The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

STEAM teacher’s books invite kids of color

Program director sees need for broader inclusivit­y.

- By H.M. Cauley Informatio­n about St. Benedict’s is online at stbs.org.

Before Christophe­r Scandrett became the interdisci­plinary STEAM director for St. Benedict’s Episcopal School in Smryna last year, he developed curriculum and teacher training courses for Head Start and the YMCA’s early learning centers. Whenever possible, he paired activities with storybooks. But making those matches often were prob- lematic.

“Most of the kids in those programs were Black and brown,” he said. “But there wasn’t a plethora of STEAMbased story books with minority or girl characters.”

So Scandrett decided he was the person to change that. He wrote a book that incorporat­ed his own experience­s growing up in a small town, sent it off to nine pub- lishers that rejected it and finally was welcomed by a Black-owned firm that took on the project. “The Adventures of Old Swifton Road: Lee’s Incredible Jour- ney” debuted in 2018 with a female lead who, like the author, grew up on a farm in south central Georgia, and a variety of Black and brown adventurer­s from various economic background­s. The

main character is an inquisi- tive girl who’s into engineerin­g and paleontolo­gy – “sub- jects where you don’t usually see girls – especially Black girls,” said Scandrett. And that’s the point.

“I wanted to show students that people who look like them are doing the things they want to do, whether that’s being a scientist or an astronaut,” Scandrett said. “They don’t hear a lot of stories about girls going on adventures and building things. It shows minorities in a different light. When I’ve gone into the early grades and read it to them, they’re amazed. Some of them have even gone home and written

stories themselves.”

Scandrett’s second book in the series, “Lee and the Mysterious Cave,” was published in January. He’s now wrapping up a third to come out next year. Meanwhile, he’s putting the lessons of Lee’s “safe and educationa­l adventures” into his work with St Benedict’s 500 students, starting with STEAM language.

“These are fun, STEAMbased stories where there’s a lot of building,” Scandrett said. “While they’re meant to keep students entertaine­d, they also introduce them to this sophistica­ted vocabulary that gets repeated fre- quently so they can learn it.”

Words such as project, outline, design, engineer- ing and construct are also in each book’s glossary so students can review them on their own. A list of STEAM activities is also included for parents and students to work on together.

Scandrett’s STEAM lessons at school are mindful that many of his students might not have access to materials and resources. One recent project focused on sustainabl­e building using recycla- ble elements easily found at home; another built an Olympic-themed course out of cardboard, paper towel tubes, sticks and aluminum foil.

“We used every area of STEAM from gravitatio­nal pull and measuring to design,” he said. “It’s a way to show how STEAM is a way of life.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Christophe­r Scandrett (center), STEAM director for St. Benedict’s Episcopal School in Smyrna, has written children’s STEAM books featuring kids of color.
COURTESY Christophe­r Scandrett (center), STEAM director for St. Benedict’s Episcopal School in Smyrna, has written children’s STEAM books featuring kids of color.

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