The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
Make it your own presentation tech learning live 2015
1. Do’s and Don’ts of Maker Monday:
Do present/share with the group.
Do talk about challenges and strategies to overcome
Do discuss what they would do to improve their process the next time
Do expect kids to be respectful of each other and the difficulty of the process
Do expect kids to celebrate each other.
Every Kid Matters. Every Kid is a critical part of Maker Monday.
Don’t give prizes. This is not about the product. This is not about crowd-pleasers.
don’t allow kids to leave without cleaning up
don’t permit any negative discussion of anyone else’s character, process, or product. Ever.
Don’t get hurt when they throw their stuff away—it’s the process that matters.
Resources
Institute of Design at Stanford University: http://dschool.stanford.edu/
Make: Magazine : http://makezine.com/
Code.Org http://code.org/
Make It @YourLibrary http://makeitatyourlibrary.org/
San Francisco Exploratorium http://www.exploratorium.edu/
The Library As IncubatorProject http://www.libraryasincubatorproject.org/?tag=makerspace
Made with Code https://www.madewithcode.com/
Pinterest search: Maker,Makerspace,Library MakerSpace
http://www.pinterest.com/search/pins/?q=makerspaces&term_meta[]=makerspaces|typed
2. Basic Supplies List
Scissors
Hot Glue Gun
Glue Stick
Markers
Packing Tape
Recyclables (paper towelrolls,glass containers,boxes)
Extra “stuff” from school (laminate,damagedbooks, paperboxes, empty
rolls, packing materials,
Iron
Perler Beads
Single-sided Refrigeratorpaper (t-shirt making)
Our costs this year:
Glue guns 3x 6.99= $20.97
Glue Stick 3X 9.99= 29.97
Perler Beads (tray) 9.89
Perler Beads (bucket) 14.99
Acrylic Paint: 15.97
$91.79
Borrowed:
Iron
Sponge brushes
Contacts:
Mark Smith, principal
Woodstock Middle School
mark.smith@cherokee.k12.ga.us
Twitter: @woodstockms
Wendy Cope, librarian
Woodstock Middle School
wendy.cope@cherokee.k12.ga.us
Twitter: @litratcher