Home

John's Q&As

ConnectEd’s Gary Hoachlander on high schools of the future
 
 

Recent Videos

ConnectEd’...
Chuck Weis on la...
Ze’ev Wurm...
State Superinten...
More videos
 
 

Weekend extravaganza of learning at Stanford

Tags: ,
Posted in Program innovation

A shout out to the 180 undergrads and grad students of Stanford who taught 200 mini-courses through Splash!, a program that brings middle and high school students to the campuse for what’s billed as — and turned out to be — an extravaganza of learning.

The 680 students came from all over the Bay Area and beyond last month to take fun and mind-challenging courses with intriguing titles: NanoSmores: Learning Nanoscience through Food, Collage and Poetry, Creating a Fully Functional Website with Notepad!, How to Identify any Insect and Impress Your Friends, Top 5 Coolest Things About the Brain, the Evolution of Sexy, Backpacking Around the World, and of course, the always popular, Making Ice Cream (with liquid nitrogen).

The goal of Splash! is to fire up students’ imaginations at a time when some are getting turned off to learning in the classroom and dismissing careers, especially in science, as boring . The topics are hands-on and real-world, and the spirit of the instructors, who are teaching their hobbies and passions, can be infectious. That’s why many of the students attended both Saturday and Sunday sessions.  As Forrest St. Martin, a junior at the Oakland School for the Arts, told me, after taking sessions on improv and the history of flu scares, “The weekend makes me want to come to a college like this.”

Splash! started at MIT and expanded to Stanford two years ago. It’s offered on weekends in the fall and spring (next one is April 17-18. UC-Berkeley and Harvey Mudd College are looking into starting their own programs. I hope they do.

Teachers interested in learning more about the program can learn more here or write stanfordesp@gmail.com.

Comments on Weekend extravaganza of learning at Stanford

This is a test comments.... where are other changes.??? are these enough spaces for comments???
- John Smith
 
Return to Home page

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Get updates of The Educated Guess

Enter your email address:

 

About The Educated Guess

The Educated Guess is a forum on education policies in California and Silicon Valley. It is funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and sponsored by the Silicon Valley E
Read more
 

About John

John Fensterwald is a journalist at the Silicon Valley Education Foundation,
which he joined in September 2009. For 11 years before that, he wrote editorials at the Mercury News in San Jose, with a focus on education.
Read more
 

Recent Posts

 

Archives

 

Categories

 

Other Links

  • Bridging Differences Diane Ravitch and Deborah Meyer, opposites on some issue, share an insightful dialogue.
  • California Progress Report Check out author and retired newspaper editor Peter Schrag’s column every Monday.
  • California Teachers Association The teachers union’s perspective on ed reform and issues affecting teachers
  • EdSource Prime site for facts and research on education in California.
  • Education Next Online journal and blogs sponsored by Hoover Institution’s Koret Task Force on K-12 Education
  • Edutopia “What works in public education. Funded by The George Lucas Educational Foundation
  • Eduwonk Blog by Andrew Rotherham, co-founder and Publisher of Education Sector, keeps sharp eye on national scene.
  • EdVoice Small advocacy group that’s a power behind the scenes in Sacramento.
  • Enterprise Blog Andrew Smarick keeps a close eye on federal spending. He writes for the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
  • Getting Down To Facts studies 20 studies on school governance and finance; published in 2007. Encyclopedic and relevant.
  • Governor’s Committee on Education Excellence 2007 report with recommendations the governor shouldn’t have ignored.
  • Joanne Jacobs Former colleage at the Mercury News challenges assumptions with incisive writing.
  • Learning Matters John Merrow, PBS’ education correspondent
  • The College Puzzle Stanford Professor Emeritus of Education and Business Administration Michael Kirst explores policy issues relating to the preparation for and success in college.