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#MIP MAKERS-IN-PROGRESS

by Diane Horvath

Five years into the development of Blake Middle School’s Blaker Makerspace, we are still evolving as #MIP Makers-In-Progress. The space is changing as we add materials and expand instruction, and the students and teachers continue to work toward a maker mindset. 

It is amazing to consider that it all started by simply clearing out a corner of the LMC, adding materials for building (including lots of cardboard), and adding electronics along with craft supplies, tools, and a 3D printer. Once the physical space was organized and filled, Design Thinking was introduced to students and teachers. The vision was to provide new learning opportunities through experimentation and creation that would help to foster collaboration and flexibility in thinking. In the Blaker Makerspace, these opportunities to create in real time also helped to demonstrate that within the learning process, failure often leads to the improvement of ideas and designs.

At the same time, my role as the Technology Integration Specialist began to morph into leading this change. What I soon found out is that success equals the willingness of fellow educators to collaborate, connect and learn from one another both inside and outside of my district. Luckily, in the Boston-area, there are so many opportunities to make connections and build your own MakerED Professional Learning Network (PLN) through offerings from MassCUE, MIT Edgerton Center and the community on twitter, which truly have been invaluable.

At the 2019 MassCUE Fall Conference, I teamed up with Kathleen Caprio, 6th Grade English Teacher, to share our #MIP Makers-In-Progress experiences at a  Playground [1] session. We wanted to highlight the BlakerMakerspace vision and our collaborative efforts in student learning by:

It truly takes teamwork inside and out to make this happen, and to develop the Maker mindset while understanding that it is a constant work-in-progress! Having a school culture of taking risks and that failure really is learning emphasizes the importance of having these opportunities for students in our school. These messages are strongly advocated by Nat Vaughn, Principal, who has helped to establish and sustain the Makerspace at Blake Middle School. But, I am also fortunate to be able to grow as an educator through opportunities to share at events like MassCUE’s Fall Conference, and by continually staying connected to other makerminded educators in the MassCUE Makerspace SIG group.


Diane Horvath is a Technology/MakerEd Integration Specialist at Thomas Blake Middle School in the Medfield Public School District. She is a 2018 MassCUE PathFinder Award recipient, a member of the MassCUE Fall Conference Committee and Makerspace SIG, and will be co-leading the Playground at the 2020 MassCUE Fall Conference. Feel free to reach out to her on Twitter and Instagram @techmonstah [4]