The focus should be on how advancements in computing technology have changed careers and lives.
Ideas for Grade 3:
Create a Venn Diagram showing the difference between life 20 years ago and today with an emphasis on technology advancements
Explore communication methods including cellphones, texting, video calls and how we communicated before this technology
Discuss working remotely versus going to work
Create a timeline of technology shifts
Explore careers that use different types of technology
The focus is on having students understand why rules around computing technology can change depending upon the setting.
Ideas:
2-3.IC.3 Discuss and explain how computing technology can be used in society and the world.
The focus is on examples of computing technology that were invented to solve broader problems in society, or existing technology platforms that can have many purposes.
Ideas:
Focus on a variety of integrated systems: phones, radios, forms of communicatin etc. Explore how this connectivity helps and protects us
The focus is on identifying digital spaces in the context of sharing or accessing information, such as an online platform where students submit work (private) versus public websites that anyone can access.
Ideas:
Join these virtual field trips or listen in on the guest speakers to learn about the world with the world
The focus is on describing computing technology that relies on a program, settings, and data to make decisions without direct human involvement.
Ideas:
Use coding programs to explore traffic lights, sensors, and programs like EZ pass and phone apps.
The focus is on identifying choices developers make when designing computing devices and software and considering the pros and cons when making those choices.
Ideas:
Explain the ease of use/familiarity with technology, screens, input devices. Explore ergonomics with cruise controle, bike pedals, accessibility etc.
The focus is not just on jobs in computer science, but also the skills and practices that are important for careers in the field of computer science.
Ideas:
Focus on communities and occupations. Explore the technology within the careers students have identified.
The emphasis is on essential components represented in the model to achieve desired results and assist in identifying patterns in the world around us, such as cycles in nature or tessellations.
Ideas:
indi Travels Around Town Lesson
indi Robot aka Santa Around the World Lesson
The emphasis is on identifying various tools in everyday life that collect, sort and store data, such as surveys, spreadsheets and charts.
Ideas:
Use information from My NASA Data
The emphasis is on using the visual representation to make the data meaningful. Options for presenting data visually include tables, graphs, and charts.
Ideas:
The focus is on identifying how to break apart a problem into smaller steps, while understanding that there can be multiple valid sequences of steps that solve the same problem.
Ideas:
Some details are essential to performing a task, while others are not (E.g., some may be so common that they don’t need to be stated).
Ideas:
Discuss how to complete choice board activities
he task can be a familiar activity or more abstract. The focus is on finding more than one way to reach the same goal.
Ideas:
The focus is on identifying key pieces of information, labelling them with a descriptive name, and observing which labels refer to different values each time the instructions are given, and which values stay the same.
Ideas:
Exploring Map Skills Lesson
The focus should be on recognizing that some steps in a task only get carried out some of the time, and that the conditions can be precisely described.
Ideas:
The focus should be on having students identify error(s) in an algorithm and suggest changes to fix the algorithm.
Ideas:
The focus should be on developing and documenting a plan in writing, using appropriate tools (such as a storyboard or story map).
Ideas:
The focus is on choosing and demonstrating different computing technologies to receive and present results depending on the task.
Ideas:
The focus is on understanding how software helps to complete computing tasks.
Ideas:
Civics - Where do we live and why?
The focus is on building problem solving techniques for self-help, such as making sure speakers are turned on or headphones are plugged in or making sure that the caps lock key is not on, to narrow down a problem.
Ideas:
The focus is on understanding that information is converted in a special way so it can be sent through wires or waves through the air.
Ideas:
The focus is being able to navigate and save a file to a specific location.
Ideas:
The focus should be on potential effects, both positive and negative, for making information public.
Ideas:
The emphasis is on recognizing and avoiding potentially harmful behaviors, such as sharing private information online or not logging off a public computer.
Ideas:
The focus is on explaining how user habits and behaviors should be adjusted based on who shares a device and/or application.
Ideas:
The focus is on having one student encode a word or message, and a different student, using the same key, decode it. You might encourage students to develop their own coding scheme.
Ideas:
The emphasis is on recognizing situations in which students should notify a trusted adult when a device or application does not perform as expected (pop-ups, authentication and/or loading issues).
Ideas:
Students should be introduced to keyboarding and identify in second grade and begin to receive direct instruction in keyboarding in third grade, with a focus on form over speed and accuracy.
Ideas:
Use any free or district approved keyboarding program
The focus is on using digital tools to communicate and collaborate in order to expand knowledge and effectively convey ideas.
Ideas:
Learning for Justice Lessons
Students will identify key words with which to perform an internet search using teacher-approved tool(s), to obtain information.
Ideas:
Different digital tools are used for different purposes, such as communicating, collaborating, researching, and creating original content.
Ideas:
Students can use different image generators to create historical images and then discuss the differences
The focus is on how personal information, both public and private, becomes available online and understand ways their information can be shared.
Ideas:
The focus is on describing actions with students and having them discuss whether those actions would be safe, responsible, respectful, and/or ethical using technology and/or online spaces.
Ideas: