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Engineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayMaillardThe chemical reaction we smell from afar that gives satisfaction is named Maillard. This is Episode 102 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines. Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs Powered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/ Originally published January 4, 2021.2022-06-1104 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The Dayinterstory driftDo wooden planks below my feet not splinter while they shift during monumental bends and strains from interstory drift? This is Episode 101 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines. Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs Powered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/ Originally published December 17, 2020.2022-06-1106 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayjerkMechanical engineers must work to eliminate excessive jerk. This is Episode 100 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines. Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs Powered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/ Originally published December 14, 2020.2022-06-1105 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayquoinStack your your stones and let walls join to make an old-school building quoin. This is Episode 99 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines. Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs Powered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/ Originally published December 1, 2020.2022-06-1103 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeach Harder Math and Problem-Solving, with Richard RusczykMath is fundamental to engineering education and other disciplines. That’s part of why Richard Rusczyk wants to teach kids harder math than they often see in school. As the CEO of Art of Problem Solving, he wants to challenge more young people mathematically, hopefully giving them an earlier chance to achieve math mastery. He talks about national math competition culture compared to sports culture, starting his online education company, and strategies to improve access to deeper math education in K-12. Related to this episode: • Art of Problem Solving (AoPS): http://artofproblemsolving.com/ • Mathcounts: https://www.mathcounts.org/ • National Society for Prof...2021-07-1359 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeach 3D Printing, with David Seto and Michael WelchKids can learn CAD for 3D printing, but teaching it doesn’t have to be a hassle. David Seto and Michael Welch wrote a set of books to make teaching and learning the subject easier. They based it on their own experiences with 3D printing, learning it as beginners, coming from finance and mobile games industries, and then teaching CAD for 3D printing in after-school programs in Hong Kong and the USA. They talk about their book, The 3D Printing Cookbook, and share practical tips for making 3D printing work for young kids. Related to this episode: • The 3D Printing Cook...2021-06-1749 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTrans Engineers You Should Know, with Dr. Ada-Rhodes ShortMechanical engineer Dr. Ada-Rhodes Short studies robot brains, having previously worked in industry and academia for commercial toy companies, NASA, Texas A&M, and more. She also advocates for diversity and inclusion in education and STEM for trans people, including her time founding the Sexual Identity Forum at Baylor University. Dr. Short talks about one of her latest projects finding trans women engineers who have made pivotal contributions to the world. Related to this episode: • Dr. Ada-Rhodes Short on Twitter: https://twitter.com/The_Ada_Rhodes • Sphero Robotics: https://sphero.com/ • SPRK+ robot: https://sphero.com/products/sphero-sprk-plus • BB8: https://sphero.c...2021-06-0239 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAiming for Equity in K-12 Computer Science, with Rosemary KameiThe Silicon Valley Education Foundation (SVEF) is a nonprofit running several programs in K-12 STEM education, including its Computer Science Institute for middle and high school teachers. Rosemary Kamei is the Chief Development and Innovation Officer of SVEF, and she talks about why SVEF piloted its CS Institute a few years ago and how it has been going through the pandemic. She talks about how it aims to promote equity in CS education, across the digital divide and accounting for socioeconomics, race, and gender in the Silicon Valley community. Related to this episode: • SVEF: https://www.svefoundation.org/ • SVEF CS Inst...2021-05-2535 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastCAD in a Web Browser, with Amanda HoughThe pandemic has spurred teachers like Amanda Hough to teach CAD remotely, but how do you do that if students don’t have the hardware to run resource-heavy CAD software? Amanda uses cloud-based CAD platform OnShape, and her students run it in a web browser, no installs needed. She talks about her experience switching over to OnShape this year, its place in education even when the pandemic is over, and how she got into STEM education in the first place as a career-changed from marine biology. Related to this episode: • Amanda Hough’s email: ahough@mpspk12.org • Amanda Hough Twitter @amandaho...2021-04-2734 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEdebounceTo shrink the number of our faulty counts,you have to learn how to debounce.This is Episode 105 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2021-04-1608 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DaydebounceTo shrink the number of our faulty counts,you have to learn how to debounce.This is Episode 105 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2021-04-1608 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastBetter K-12 Engineering Post-COVID, with Dr. Corey HallSTEM curriculum specialist Dr. Corey Hall shares tips and resources for teaching engineering effectively at the K-12 level in 2021, both during and beyond COVID. Corey recommends teaching strategies and products based on her 24 years of experience in education, as a school librarian, middle school teacher, professor, and online teacher. She discusses 3D printing, lending libraries, virtual cloud-based robotics software, out-of-school STEM programs such as in 4-H, and more. Related to this episode: • Dr. Corey Hall on Twitter: https://twitter.com/rchallway • Dr. Corey Hall on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/library_doc/ • STEM Education Works: https://stemeducationworks.com/ • Zork: https://en.wikip...2021-04-0745 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEanti-patternMy code is as long as here to Saturn, but condensed and confused in an anti-pattern.This is Episode 104 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2021-03-2607 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The Dayanti-patternMy code is as long as here to Saturnbut condensed and confused in an anti-pattern.This is Episode 104 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2021-03-2607 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastHow to Change the Education System, with Suzanne DemallieThe education system can change top-down, or bottom-up. Author Suzanne DeMallie wrote “Can You Hear Me Now?” – a book about how parents and teachers might change our schools from the bottom-up. She draws on her own experiences in Baltimore County Public Schools as an elementary math teacher from 2011 to 2019, a parent of children in BCPS, and an advocate for sound enhancement technology in classrooms across the country. She also talks about how COVID has affected her opinions on testing, 1-to-1 device policies for elementary schools, and more. Related to this episode: • Suzanne DeMallie: https://suzannedemallie.com/ • Can You Hear Me Now?: http...2021-03-1959 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVELegendary LEDs, with Dr. Russ DupuisLEDs, or light-emitting diodes, have changed the world – and continue to do so.  This energy-efficient electronics technology came from decades of design and discovery in engineering. Dr. Russell Dupuis is one of the engineers behind LEDs, and he recently was one of five winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for his work in this technology. Dr. Dupuis explains his contribution to creating thin-film electronics necessary for LEDs, starting from his university days in Illinois, and he also discusses its implications for the future.  He currently is a professor of electrical engineering at Georgia Tech.  This is a joint...2021-03-0653 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayLegendary LEDs, with Dr. Russ DupuisLEDs, or light-emitting diodes, have changed the world – and continue to do so.  This energy-efficient electronics technology came from decades of design and discovery in engineering. Dr. Russell Dupuis is one of the engineers behind LEDs, and he recently was one of five winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for his work in this technology. Dr. Dupuis explains his contribution to creating thin-film electronics necessary for LEDs, starting from his university days in Illinois, and he also discusses its implications for the future.  He currently is a professor of electrical engineering at Ge...2021-03-0653 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastLegendary LEDs, with Dr. Russ DupuisLEDs, or light-emitting diodes, have changed the world – and continue to do so. This energy-efficient electronics technology came from decades of design and discovery in engineering. Dr. Russell Dupuis is one of the engineers behind LEDs, and he recently was one of five winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for his work in this technology. Dr. Dupuis explains his contribution to creating thin-film electronics necessary for LEDs, starting from his university days in Illinois, and he also discusses its implications for the future. He currently is a professor of electrical engineering at Georgia Tech. This is a joint ep...2021-03-0553 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeaching HTML/CSS, Unplugged and Offline, with Sam TaylorHow do you learn web development without a computer, or without any electronic device? Sam Taylor wrote a book to help learners do just that. As a former middle school teacher and current tech worker, Sam wrote the newly released educational book titled The Coding Workbook, which intends to teach the basics of HTML and CSS, but with no computer required. Hear the discussion about this new book, accessibility to STEM education, what teaching middle school science is like, and more. Related to this episode: • The Coding Workbook: https://nostarch.com/CodingWorkbook • NGSS (Next Generation Science Standards): https://www.nextgenscience.org...2021-02-0339 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAerospace Engineering Entrepreneur, with Mishaal AshemimryMishaal Ashemimry is an aerospace engineer and pilot who, after working for major aerospace organizations, formed her own aerospace startup to design rockets for small, low-Earth orbit satellites. As a Saudi American, she got interested in the stars when she was young, looking up at the sky while visiting Saudi Arabia. She describes many parts of her path in this career, including love of math, starting a business, being recognized as the first female aerospace engineer in the Gulf Cooperation Council, and her role as an Arabic-speaking STEM education social media influencer. Related to this episode: • Mishaal Ashemimry’s profile: http...2021-01-2253 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The Dayzip tieThey told me, "Let 'er rip, guy!""Tighten up that zip tie!"This is Episode 103 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2021-01-1305 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEMaillardThe chemical reaction we smell from afarthat gives satisfaction is named Maillard.This is Episode 102 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2021-01-0504 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayMaillardThe chemical reaction we smell from afarthat gives satisfaction is named Maillard.This is Episode 102 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2021-01-0504 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastWhat Do Equations Sound Like on the Piano?Let’s make equations musical. Instead of visualizing equations on a graph, let’s listen to them on the piano, merging all our math and music knowledge. You can make two-dimensional x-y math equations audible – or sonify them – by translating the x-values to time and the y-values to the keys of a piano. If you can’t play them on the piano yourself, we can use the free web app Chordinates! by Pios Labs to do it instead. Listen to the sound of coordinates, linear equations, polynomials, trigonometric functions, and random distributions of notes on the piano, and analyze their patterns...2020-12-2949 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEinterstory driftDo wooden planks below my feet not splinter while they shiftduring monumental bends and strains from interstory drift?This is Episode 101 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-12-1706 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The Dayinterstory driftDo wooden planks below my feet not splinter while they shiftduring monumental bends and strains from interstory drift?This is Episode 101 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2020-12-1706 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEjerkMechanical engineers must workto eliminate excessive jerk.This is Episode 100 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-12-1506 minEngineering Word Of The DayEngineering Word Of The DayjerkMechanical engineers must workto eliminate excessive jerk.This is Episode 100 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2020-12-1505 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEquoinStack your your stones and let walls join to make an old-school building quoin.This is Episode 99 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-12-0203 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastModernizing Army Training in Software and TechArmy Futures Command (AFC) is partnering with Austin Community College (ACC) in Texas to create a new Software Factory, which will be a software development training program for Army soldiers. Planned to start in January, it will blend training of both soldiers and civilians in newer tech practices in agile development. Maj. Vito Errico from AFC will co-lead the Software Factory, and he joins the podcast to describe its goals. Garrett Groves, Vice President of Business and Industry Partnerships, also joins the podcast to explain how ACC is uniquely aligned to support such a program. They also explain what K-12...2020-11-1933 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEcurryingYou might see some programmers scurryingwhen trying to implement a little currying.This is Episode 98 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2020-11-1309 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEskunkworksEvery product has flaws and some quirks,but are products better if they come from skunkworks?This is Episode 97 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/2020-11-0605 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEHow is school reopening going? - Preview of The K12 Engineering Education PodcastListen to the full episode of "How Is School Reopening Going" on The K12 Engineering Education Podcast, previewed here.  Visit: https://k12engineering.net/  Brought to you by Pios Labs.--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-11-0101 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastHow Is School Reopening Going?Schools have reopened in Fall 2020 amid the COVID19 pandemic, and educators are putting in overtime to make it work. Four educators speak about their experiences getting students learning again either online or in person: Superintendent Teddy Clevinger in Bell County, Texas; engineering entrepreneurship teacher Melanie Kong in Seattle, Washington; science and engineering teacher Amy Morriss in New Orleans, Louisiana; and engineering and architecture teacher Audrea Moyers in Austin, Texas. They describe their challenges and successes as educators so far this year. Related to this episode: • Music clips from Doctor Dreamchip: https://freesound.org/people/Doctor_Dreamchip/ • Sketchup for schools: https://www...2020-10-3146 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEADAEngineers, don't be shady, eh?Design it with the ADA.This is Episode 96 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https...2020-10-1507 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEbioreactorGet an engineer and a chiropractorif you're going to move that bioreactor.This is Episode 95 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https...2020-10-0805 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEop ampA real electrical top champis the multitalented op amp.This is Episode 94 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsListen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Powered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-09-3008 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVETry the Chordinates! web app betaMake math more musical, with Chordinates!   WIth it, you can hear what equations sound like on the piano.  This is an invitation to try this early version for free today: https://www.pioslabs.com/chordinates/Andy feedback you give about it will help make it better for future students and teachers. Developed by Pius Wong. Powered by Pios Labs.--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-09-2604 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEstressMaterials at their bestwill take a lot of stress.This is Episode 92 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Listen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationSupport the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education...2020-09-1605 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVERUDIf I total my car, you see,I'll just call it an RUD.This is Episode 91 of Engineering Word Of The Day, an informal show on favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines.Listen to the latest episodes, ad-free: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com/Catch past episodes on Anchor and PRX: https://anchor.fm/engineering-educationSupport the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabsPowered by Pios Labs: https://pioslabs.com/--- Support this podcast: https...2020-09-1006 minEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEEngineering Word Of The Day: ARCHIVEScience isn't static -- Preview of The K12 Engineering Education PodcastThis is a preview of "Listen and Learn: Making an Audio Course for Doing Science at Home," a Season 5 episode of The K12 Engineering Education Podcast, produced by Pios Labs.  Listen to the full episode soon at k12engineering.net.--- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/engineering-education/support2020-08-2900 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastListen and Learn: Making an Audio Course in Science for KidsHow do you make an audio-based course to teach science topics to kids? Podcast creator, teacher, and musician Marshall Escamilla explains. Marshall is a co-creator of the highly rated Tumble Science Podcast for Kids. He drew on his podcasting experience and his years in the classroom to develop a “podcourse” for Himalaya Learning, focused on exploring the living things inside kids’ homes. In this conversation, he talks about the goals of the audio course, tips on better remote learning, free music resources for digital creators, and the response to COVID19 in his current home of Barcelona, Spain. Related to this episod...2020-08-2844 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastHow Can Model Railroading Teach STEM?Model railroading is uniquely primed for doing educational outreach today, says Stacey Walthers Naffah, President of Milwaukee-based Walthers. Walthers is a major model railroading company, distributing and manufacturing products for hobbyists around the world. Stacey discusses how the industry has a big opportunity to add to K-12 education, in history, science, technology, engineering, art, and math, whether it involves wifi-controlled trains or teaching kids to properly scale down 3D models. She shares that Walthers is looking for more ideas about how to partner with educators. Related to this episode: • Walthers: https://www.walthers.com/ • Profile of Stacey Walthers Naffah: https://onmi...2020-06-2746 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastHow Do You Build a Career in EdTech?These teachers know tech. Steve Dembo and Victoria Thompson teach in K-12 and are also educational technology consultants. Steve is a middle school teacher and founder of the edtech consulting and training company Teach42, based out of Chicago, and Victoria is a math teacher in Washington and consults on edtech products for different large corporations. They guested on the show to describe how they got into this career path and what the field may look like in the future. Rachel Fahrig moderated the conversation, which is the postponed live podcast panel originally planned for SXSW Edu 2020. Related to this episode: • Or...2020-05-111h 11The K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastGreen Chemistry Invention in K-12The nonprofit Beyond Benign specializes in developing and disseminating educational resources in green chemistry – like how to create bioplastics, or thinking about a full product life cycle – and two guests from Beyond Benign joined the podcast to talk about it. Janie Butler is the K-12 Program Manager for the organization, and Eric Nash is a high school teacher while working as Lead Teacher for Beyond Benign. Originally scheduled to present at the SXSW Edu 2020 Conference in Austin, Texas, they discussed how chemistry and design can be integrated into the K-12 classroom, why this is important, and more. They also brainstorm ways...2020-04-1151 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastShelter in Place, Go to SchoolRachel describes how her small Texas school district can function in the middle of COVID-19. As a school district administrator, she has to organize many major actions in this crisis, ranging from meal distribution to bolstering cybersecurity as teachers transition to online learning. Her team still must wrestle with many new questions as they come back from Spring Break. Related to this episode: • Austinites making face masks: https://www.kut.org/post/austinites-make-face-masks-help-fill-need-hospitals-face-shortages • Remind: https://www.remind.com/ • Google Classrooms: https://classroom.google.com/u/3/h • Istation: https://www.istation.com/ • Prodigy: https://www.prodigygame.com/ • Education Galaxy: https://app.educationgal...2020-03-3135 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeach the Geek to SpeakAs a biomedical engineer in orthobiologics, Neil Thompson still had to do a lot of public speaking. He was a self-professed awful public speaker, but then he worked hard to improve his skills. Now he wants to teach other STEM professionals the same public speaking strategies he learned, so they can get better like he did. Neil talks about best practices for public speaking, his father’s influence on his education, and his children’s book on the science of black hair. Related to this episode: • Neil Thompson: https://teachthegeek.com/our-teachers/ • Teach the Geek: https://teachthegeek.com/ • Toastmasters: https://www.toastm...2020-03-2631 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastNot SXSW LiveThe South-by-Southwest education conference for 2020 is cancelled, due to emergency declarations related to COVID-19. Pius and Rachel discuss what happens next, for educators in Texas and across the country. Related to this episode: • How Coronavirus Took Down SXSW: https://www.citylab.com/equity/2020/03/sxsw-cancellation-coronavirus-austin-music-film-festival/607669/ • How Do You Build a Career in EdTech?: https://schedule.sxswedu.com/2020/events/PP102219 • Past podcast episodes with Melanie Kong: http://www.k12engineering.net/guests/10 • State-by-state breakdown of 120 rural hospital closures: https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/state-by-state-breakdown-of-120-rural-hospital-closures.html Subscribe and find more podcast information at: http://www.k12engineering.net. Support Pios Labs with regular...2020-03-1432 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastReal-World Learning in 2020Casey Lamb and Roger Horton work with the nonprofit organization Schools That Can. Schools That Can aims to promote real-world learning in education, with particular experience fostering real-world learning for younger students. This takes many forms, including collaborating with industry, teaching design thinking, and embracing the maker movement. Casey and Roger joined the podcast to talk about their National Forum on real-world learning in the digital age, as well as how real-world learning is evolving today. Roger is the Director of Maker Programs with Schools That Can, as well as the lead practitioner on a National Science Foundation project for...2020-03-1052 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThis Engineer Is Running for CongressProject manager and software engineer Rick Kennedy is running for US House Representative for District 17 in Texas, in the 2020 Democratic primary. After decades working in tech, and after Trump was elected, Rick decided to run for office to try to solve difficult social problems and help end political divisiveness in the country. He joins the podcast to talk about his vision for universal pre-K, the costs of higher ed, rural internet, online disinformation, and more. Related to this episode: • Rick Kennedy’s campaign: https://rickkennedyforcongress.com/ • US House District 17: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas%27s_17th_congressional_district • Texas ranked 3...2020-02-2641 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastLeveling Up Your Career in EducationHow do you “develop your practice” as a teacher and administrator? Rachel and Pius discuss this question and share their thoughts on going deeper into their careers as educators, all after a dinner of Austin barbecue. Related to this episode: • Slab BBQ: http://realdopebbq.com/ • The cover art is a photo of the Slab BBQ wall, showing patches from the 10th Mountain Division: https://home.army.mil/drum/index.php/units-tenants/10th-mountain-division-li • Highway 290 named for 10th Mountain Division: https://www.aaroads.com/guides/us-290-west-bastrop-tx/ • Math Anxiety: http://www.k12engineering.net/episodes/53 Subscribe and find more podcast information at: http://www.k...2020-01-2618 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastInventing GPSHugo Fruehauf, one of the co-inventors of GPS, explains the nitty-gritty of what GPS is. He also details his critical engineering work on the GPS subsystem of the atomic clock. Hugo was one of four recipients of the 2019 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering, along with Dr. Bradford Parkinson, Professor James Spilker, and Richard Schwartz. Related to this episode: • Hugo’s website: http://hugofruehauf.com/ • Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering: https://qeprize.org/ Subscribe and find more podcast information at: http://www.k12engineering.net. Support Pios Labs with regular donations on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs, or send one-time contri...2020-01-1632 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAustralian Trends in Engineering EducationLike much of the world, Australian educators are increasingly embracing STEM education for younger students. Chris Perkins is one such teacher at Keithcot Farm Primary School outside Adelaide, South Australia. He talks about a range of issues on his radar as a STEM teacher, including how he stays up-to-date, Australian inventions, how New South Wales is a leader in that country for education, and more. For a video of the robot arm that Chris mentioned, see it here: https://youtu.be/L9rG8cD3pxQ The cover art for this episode comes from Gilbert Toyne’s 1925 Australian patent on the ro...2019-12-0355 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastQ&A with a Chemical EngineerWhat does a chemical engineer do? What makes a good one? What should young people know about the field? Chemical engineer Will Mullen helps us answer these questions and more. Will is a Process Engineer and Engineering Manager at a manufacturing plant for specialty chemicals in North Carolina. Before that he managed facilities and worked in chemical plants in Texas and Georgia, and he has been involved in youth leadership for many years. Related to this episode: • NC State Chemical Engineering: https://www.cbe.ncsu.edu/ • Skype a Scientist: https://www.skypeascientist.com/ • NC State Engineering Ambassadors: https://www.engr.ncsu.e...2019-10-3154 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastCareer Advice for New Electrical and Software EngineersWhat should you look for in your first engineering job? How do you bridge high school, college, internships, and then finally full-time work? Is college worth it for the tech industry? Engineer and developer Omar Leyva gives advice on all this and more, speaking as an Android developer and computer engineer at Tile, a consumer electronics company in San Mateo, California. He also describes how his very first experience programming was C++ in college, how being a son of immigrants affected his views on college, and why people and company culture are so important for evaluating a job. Related to...2019-09-1840 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastRobots for Everyone!What do young people think about STEM fields today? Michigan STEM educator Danielle Boyer talks about her perspective as a recent high school graduate who teaches robotics to many young K-12 students. She talks about her lower-cost robot platform Every Kid Gets a Robot, her coloring books for STEM representation, young people’s college fears, and also her views on accessibility and diversity in engineering. Episode cover art photo courtesy of Danielle Boyer. Related to this episode: • Danielle Boyer at the STEAM Connection: https://www.steamconnection.org/ • Every Kid Gets a Robot: https://www.steamconnection.org/robotics • Fischer Unitech camps: https...2019-08-3137 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastDistributed Programming for NewbiesDistributed systems rule much of new technology today, as software programs exist across multiple computers, servers, phones, and smart devices. How can students learn to program these systems? Start with a visual programming environment, says Dr. Akos Ledeczi from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Dr. Ledeczi is an electrical and computer engineer who researches distributed systems and how to teach computer science. His research group created the NetsBlox block-based programming platform, based on SNAP and similar to Scratch, but it also has capabilities built-in for distributed or parallel programming. Ledeczi discusses the NetsBlox platform, their curriculum for teaching high schoolers...2019-08-1227 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastCybersecurity and Being HumanCybersecurity needs more professionals working in the field, and guest Nicole Bushong from Houston shares why. They explain critical issues today in digital crime, cyberwarfare, hacking, public safety, and diversity of the tech workforce. They also explain key aspects of their own path toward this field, including navigating the still male-majority field of cybersecurity, working in a women’s tech organization at The University of Houston, and getting educated while having dyslexia. Related to this episode: • Engie North America: http://www.engie-na.com/ • Women in Cybersecurity, University of Houston (WICSUH): https://www.wicsuh.org/ • HouSecCon, Houston Security Conference: http://houstonseccon.org/ • “...2019-07-0753 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeaching Accessibility by Building Picture Books for the BlindHow can you teach universal design to kids and teens? Have them build accessible games and books, according to The Build a Better Book project, from The University of Colorado Boulder. Guests Dr. Stacey Forsythe and Dr. Kathryn Penzkover develop the Build a Better Book project at UC Boulder, which provides curriculum for schools and libraries to teach people to create books and games for the visually impaired. Along the way, they can learn about the design process, makerspace technology, the arts, empathy, and community engagement. Drs. Forsythe and Penzkover spoke on the podcast during South by Southwest (SXSW) 2019 in...2019-05-1822 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastEducating a Cybersecurity ProfessionalIn this age of growing internet technology and connected computers, cybersecurity engineers and computer scientists will be more critical. Software engineer Sam Houston joins the podcast to talk about how she got into the security field, led by interests in computers and a desire to protect those in need. Sam is also a former student of Rachel, and we talk about key memories in her K-12 and college education – shoutouts to Miss Avery and Dr. Burris. Related to this episode: • Target hack in 2013: https://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/target-settles-2013-hacked-customer-data-breach-18-5-million-n764031 • Sam Houston State University: https://www.shsu.edu/ •...2019-04-2553 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastHighlights of SXSW Edu 2019If you missed the 2019 edition of the South by Southwest Education (SXSW Edu) conference in Austin, Texas, we rehash some highlights that you may have missed. We talk about empathy, accessibility, and a few new tech tools available to educators discovered at the conference. Related to this episode: • SXSW Edu: https://sxswedu.com • UT McCombs School of Business: https://www.mccombs.utexas.edu/ • Yes, And game, as described by Mary Elisabeth: https://medium.com/improv4/saying-yes-and-a-principle-for-improv-business-life-fd050bccf7e3 • Build a Better Book project at CU Boulder: https://www.colorado.edu/project/bbb/ • Empathic lead user analysis, as described in a study: htt...2019-04-0926 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastFixing School FinanceTexans across the state and across the political divide agree: public school funding needs fixing. What that means exactly, however, is tricky. In Part 1, Texas State Representative Donna Howard explains the school finance conundrum and its evolution over the years, along with some potential solutions floating around the legislature. In Part 2, political consultant Kolby Monnig argues that citizens must influence education laws by communicating with their representatives, and she demystifies that process. Lastly, in Part 3, educators, school support personnel, and unions rally for K-12 education reforms across the board. Related to this episode: • Representative Donna Howard: https://house.texas.gov/me...2019-03-1241 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastWater Systems with the Army Corps of EngineersProblem-solving, technology, and public service all combine when you work as an engineer for the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). Dr. Michael Sterling, PhD, is a lead water resource engineer at the US Army Corps of Engineers, Southwestern Division, and he oversees missions related to water supply, flood prevention, hydroelectric power, and more issues affecting large swaths of the USA. Dr. Sterling also discusses how he came to USACE from the fields of chemical, civil, and environmental engineering, and how to help young people get on a similar path. Related to this episode: • US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE): ht...2019-03-0419 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastArtificial Intelligence for KidsThe educational technology company Robolink is coming out with a new robotics platform for teaching kids the fundamentals of programming artificial intelligence (AI). Hansol Hong is the CEO and Founder of San Diego-based Robolink. Hansol discusses their latest AI education product Zümi, which won an award at the 2019 International Consumer Electronics Show for innovation. Hansol also talks about their Kickstarter campaigns, the ethics of AI in self-driving cars, drones, and more. Related to this episode: • Robolink: https://www.robolink.com/ • Kickstarter for Robolink’s Zümi: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/robolink/driving-into-the-world-of-ai-zumi • Rokit Smart Robot kit” https://www.robolink.com...2019-02-2544 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastMoney, Machines, and MoreEducator Rachel and engineer Pius introduce Season 4 and brainstorm about what interests us in K-12 engineering education today. We talk about school finance reform, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and more. Related to this episode: • Lego programming: https://www.lego.com/en-us/mindstorms/learn-to-program • Article on Facebook security breach in 2018: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/28/technology/facebook-hack-data-breach.html • Article on the Stuxnet virus applied to an Iranian power plant: https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2012/06/01/154162121/as-the-worm-turns-cybersecurity-expert-tracks-blowback-from-stuxnet • AP CS Principles: https://apcentral.collegeboard.org/courses/ap-computer-science-principles/course • Texas Legislative Sessions: http://www.tcdd.texas.gov/public-policy/texas-legislature/ • Article on how school finance works right now in Texas...2019-02-1831 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastStaticsEngineers Sadhan and Pius continue an ongoing series of discussions on the fundamentals of mechanical engineering. Today they talk about what they remember about statics, forces, acceleration, moments, relativity, stars, and more. Related to this episode: • Statics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statics • Dynamics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamics_(mechanics) • Force: https://physics.info/newton-first/ • Newton’s Third Law: https://physics.info/newton-third/ • Theory of Relativity: https://www.space.com/17661-theory-general-relativity.html • Moment: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moment_(physics) • Golden Gate Bridge: http://www.goldengatebridge.org/ • Homeostasis: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeostasis • Nuclear fusion: http://www.nuclearconnect.org/know-nuclear/sci...2018-12-1341 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe Startup Reinventing Invention KitsWhat are the trends in educational kids’ toys today? How can programming kits be improved? How does an education business start and succeed? Entrepreneur Joseph Greer in Chicago discusses these issues as he describes his STEM education startup, MakeXchange, and its “Invention Lab” Arduino kit. The kit was designed to be more user-friendly and more organized than other Arduino kits. This is the start of Joseph’s goal to make the number one STEM education consumer product company. ***For a limited time this November, use the discount code K12ENGINEERING10 AT MakeXchange.com for a 10% discount. Related to this episode: • MakeXchang...2018-11-0839 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastGames and Simulations in Construction EngineeringArchitectural and civil engineers are using rich digital tools to simulate constructed buildings. Similar tools are also being used in digital video games and virtual reality games that might teach future engineers. Dr. Fadi Castronovo speaks about his efforts to advance engineering education using simulations and games like these. Fadi is an engineering professor at California State University, East Bay (or Cal State East Bay), an architectural engineer by training, and an educational game designer. He also talks about his students’ game to teach sustainability practices, his favorite video games, and his background across the world. Related to this episode: • Dr...2018-10-2354 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastReaching the High School Girls Who Didn't See Themselves in TechAmong the various STEM education organizations that have developed throughout the last several years, there is ChickTech. The local Austin chapter of the nonprofit began just a few years ago, and Dana DeFebbo, its Assistant Director, discusses how ChickTech Austin reaches out to high school girls who might not have had opportunities in tech. Dana talks about the challenges and rewards of running an all-volunteer program like this and her hopes for its future. Related to this episode: • Chicktech Austin: https://austin.chicktech.org/ • ChickTech: https://chicktech.org/ • OSCON, Open Source Convention: https://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/oscon-or • Microbits: https://microbit...2018-10-0835 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAn Architect in the ClassroomWhat skills does a professional architect bring to high school education? Guest Kelly Foster explains, as he shares his experience as both a practicing architect and a STEM teacher. He discusses his methods in teaching creativity and problem-solving in multiple areas of design, including civil and architectural engineering, architecture, and graphic design. He also analyzes the design of the new Central Library, part of the Austin Public Library system. Guest co-host Rachel also joins the discussion. Related to this episode: • Austin Central Library: https://library.austintexas.gov/central-library • Science poster designed by Kelly Foster, “CAUTION! Science Teacher at Work”: http://www.k12e...2018-09-1048 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTruth in Storytelling: The Reality of Teachers' LivesAuthor Roxanna Elden discusses her new satirical novel Adequate Yearly Progress, which tells the story of the teachers’ lives across one year in the fictional Texas high school of Brae Hill Valley. Roxanna’s book draws on her own experience as a K-12 public school teacher and her conversations with other teachers around the country. Roxanna says that past portrayals of teachers in popular media can be very unrealistic, and her book is meant to challenge that. Related to this episode: • Roxanna Elden, author: https://roxannaelden.com/ • “Adequate Yearly Progress” on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Adequate-Yearly-Progress-Roxanna-Elden/dp/1732098700/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8 •...2018-08-0645 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastLeaving Teaching for TechFormer teacher and current tech worker Sophia talks about why she left the classroom, how people perceive teachers, how to bring STEM to four-year-olds, and the value of communication skills in software development. Related to this episode: • AISD (Austin Independent School District): https://www.austinisd.org/ • General Assembly Web Development courses: https://generalassemb.ly/coding/full-stack-web-development • Front-End, Back-End, and Full Stack web development, on Udacity: https://blog.udacity.com/2014/12/front-end-vs-back-end-vs-full-stack-web-developers.html • “Stand and Deliver” the movie: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094027/ • “Texas at top of list for cuts in K-12 education” article in the Texarkana Gazette: http://www.texarkanagazette.com/news/texas/sto...2018-07-3034 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastEngineers on EyesWhat’s so great about the human eye? Can we build something just like it? When would we need to design something better? Sadhan joins the podcast again as we give our engineers’ perspectives on these questions and more. Related to this episode: • Curriculum for Biomedical Engineering at Northwestern University: http://www.mccormick.northwestern.edu/biomedical/undergraduate/bachelor-of-science/curriculum.html • Ohm’s Law, on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm%27s_law • Anatomy of the eye, at the National Eye Institute: https://nei.nih.gov/photo/anatomy-of-eye • The occipital lobe of the brain, on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occipital...2018-07-0919 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe Future of Assessments in Engineering DesignNow that states have written engineering into K-12 science and technology learning standards, more institutions are thinking about how to run standardized tests in the subject. The educational assessments organization ETS is one institution interested in an in-depth, fair, and large-scale assessment for engineering learning. Deb Brockway, Senior Research Associate at ETS, talks about some of her work in this area, especially in engineering design. She describes a current research project to assess students as they work together designing in a virtual environment. Related to this episode: • ETS Assessments Development: https://www.ets.org/k12/capabilities/assessment-development/ • Deb Brockway’s email...2018-06-2428 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeaching Science in PrisonScience education occurs in juvenile detention centers, as part of the schooling available to young people there so that they can receive their high school equivalency certification. Guests Rachel and Kasina talk about their experiences teaching science and other subjects to boys and young men in these institutions. They describe the constraints and opportunities in these classrooms and how they compare to schools on the outside. Related to this episode: • Dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT): https://behavioraltech.org/resources/faqs/dialectical-behavior-therapy-dbt/ • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT): https://psychcentral.com/lib/in-depth-cognitive-behavioral-therapy/ • High School Equivalency (HSE): https://hiset.ets.org/what • GED high school e...2018-06-1040 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTeaching Computer Science Remotely to KidsVivian Shen and Ruby Lee want to teach kids how to program one-on-one over the internet. Vivian and Ruby are Cofounders of Juni Learning, their new educational startup that provides programming lessons to kids like how others provide private piano lessons. Although they both studied computer science at Stanford, they got to computer science at an older age than the kids they are now serving. They talk about why they started Juni Learning and the benefits and challenges of teaching CS live online. Related to this episode: • Juni Learning: https://junilearning.com/ • Email Juni Learning: hello@learnwithjuni.com • Stanford Computer Scienc...2018-05-2738 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastIntro to Mechanical EngineeringWhat is mechanical engineering? Engineer Sadhan Sathyaseelan joins the show again from The University of Texas to wonder out loud about all the important aspects of this classic engineering field. This is a continuing series of conversations introducing the fundamentals of different engineering disciplines. In this episode on mechanical engineering, we talk about thermodynamics, motion, manufacturing, mechatronics, design methodology, machine elements, and more. Related to this episode: • “Engineering 101” podcast episode: http://www.k12engineering.net/transcripts/ep55.html • University of Texas at Austin Mechanical Engineering Degree Information: http://www.me.utexas.edu/undergraduate/degree-information • The Game of Life: https://boardgamegeek.com/boardg...2018-05-1442 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastSXSW EDU Live: Podcasting and Lesson DesignRecorded in the middle of South-by-Southwest (SXSW) EDU 2018, this episode features educator Rachel and engineer Pius. They discuss their immediate reactions to hosting two SXSW events this year, including insights on how to use podcasting for education and how to design lessons using empathic lead user analysis. Look out for future episodes from after the conference! Related to this episode: • SXSW EDU: https://www.sxswedu.com/ • SXSW Edu Session: “Podcast for Education Meetup”: https://schedule.sxswedu.com/2018/events/PP71654 • Educators’ favorite podcasts, from SXSW meetup: https://padlet.com/pioslabs/xzc0ox5ifomk • Lab Out Loud podcast: https://laboutloud.com/about/ • National Science...2018-05-0125 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastScience StorytellingMarshall Escamilla is part of a team of podcasters who create Tumble, a science podcast for kids and their families. With a background in music and K-12 education, Marshall shares the purpose of Tumble and how his show tries to tell science stories. Hear his thoughts on how to bring podcasting into the classroom, how to combine listening with other learning activities, and how science education is inherently political today. Related to this episode: • Tumble website: http://www.sciencepodcastforkids.com/ • Political crisis in Spain and Catalonia: https://www.politico.eu/article/catalan-chill-for-european-separatist-movements-aland-islands-south-tyrol/ • Radiolab on NPR: https://www.wnycstudios.org/shows/radiol...2018-04-2839 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastSXSW EDU Uncensored: Full RecapWe recap the South by Southwest Education conference (SXSW EDU) in 2018 after it ends, talking about the reactions of attendees, educational technology, PBS, escape rooms, political visitors, the educational pipeline from industry on down to K-12, ideas for future SXSW events, and more. Related to this episode: • Scandinavian Airlines direct flight between Austin and Stockholm: http://kut.org/post/scandinavians-apparently-love-sxsw-so-airline-flying-nonstop-austin • The lingonberry: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccinium_vitis-idaea • SXSW EDU (South by Southwest Education): http://sxswedu.com/ • SXSW EDU panel “Practitioner Perspective: Finding Edtech Efficacy”: https://schedule.sxswedu.com/2018/events/PP76404 • Example research paper on an educational product (a K-12 engineeri...2018-04-1648 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastTracing Brain Circuits for Mental Health, with Dr. Talia LernerNeuroscience research needs help from many fields, including engineering. Dr. Talia Lerner describes some of the engineering tools that she uses to study neural circuits in animal models, especially involving dopamine. She is a professor and basic science researcher at Northwestern University in Chicago, and she studies these circuits in the hopes of improving mental health diagnoses and treatments. Dr. Lerner also shares her thoughts on what doctors, scientists, and engineers will tackle in future neuroscience work. Related to this episode: • Dr. Talia Lerner’s lab, The Lerner Lab: http://lernerlab.org/ • Videos of neurons visualized with new techniques: http://lerner...2018-04-0830 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastEngineering 101What is engineering? What are the important aspects of engineering that anybody should know? Can we talk about all this without getting too deep into math? Engineer and researcher Sadhan Sathyaseelan joins the podcast to kick off a series of episodes meant to introduce engineering concepts to anyone, not just the people studying it in college. Related to this episode: • Article on Elon Musk on sending people to Mars: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/11/elon-musk-says-mars-spaceship-will-be-ready-for-short-trips-by-first-half-of-2019.html • University of Texas at Austin Department of Mechanical Engineering: http://www.me.utexas.edu/ • Engineer Your World: http://engineeryourworld.org/ • Fourier transforms, on Wikipedia: https://en.wikip...2018-03-2527 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAutonomous Vehicles, Now and LaterSociety is headed toward more driverless cars, self-driving cars, shared cars, connected fleets, and all kinds of autonomous vehicles (AVs). How will engineers of tomorrow deal with this technology? Dr. Kara Kockelman, Professor of Civil Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, talks about her research in this area and current advances in the field. She discusses driver psychology, effects of AVs on the environment, the importance of statistics and computer science in her work, the difference between cars in Texas and California, and much more. Related to this episode: • Dr. Kara Kockelman’s work: http://www.caee.utexas.edu...2018-03-1435 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastImproving Underperforming SchoolsWe close out Season 2 with another visit from Rachel, an educator with experience in school improvement strategies. First Pius and Rachel discuss future plans to present sessions at the upcoming South by Southwest EDU conference in 2018, followed by an homage to Austin, Texas. Then the main discussion starts, as Rachel defines what “underperforming” or “failing” schools are and how STEM and engineering programs sometimes could be used to try to turn them around. Mentioned in this episode: • South by Southwest EDU (SXSWedu): https://www.sxswedu.com/ • SXSW session “Podcasting for Education Meet Up” https://schedule.sxswedu.com/2018/events/PP71654 • SXSW session “Designing...2017-11-2033 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastAre All-Girls Engineering Classes Different?Teachers at all-girls schools might have insights on how to engage more young people – especially girls – into engineering. Several teachers at The Ann Richards School for Young Women Leaders in Austin shared their thoughts in this two-part episode. In Part 1 (01:15) we hear from Shamaa and Shireen, two high school engineering teachers, and then in Part 2 (28:50) we hear from Patience, Simon, and Kristina, three middle school engineering and STEM teachers. They discuss teaching in a small school, differences between all-girls classes and co-ed classes, the importance of school culture, Project Lead The Way curriculum, advice for parents, and more. Mentioned in this...2017-10-3052 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastCoding Python in Middle SchoolHow can you bridge the gap between teaching simpler visual programming tools and teaching more complicated textual programming tools? Julia Lamorelle’s answer is Python. Julia cofounded Kiwi Compute, a new education business that focuses on teaching middle school kids how to code in Python, a language widely used in academia and industry today. She talks about why Kiwi Compute has this education strategy and how it executes it, despite challenges in setting up a Python environment and attracting qualified teachers. Mentioned in this episode: • Kiwi Compute: https://www.kiwicompute.com/ • Python language: https://www.python.org/ • Scratch: https://scratch.mit.edu...2017-10-1632 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastVisiting Engineers VirtuallyHow can teachers expose their students to more engineering role models? What do they do if they don’t have time to arrange visits and field trips? That’s where Sarah McAnulty comes in. Sarah is a biology PhD student who also recently started Skype a Scientist, which is a free program to match scientists and engineers with K-12 classrooms. Sarah spoke with us about how the program helps more students get authentic interactions with STEM professionals. Mentioned in this episode: • Skype a Scientist: https://www.skypeascientist.com/ • About Sarah McAnulty: https://about.me/SarahMcAnulty • Hawaiian bobtail squid: https://en.wikipedia...2017-10-0215 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastDigital Pop Culture for STEMHow do you use the power of digital pop culture today to engage kids in engineering? Guest engineer Nehemiah Mabry, Ph.D., talks about this and more. Nehemiah is a practicing engineer in North Carolina and founder of his business STEMedia. STEMedia creates digital content to promote science, technology, engineering, and math. Mentioned in this episode: • STEMedia website: http://stemedia.org/ • Email Nehemiah: Nehemiah@stemedia.org • STEMedia on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/_stemedia/ • STEMedia on Twitter: https://twitter.com/_stemedia • Technimetric STEM Poetry: https://www.nspe.org/resources/pe-magazine/march-2016/technimetric-poetry-stem • National Academy of Engineering: http://nae.org/ • NASA Marshall Space...2017-09-1826 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastMexico vs. USAWhat is engineering education like in Mexico compared to the USA? This episode is an introduction to that topic as we talk to Hernando Garrido, a mechatronics and manufacturing engineer with the medical device company Fresenius Medical Care. He talks about his experience growing up in the Mexican school system near the US-Mexico border in Reynosa. He also compares it to his experience studying and working in Texas and California. Mentioned in this episode: • Fresenius Medical Care: https://fmcna.com/ • City of Reynosa, Mexico: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynosa • Peritoneal dialysis machines: https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/kidney-disease/kidney...2017-09-1021 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastScouting for Engineering EducationThe Boy Scouts of America are growing a new youth educational program called STEM Scouts, open to boys and girls. Guests Davis Fox and Deborah (Debbie) Vasquez talk about the mission of the program, which goes beyond teaching content knowledge in science, technology, engineering, and math. It includes teaching curiosity, teamwork, parental involvement, and other values that align with Scouting programs generally. Davis and Deborah also discuss the program impact on kids in the Austin, Texas, area so far. Mentioned in this episode: • STEM Scouts: https://stemscouts.org/ • Boy Scouts of America (BSA): http://www.scouting.org/ • Venturing program at BSA: h...2017-09-0426 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastVerification and ValidationGuest engineer and consultant Pat Sweet, P.Eng., talks about two of his favorite words in engineering: verification and validation. They describe concepts whose importance cuts across all the engineering disciplines, and so engineering educators could also teach these fundamental concepts to kids and teens. This episode is a rebroadcast of two short episodes of Engineering Word Of The Day, a podcast on the favorite, fascinating, or funny words and phrases used in various engineering disciplines. Mentioned in this episode: • Engineering Word Of The Day (EWOTD) podcast: http://engineeringwordoftheday.com • Engineering and Leadership blog and podcast from Pat Sweet, P.Eng...2017-08-2121 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastRoad to Civil EngineeringWhat’s it like to engineer roadways and the physical infrastructure of society? Guest Jerel Rackley, P.E., explains. Jerel is a civil engineer with the design and consulting firm Atkins, and in his fourteen years of experience in the field, he has seen what it takes to succeed. Hear him talk about taking the Professional Engineer (P.E.) exam, working with clients, the importance of people skills, the future of advanced 3D modeling in civil engineering, and more. Mentioned in this episode: • Atkins: http://www.atkinsglobal.com/en-GB • Principles and Practice of Engineering (PE) exam, for Professional Engineer licensure: http...2017-08-1427 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastRaising an Electrical EngineerHow do you make an engineer? Guest engineer Leyla Yilan shares her thoughts. Leyla is an electrical and computer engineer at chip-maker AMD, as well as a proud parent of two daughters. She tells her story of how she got into the field, explaining the importance of family and friends in pivoting her toward engineering. Then she talks about how she tries to expose her kids to different fields like she was. Also hear Leyla talk about equivalence checking, being a daughter of an immigrant, gendered toys, bringing your daughter to work, and more. Mentioned in this episode: • Maker Kids La...2017-08-0734 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastSkateboard Mechanical EngineeringGuest mechanical engineer Beau Trifiro talks about his business in skateboard design, fabrication, and education. Based in San Diego, Open Source Skateboards not only builds custom skateboards, it also teaches kids in middle school and high school how to design and build their own boards. Beau talks about teaching hands-on projects, how he deals with kids making mistakes, and why he thinks studying mechanical engineering allows for so much creativity. Mentioned in this episode: • Open Source Skateboards website: http://www.opensourceboards.com/ • Open Source Skateboards on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/opensourceskateboards • Open Source Skateboards on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/op...2017-07-1726 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastChina vs. USAHow does China prepare students for careers in computer science and related fields, compared to the USA? Hear from a Chinese student of computer science and mathematics who is studying in Texas for his undergraduate degree. He talks about the notorious Chinese college entrance exams, similarities between math and computer science, perceptions of an American education and American companies among Chinese, and why he would have learned more programming at a younger age if he could have. Mentioned in this episode: • Districts of Beijing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_administrative_divisions_of_Beijing • Chinese college entrance exam photos: http...2017-07-1022 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastInside a Startup After-School STEAM ProgramFounding an education business comes with challenges and rewards, far beyond the financials. Guest EJ Zain talks about this first-hand. EJ founded the startup Maker Kids Lab, LLC, in Austin, Texas. Her very new startup runs after-school programs for middle schoolers in science, technology, engineering, art, and math (STEAM). In her lessons, Zain and her team of helper-teachers guide students of different ages to work together on hands-on, creative projects. She discusses her motivations for starting Maker Kids Lab as a parent, her strategies for engaging kids, and her hopes for creating a business with a social impact. Mentioned in...2017-07-0329 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastOvercoming StrugglesSome students struggle with trauma, mental health, mental disabilities, and negative peers and adults; and yet, with the right decisions and the right help, they still will become successful engineers. Hector is a computer engineer who has such a story. Although engineering and computers interested him early on, he faced several major obstacles on his path to getting an engineering degree. Hector talks about self-reflection, accommodations, and other supports that helped him overcome these obstacles. Mentioned in this episode: • Wolfenstein video game series, starting in 1981 to today: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfenstein_(series) • Info on accommodations for college students with...2017-06-2027 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastOrganizations to Build an Engineering IdentityDr. Renata Revelo talks about the importance of identity when educating and retaining engineers. Dr. Revelo is an electrical engineer, a professor, and a researcher in engineering education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She’s studied Latina/Latino students who participated in the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) during their education, and she found that the organization helped them better see themselves as engineers, without separating themselves from their own communities. As a follow-up to the previous episode of the podcast, this episode explores Dr. Revelo’s work with Hispanic students at the college level, while applying the...2017-06-1220 minThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastThe K12 Engineering Education PodcastEngaging Hispanic Students in EngineeringStart with what kids already know, when teaching them engineering. Have them work in their community. Guest Dr. Alex Mejia says you should tap into students’ existing “funds of knowledge” to raise engineering students’ achievement. He’s done research on this pedagogical style with Latino and Latina students, as a professor of engineering in San Angelo State University and soon-to-be professor at the University of San Diego (starting in August 2017). We talk about his research, his background and motivation for doing this work, culturally responsive education, and practical strategies to teach all students. Mentioned in this episode: • Dr. Joel Alex Mejia at the...2017-06-0526 minAll HazardsAll HazardsCal OES PIOs Talk Disaster Experience, Relationships and More in Team Chat  What does a typical day on the job look like for Cal OES public information officer? Well, the answer to that is – there is no typical day. One thing you can count on is that it’s likely there won’t be a press release in draft mode; only for special occasions are press releases written. More often than not, our PIOs are busy creating more engaging forms of communication, from short and longer form videos, to daily blogs to podcasts and social media. Our PIOs also get their hands dirty to get the public and stakeholders the inf...2017-01-3145 min