaching," she said. "Our student body has great interest in working with elementary children, and this opportunity is a wonderful expansion and outlet for that interest."

Pairs of undergraduate students will co-teach units with K-7 classroom teachers and the support of college science education professors over the course of the school year.

“It’s a broad, new step into some really great potential for teaching sciences,” Himes said. “It’s a really unique project because it includes so many people — science and math faculty both at MCLA and Williams, and both groups of undergraduates. It will facilitate interactions between the campuses, and also benefit the local school community of elementary teachers and students.”

As part of the grant, undergraduates and K-7 teachers also will participate in joint professional development to deepen their understanding of both the nature of scientific inquiry and science teaching, and reinforce their connection as a community of learners.

Moreover, the project also seeks to improve the scientific literacy of the general populace through improving the ability of undergraduate participants and their college faculty advisers to communicate scientific information to a lay audience. In addition, it will help increase the pool of potential scientists by increasing the quality of science education within the North Adams school district. For more information, go to www.mcla.edu.

"This is very exciting for all involved," said Sarah Bolton, dean of the college and professor of physics at Williams. "The elementary students will learn to develop and enjoy their scientific imaginations, and the college students, with an eye to their futures, will experience how rewarding it can be to do science with children. Our thanks go to the NSF for recognizing the importance of such work and supporting it."


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Drury Senior Writes Song About Overcoming Challenges

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Drury High senior and Berkshires' Academy for Advanced Musical Studies student drummer Zach Hillard has composed a song, "Here I Am," as a personal anthem of overcoming challenges.
 
"If you want to do something, go do it. That's the whole point behind 'Here I Am,'"  Hillard said. "Any obstacles and challenges you may face in your life, if you have something you want to do, go for it. There is not one person on earth who does not have a dream or something they want to overcome. Whether it is physical or mental, it does not matter, if you want to do it."
 
The song is personal and showcases Hillard's struggles with cerebral palsy and how those struggles have shaped who he has become. 
 
The song opens with the lyrics:
 
Look — my name is Zach.
I was born early, eager to see the world
and drop some knowledge.
Doctors said that I would not talk, walk,
and be wheelchair bound.
But look at me:
Here I am.
I'm talking, walking, and can do anything
I wanna do; nothing can stop me.
 
Hillard said he never knew writing music would be so important to him and was surprised by how much he took to the BAAMS assignment that asked students to pen some lyrics and themes for an original song.
 
Hillard decided to write about his own life. 
 
"I've got a pretty cool life story. So I went home, I thought about it, and in about one day, I had most of it written," he said. "...The end of verse one I wrote ‘look at me here I am.' I thought 'Here I am' that is sort of catchy."
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