iExploreScience: STEM in Elem

06 How To Run a STEM Challenge Without the Chaos

Nicole VanTassel Season 11 Episode 6

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0:00 | 16:08

You know that feeling you get before you start a science lab or STEM challenge — excitement tinged with nervousness and maybe a little dread? You can imagine success -- kids exploring, talking, problem-solving ... and also the looming potential chaos -- supplies spilled, kids arguing, no one actually following the task? As science teachers, we want to get kids moving, discussing, exploring, engaged... but there's also a sense of "out of our control" when we do (although the "control" is always an illusion anyway -- but that's a discussion for another day!) The thing is, the chaos never really comes from the activity itself. It comes from what wasn't established before it started. In this episode, Nicole breaks down the three classroom management foundations you need before any STEM challenge can work, plus the mistake that turns well-intentioned hands-on learning into stress for everyone.

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Running a STEM challenge without chaos isn't about finding the perfect activity — it's about what you build before the activity ever starts. In this episode, Nicole walks through the classroom management infrastructure that makes hands-on science actually work, explains why giving students more freedom than they're ready for isn't trust (it's a setup for failure), and makes the case for why written instructions are always, always an equity issue.

IN THIS EPISODE:

  • The three things that need to be established, practiced, and working in your classroom before you run a STEM challenge — and why reviewing them the day-of doesn't count
  • Why chaos in a STEM activity is almost never caused by the activity itself
  • How to calibrate the right level of student independence for your class right now (not where you wish they were)
  • Why written instructions aren't just good practice — they're an equity move for students with ADHD and working memory challenges
  • What a clear "finish line" does for both students and teachers in open-ended challenges
  • A one-page STEM Challenge Planning Template (free for Substack subscribers) that walks through all of it

LINKS MENTIONED:

📬 Free STEM Challenge Planning Template — one-page reusable planner for any challenge or lab, free for iExploreScience Substack subscribers: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/


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