Posts Tagged homeschool

STEM Tuesday– Celebrating Diversity in STEM– Writing Tips & Resources

Author’s Purpose

Why do authors write what they write? I’ve thought about this question a lot lately. Authors explain their purpose in prologues, epilogues, introductions, or author’s notes. For me, these parts of a book are often as interesting as the main text.

This month’s Celebrating Diversity in STEM– Book List reminds me of why it’s important to have perspectives from diverse authors. As nonfiction authors, we always put ourselves — our passions, our personalities— into our books. Our race and cultural background is part of what makes us who we are. It can influence what stories —and whose stories — we choose to tell. And it also affects how we write our books, adding authenticity and heart. 

A Closer Look at Author’s Purpose

Let’s look at what four of this month’s authors say about their purpose for writing.

In HIDDEN FIGURES, Margot Lee Shetterly writes that growing up she “assumed the face of science was brown,” because her father and people in her community worked in science, math, and engineering. Shetterly soon learned the world was very different when her father was a child. And when Shetterly discovered African-American women mathematicians had worked at NASA Langley Research Center for decades without recognition, she was determined to spotlight their contributions to American history. As Shetterly writes in her prologue, “The contributions made by these African-American women have never been heralded, but they deserve to be remembered and not as a sidetone in someone else’s account but as the center of their own story. …This is their story.”

In WHAT COLOR IS MY WORLD, Kareem Abdul Jabbar also aims to inform readers about overlooked historical figures: “Unfortunately, many of the greatest American inventors have been ignored by history textbooks based on the color of their skin or their gender. …By telling of their unsung but vital contributions, I hope to celebrate these overlooked role models so that we can all appreciate one another in meaningful ways.”


William Kamkwamba (THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND) writes to persuade other youth, especially Africans, to pursue their dreams, “I want you to know your ambitions just as important and worth achieving, however big or small. …Think of your dreams as tiny miracle machines you can tough. The more faith you put into them, the bigger they get, until one day they’ll rise up and take them with you. (Epilogue)” In her introduction to PATH TO THE STARS, Sylvia Acevedo has a similar purpose for telling her story, to inspire young people to “dream big dreams and make those dreams come true.”

Whether the book is a biography or an autobiography, each author’s deep personal connection and passion shine through in their writing. They’ve crafted stories only they can tell.

FINDING YOUR PURPOSE – Story Sparks

That deep, personal connection that ignites our writing is something every good writer aims for. And it starts with the stories or angles we choose — our story sparks. So pull out your writer’s notebook, and let’s get going.

Turn to a clean page in your notebook, and title it “STORY SPARKS.” Now let’s fill it up with ideas.

  • First, what subjects excite you? They could be school subjects like biology, hobbies like knitting or building robots, pets, or your favorite sport. 
  • What kind of books do you like to read? What about TV shows, movies, and music?
  • Are there certain news stories you find most appealing?
  • Maybe there are special places you like to visit, like the beach or a quiet forest.
  • Next think about themes and ideas that interest you. Is it underdogs? Bullies? Being the youngest? Are you interested in social justice or the environment?
  • Finally, like the authors on this month’s book list, think about your personal history, traditions, culture, and community. Do they give you inspiration for stories to tell? If so add them to your list too.

As you make your list, see if you notice any patterns, similarities, or connections that fire up other ideas. If not, try smashing two ideas together like environmental issues plus your favorite spot— the beach? After a little digging, you add ocean pollution to your list.

Here’s the good news. You can use your story sparks to find focus even if your teacher assigns topics for informational writing. Have to write a presidential biography? Is space your jam? Why not pick John F. Kennedy, who launched the U.S. into the Space Race?

Whenever you learn something new and find yourself thinking, “Hmmmmm, that’s interesting,” jot it down. You’ll never run out of ideas. Happy writing!

O.O.L.F.

 


Kirsten W. Larson used to work with rocket scientists at NASA. Now she writes books for curious kids. She’s the author of WOOD, WIRE, WINGS: EMMA LILIAN TODD INVENTS AN AIRPLANE, illustrated by Tracy Subisak (Calkins Creek, 2020), A TRUE WONDER: The Comic Book Hero Who Changed Everything, illustrated by Katy Wu (Clarion, 2021), THE FIRE OF STARS, illustrated by Katherine Roy (Chronicle, Fall 2022), along with 25 other nonfiction books for kids. Find her at kirsten-w-larson.com or on Twitter/Instagram @KirstenWLarson.

STEM Tuesday’s New Year’s Celebration — Part Two

Partie Deux (Translation…Part Doo.)

Recap: We last saw Mike Hays, our STEM Tuesday New Year’s Post expert, in the barnyard with his trusty sidekick, Dr. Bull Loney,  attempting to clean his boot.

The Look (M. Hays 2020)

“STOP! Stop this recap! What’s with this ‘trusty sidekick’ bit, Hays?” screamed Dr. Bull Loney.

I turned to my bovine friend. “Doesn’t it sound awesome? Our hero and his assistant out in the world solving the great mysteries of science, engineering, technology, and mathematics?”

“No.” said the good doctor flatly. 

“We could be international men, well, man and bovine, of mystery and intrigue. I see a Netflix series coming on.”

“You’re an idiot. Everybody knows I’m the brains of this dynamic duo.”

I sat down on a hay bale and started scraping the cow poo off of my boot with an old piece of barn wood.

“Besides, you got it all wrong. It’s science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.” The tail swished back and forth impatiently. “That’s what STEM stands for.”

“Same thing that I said.”

“What you said makes SETM, not STEM.”

“Same thing.”

“Not at all.” Dr. Loney paused. “Hey, this brings up another problem. Precision.”

“I thought you are supposed to be introducing ‘Cow Poo’ as your STEM Tuesday 2021 theme?”

“I’ll get to that but this is important. Precision is important for not only doing proper STEM work but in presenting the STEM message to others.”

“That’s ridiculous.”

“You think so? What good are discovery and innovation if all that discovery and innovation stays in the head of the discoverer/innovator?”

“Not much, I guess.”

“Right. The real value of discovery and innovation, the real value of STEM, is spreading that information to others and putting it into practice.”

“Makes sense. But where’s the precision part fit in?”

The bull lit up like a firework on New Year’s Eve. He was in his element. He was on a roll. 

“Precision, my friend, is the trust part of science. We all know consistency in your data builds trust in the data. However, precision is also important in the messaging side of things too. Without precision in presenting and teaching your information, trust devolves into confusion.”

“So when our message lacks precision, we can create more confusion than trust.”

“Precisely. It’s SETM vs. STEM. You only work to confuse people with SETM rather than the accepted acronym, STEM. Nobody really likes confusion except, perhaps, pigs.”

“Now I get it. That’s kind of like what we do at STEM Tuesday and what the great community of nonfiction kidlit writers does. Spread information through precision in messaging. Getting the best information that we can to the readers.”

“Hays, I think you are coming around. There’s hope for you yet.”

I fought the urge to flick the stuff from the bottom of my boot at him. “Can we  get around to your 2021 STEM Tuesday announcement now?”

“Of course. And you don’t have to be so snappy about it. You done cleaning that shoe off yet? I feel this is an announcement best suited for the sunshine and wide-open space of the pasture.”

We moved through the gate and into the brown grass of the pasture. We stopped on a rise overlooking the corn stubble fields stretched below us. The sunshine felt good and the beauty all around me on this late December day made me forget all about my boot mishap.

“Dr. Bull Loney, this is the perfect spot to make your announcement. But first, tell me why you think “Cow Poo” not only represents 2020 but is also the perfect word for 2021?”

“It’s simple. It’s a circle of life thing.”

“Wait!” I said, looking around at the pastoral setting with images of animated musical animals popping into my head. “You’re not going to start belting out one of those Disney songs, are you?”

“Not a bad idea, but no. Circle of life. The grass grows and the grain grows. We eat the grass and the grain. We absorb the nutrients and then we get rid of the rest in the form of poo. The poo fertilizes the soil and provides nutrients to the grass and the grain. See? Circle of life stuff.”

“What about methane gas?”

“All part of the process. There are positives and negatives to everything under the sun. We can’t ignore the fact that hardly anything in our universe is 100%. That’s why we have statistics.”

“Okay, you’re saying “Cow Poo” needs to be our 2021 word just because it’s fertilizer?”

“After the Cow Poo year of 2020, don’t you think a little fertilizing is needed in our future?”

“You have a point.”

“Precisely.”

“Okay Dr., make the announcement.”

“Ladies and gentlemen, I propose ‘Cow Poo 2021’ as the STEM Tuesday theme for the New Year. Keep the STEM faith as we navigate these tough and difficult times. We wish you the best and can’t wait to see what you’ll create fueled by your own means of fertilizer. Happy New Year from the MUF family and the STEM Tuesday team!”

As the wisdom of Dr. Bull Loney sunk in, I looked around at the beauty of nature surrounding me. With the challenges we face in 2021, a little fertilizer in our future is not a bad thing at all. We need it for our creative life. We need it for our discoveries. We need it for our innovation. We need it to make our world just a little bit better today than it was yesterday.

I only suggest we pay attention to what’s under our feet so we don’t accidentally step in something we don’t have to scrape off our boots. Also, I recommend checking out some books on poop (including a few titles below from STEM Tuesday contributors). It’s fascinating stuff! 

Who Gives A Poop? Surprising Science From One End To The Other by Heather L. Montgomery (2020)

Building With Poop by Jennifer Swanson (2018)

 

Happy New Year! May your life be fertile and productive in 2021.

 

Anya Adora [CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)]

Mike Hays has worked hard from a young age to be a well-rounded individual. A well-rounded, equal opportunity sports enthusiasts, that is. If they keep a score, he’ll either watch it, play it, or coach it. A molecular microbiologist by day, middle-grade author, sports coach, and general good citizen by night, he blogs about sports/training related topics at www.coachhays.com and writer stuff at www.mikehaysbooks.comTwo of his science essays, The Science of Jurassic Park and Zombie Microbiology 101,  are included in the Putting the Science in Fiction collection from Writer’s Digest Books. He can be found roaming around the Twitter-sphere under the guise of @coachhays64.

STEM Tuesday’s New Year’s Celebration — Part One

Part One: A Great Conjunction

Last year, I volunteered to do the STEM Tuesday New Year’s Eve post. It was full of shiny optimism with a hopeful eye to what was going to be a fantastic year in 2020. I was wrong. For this year’s post, I knew I had to do something different or else risk being exiled from the wonderful STEM Tuesday team. In an act of desperate redemption, I had to bring in an expert. With the upcoming Chinese New Year ringing in the Year of the Ox, I felt it appropriate to head to the ranch and consult with the expert bovine, Dr. Bull Loney. 

“Hello, Dr. Bull Loney. Did you enjoy the Great Conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn last week?”

“Oh, it’s you. Yes, I found tracking the planets over the past few months absolutely fascinating and it’s been a fantastic show. The views we get here at the ranch are absolutely spectacular. Amateur astronomy is right up my alley.”

 

“Excellent. I bet you’re wondering why I’m here.”

The tail swished back and forth while he pondered my last statement. “Not really,” he said.

“Well, I need help.”

“Everyone knows that, Hays.”

“You’re not as funny as you think, Bull Loney.”

“That’s Dr. Bull Loney to you,” the bull replied. “Anyway, my fellow bovine appreciate my humor and wit.”

I didn’t want to head down the path of Dr. Bull Loney’s humor and wit so I got straight to the point of my visit. “I’m writing the STEM Tuesday New Year’s Post and need your help.”

“Ha! Why did they let you do the STEM Tuesday New Year’s Post again this year?”

“Quality, I guess?”

“Bahaha. Now, that’s complete humbug!“ The bull turned and sauntered off toward the feeder.

I followed. “Please help me?

“My guess is everyone else is on vacation and the STEM Tuesday Team found themselves, once again, in desperate straits.”

“Whatever. Can we just get to my idea? I was thinking about a STEM Tuesday Word of the Year to look back on 2020 and another word to look forward to 2021.” 

”You mean like last year’s ‘Optimism’? If a bull can laugh, I swear Dr. Bull Loney belly laughed. Thank goodness he’s a bull or else there might be milk-through-the-nose laughter happening.

“Are you going to help me or not?” I said, running out of patience.

“Let me defer to you, Nostradamus. Show me what you got so far.”

I walked away from the giggling bovine and faced the open pasture.

“Ladies and gentlemen, the 2020 STEM Tuesday Theme of the Year is—.” I froze in my tracks.  “Ugh! I stepped in cow$%@#!”

The laughter stopped.

“Whoa! Whoa! Whoa! Back it up a minute. What’s wrong with cow$%$@#, anyway? It’s a necessary part of being a bovine. And can you refer to it as cow poo? We do have certain standards at From the Mixed-Up Files…Of Middle-Grade Authors.” 

“Well, right now, cow poo is all over my boot.”

The bull looked at the bottom of my boot and turned away to hide its joy. “Ah, there’s 2020 in a nutshell.”

“What are you talking about?” 

“You stepped in cow poo. That’s about as 2020 as you can get.”

“I did not just step in cow poo on purpose. It was an accident. In fact, it’s probably your fault anyway.” I said standing on one foot trying to decide how to proceed.

“My fault?”

“Yes. You appear to be the only cow around right now.”

“Bull.”

“Whatever.”

“Bovine or Bos taurus will work also.”

“Whatever! The fact remains you are the only bovine in the barnyard so it has to be your, um…deposit that I stepped in.”

“That is so very 2020.”

“Can we stop with the 2020 bit and get back to the STEM Tuesday Theme of the Year?”

“I just did.”

“What?”

“I think cow poo is the perfect STEM word for 2020.”

“That is not an appropriate word to use.”

“It’s perfect.”

“It’s disgusting.”

“It’s perfect.”

“No.”

“Listen for just one minute, okay? Why did you step in it?”

“I wasn’t paying attention?”

“See? The perfect 2020 word.”

“And you neglected to warn me it was in my path so it’s your fault.”

Silence. I tried to avoid the death glare of a 2000 lb. bull by focusing on my soiled boot.

“My fault! You’re the one who wasn’t paying attention to the data staring you in the face, or, in this case, under your foot. You are the person who stepped right in it.”

“That’s ridiculous! Complete cow$!@#.”

“Poo.”

I thought for a moment. As much as I hate to admit it, Loney actually made sense. I wasn’t paying attention to the data in front of me. To make matters worse, instead of accepting my mistake and accepting responsibility, I threw the blame everywhere except where it belonged…back on me.

“You win. Cow poo is a good representation of 2020. You can make the official announcement.”

Dr. Bull Loney’s tail swished in delight. He pawed the ground and snorted just to prove his superiority. 

“Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your efforts during this unforgettable year of 2020. I dedicate this Year of Cow Poo to all who trudge through these tough and difficult times. We wish you the best and can’t wait to see what you’ve created this past year and what lies ahead for each of you in the middle-grade universe.”

Loney walked over to me with the look of great accomplishment in those large, round black eyes. “How was that, Hays? An improvement over last year?”

I patted his flank. “You did well, Bull Loney.”

“That’s—”

“I know. I know. It’s Dr. Bull Loney.”

“Thank you, Hays.”

We walked to the barn side by side. 

As I slid the barn door open, the bull said, “Come to think of it, cow poo is also the perfect word for 2021.”

“I’m not buying it,” I said.

“Let’s get that boot cleaned up and tomorrow I’ll tell you why #CowPoo2021 deserves to be our theme for the New Year.”

To Be Continued Tomorrow...

Anya Adora [CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)]

Mike Hays has worked hard from a young age to be a well-rounded individual. A well-rounded, equal opportunity sports enthusiasts, that is. If they keep a score, he’ll either watch it, play it, or coach it. A molecular microbiologist by day, middle-grade author, sports coach, and general good citizen by night, he blogs about sports/training related topics at www.coachhays.com and writer stuff at www.mikehaysbooks.comTwo of his science essays, The Science of Jurassic Park and Zombie Microbiology 101,  are included in the Putting the Science in Fiction collection from Writer’s Digest Books. He can be found roaming around the Twitter-sphere under the guise of @coachhays64.