Schlagwort: BETT

  • Come to our free educator sessions next to Bett 2020

    Come to our free educator sessions next to Bett 2020

    Reading Time: 4 minutes

    Are you attending Bett Show this year? Then come to our free educator sessions on Friday 24 January right next to Bett to take a break from the hustle and bustle of the show floor and learn something new!

    Our team will be in a private room below the [email protected] pub, next door to Bett, all day on Friday 24 January. We’ll be offering free physical computing sessions for primary and secondary educators during the day. Then from 17:30, you can drop in to chat to us about computing in your classroom, and to connect with like-minded educators.

    A teacher attending a physical computing sessions laughs as she works through an activity

    Our schedule for you on 24 January

    11:00–12:30: Physical computing session for primary teachers (limited spaces, please register to attend)

    12:45–13:30: Panel and Q&A for primary teachers: Code Club and the National Centre of Computing Education (drop in without registering)

    14:30–16:00: Physical computing session for secondary teachers (limited spaces, please register to attend)

    16:15–17:00: Panel and Q&A for secondary teachers: Code Club and the National Centre of Computing Education (drop in without registering)

    17:30–21:00: Informal meet and greet with the Raspberry Pi team for everyone (drop in without registering)

    • Snacks and refreshments will be provided at all the sessions
    • Directions to the [email protected] pub, where you’ll find us, are below
    • You don’t need to have a pass to Bett Show to attend any of our sessions

    What are these physical computing sessions?

    In these free, registration-only, practical sessions (tailored to primary and secondary educators, respectively), we’ll highlight the value of delivering curriculum objectives through physical computing activities.

    You’ll learn about:

    • Setting up a Raspberry Pi computer
    • Controlling LEDs using Scratch, Python, and Raspberry Pi
    • Pedagogical approaches such as pair programming and Parson’s Puzzles

    Women using Raspberry Pi and Trinket

    The sessions are perfect for you if you’d like an introduction to how to bring physical computing to your classroom, because no experience of physical computing is needed.

    Both sessions are free and open to all teachers and educators working with learners in the relevant Key Stages.

    Spaces are limited for both sessions, so make sure you register to reserve your space:

    Find out how to bring more computing opportunities to your school

    Following each of the physical computing sessions, you’ll have the chance to find out how else we can help you bring computing to your school! During a 45-minute panel and Q&A, our team will introduce you all things Code Club and how to set up an engaging coding club in your school, and to the comprehensive, free support we offer you through the National Centre of Computing Education. You’ll also be able to ask us any questions you have about the programmes and resources we offer to you.

    There is no need to register for this ‘panel and Q&A’ part of the day — just drop in when it suits you.

    Network with us and other educators

    Your evening at [email protected], from 17:30 onwards, will be an informal meet and greet with the Raspberry Pi team. Snacks and refreshments will be provided, and you can drop in whenever you like.

    This is your time to chat to us, discover more about the other educational activities we run, and network with other primary and secondary educators who want to encourage children and young adults to get hands-on with computing.

    Code Club

    We hope to see many of you there, and we’re looking forward to chatting with you!

    If you have any questions about this event, or want to find out more, please contact [email protected] and we will get back to you!

    How to find us

    The [email protected] is a pub located in Warehouse K next to the ExCel Center, easily accessed from the footpath between the ExCel West Entrance and Custom House DLR Station.

    Map of where the Fox@ExCel London is

    You will find us in a private area below the main floor of the [email protected]. There should be a sign directing you to the location, and you can also ask the pub staff to point the way.

    From Custom House DLR Station:

    Follow the signs along the footbridge towards the ExCel main entrance, enter the door labelled ‘[email protected]’ on the first building to your right, and head down the stairs.

    From the ExCel West Entrance:

    Turn right out of the main entrance and follow the footbridge towards the ExCel. You will find the entrance to the [email protected] in the second pair of doorways on your left. Enter the building and go down the stairs.

    Website: LINK

  • Four days of STEAM at Bett 2018

    Four days of STEAM at Bett 2018

    Reading Time: 3 minutes

    If you’re an educator from the UK, chances are you’ve heard of Bett. For everyone else: Bett stands for British Education Technology Tradeshow. It’s the El Dorado of edtech, where every street is adorned with interactive whiteboards, VR headsets, and new technologies for the classroom. Every year since 2014, the Raspberry Pi Foundation has been going to the event hosted in the ExCeL London to chat to thousands of lovely educators about our free programmes and resources.

    Raspberry Pi Bett 2018

    On a mission

    Our setup this year consisted of four pods (imagine tables on steroids) in the STEAM village, and the mission of our highly trained team of education agents was to establish a new world record for Highest number of teachers talked to in a four-day period. I’m only half-joking.

    Bett 2018 Raspberry Pi

    Educators with a mission

    Meeting educators

    The best thing about being at Bett is meeting the educators who use our free content and training materials. It’s easy to get wrapped up in the everyday tasks of the office without stopping to ask: “Hey, have we asked our users what they want recently?” Events like Bett help us to connect with our audience, creating some lovely moments for both sides. We had plenty of Hello World authors visit us, including Gary Stager, co-author of Invent to Learn, a must-read for any computing educator. More than 700 people signed up for a digital subscription, we had numerous lovely conversations about our content and about ideas for new articles, and we met many new authors expressing an interest in writing for us in the future.

    We also talked to lots of Raspberry Pi Certified Educators who we’d trained in our free Picademy programme — new dates in Belfast and Dublin now! — and who are now doing exciting and innovative things in their local areas. For example, Chris Snowden came to tell us about the great digital making outreach work he has been doing with the Eureka! museum in Yorkshire.

    Bett 2018 Raspberry Pi

    Raspberry Pi Certified Educator Chris Snowden

    Digital making for kids

    The other best thing about being at Bett is running workshops for young learners and seeing the delight on their faces when they accomplish something they believed to be impossible only five minutes ago. On the Saturday, we ran a massive Raspberry Jam/Code Club where over 250 children, parents, and curious onlookers got stuck into some of our computing activities. We were super happy to find out that we’d won the Bett Kids’ Choice Award for Best Hands-on Experience — a fantastic end to a busy four days. With Bett over for another year, our tired and happy ‘rebel alliance’ from across the Foundation still had the energy to pose for a group photo.

    Bett 2018 Raspberry Pi

    Celebrating our ‘Best Hands-on Experience’ award

    More events

    You can find out more about starting a Code Club here, and if you’re running a Jam, why not get involved with our global Raspberry Jam Big Birthday Weekend celebrations in March?

    Raspberry Pi Big Birthday Weekend 2018. GIF with confetti and bopping JAM balloons

    We’ll be at quite a few events in 2018, including the Big Bang Fair in March — do come and say hi.

    Website: LINK