{"id":1200,"date":"2020-04-21T16:39:07","date_gmt":"2020-04-21T20:39:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/?p=1200"},"modified":"2022-10-04T17:56:54","modified_gmt":"2022-10-04T21:56:54","slug":"makerspaces","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/makerspaces\/","title":{"rendered":"Learning at Home and School Through Makerspaces"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>Creating, making, and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination, and imagination is free.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">In early 2020, you may have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood. Maybe you saw posts about masks being made by novice sewers, raised garden beds being built, or face shields being 3D-printed in workshops and living rooms. Families were experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough bread starters. TikTok videos were on the rise and teachers were making virtual learning videos for kids.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>You could say the COVID-19 virus kicked the maker switch on into high gear. But there have always been communities of makers all over the country. Many cities have <strong>makerspaces<\/strong>, where people can use tools to make various things in a place accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with equipment like power saws, 3D printers, sewing machines, and more, makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad. They are a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages, while capturing interest in STEAM disciplines.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-1210 aligncenter\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"582\" height=\"190\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1.png 3840w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-300x98.png 300w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-1024x334.png 1024w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-768x250.png 768w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-1536x501.png 1536w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-2048x668.png 2048w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-MakerSpace-Sign-1-500x163.png 500w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 582px) 100vw, 582px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>One of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico, Virginia. It has been in existence for three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant for Henrico County Public Schools through the <a href=\"https:\/\/spcs.richmond.edu\/professional-education\/areas\/teaching-instruction\/partners-arts\/awards.html\">Engaging Creative Thinkers (ECT) Awards<\/a>. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_1202\" style=\"width: 469px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-1202\" class=\"wp-image-1202\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6734-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"459\" height=\"345\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-1202\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">The sketchbook share-out in 2018<\/p><\/div>\n<h2>Makers Gonna Make<\/h2>\n<p>Throughout the three years, the 5th-grade students at Carver became ambassadors of the program and modeled the different makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Lower grade levels had the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The ECT Award went a long way in kick-starting and sustaining the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country, we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as the COVID-19 pandemic has been, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real-world opportunities to apply their creativity too.<\/p>\n<h2>Sketching for All<\/h2>\n<p>One of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received through the award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating, and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom was given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school, a new prompt was read on the morning announcements. Prompts included developing a new flag for a new country, re-envisioning the school library, creating a new type of tree, and designing character costumes. Students were given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_1204\" style=\"width: 327px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-1204\" class=\"wp-image-1204\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-Schoolwide-Sketchbook-Project.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"317\" height=\"423\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-Schoolwide-Sketchbook-Project.png 478w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2020\/04\/Ruby-Carver-Schoolwide-Sketchbook-Project-225x300.png 225w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 317px) 100vw, 317px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-1204\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Sketchbooks were given to each student, and showcased<\/p><\/div>\n<p>Although Carver received a generous award to start the makerspace, makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about!<\/p>\n<h2><strong>How to DIY a Home Makerspace<\/strong><\/h2>\n<ol>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Designate an <strong>area<\/strong> where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your makerspace be portable, find a big box to collect and store your items in.<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Start <strong>collecting<\/strong> plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Try <strong>expanding<\/strong> your makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element.<\/span>\n<ul>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\"><em>Sewing:<\/em> Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\"><em>Carpentry:<\/em> Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parent&#8217;s permission, add a hammer and screwdriver to your makerspace.<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\"><em>Building:<\/em> We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!?<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\"><em>Tech:<\/em> Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice.<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Do you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade<strong> sketchbook<\/strong> to dream up your ideas and draw models. <\/span><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Do this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Now that you have all your stuff, <strong>get organized<\/strong> so you can find all the stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies.<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span data-sheets-value=\"{&quot;1&quot;:2,&quot;2&quot;:&quot;Learning at Home through Makerspaces\\n\\nYou might have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood recently, posts about masks being sewed by novice sewers around the country, raised garden beds people are building, or face shields and ventilators being 3D printed in people\u2019s workshops and living rooms. Families are staying at home experimenting with recipes for everything from homemade hand sanitizer to sourdough breads starters. Tiktok videos are on the rise and teachers are making virtual learning videos for kids. \\n\\nYou could say the COVID-19 virus has kicked the maker switch on into high gear, but before that switch got flipped there has always been communities of makers all over the country. Many large cities have Makerspaces, places where people can use tools to make various things, that are accessible to the public or by membership. Stocked with powersaws, 3D printers, sewing machines, Makerspaces have become more than just a passing fad, but a community opportunity to provide equitable and inclusive spaces to foster confidence, creativity and curiosity in all ages while capturing interest in Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.\\n\\nOne of these communities exists at Ruby F. Carver Elementary School in Henrico County and has been in existence for the last three years thanks to the generous support of Partners in the Arts. The project was originally started through conversation between the school\u2019s art teacher and librarian about wanting to give students more opportunities to make, play, and explore in an effort to increase development of creativity and curiosity. Their lunch time conversation grew into a grant proposal through Partner in the Arts\u2019 Engaging Creative Thinkers Award. Over three years and $6,000 later, the Ruby Carver Makerspace is a bustling hub of creation that includes supplies, tools, plugged and unplugged means of creation for students. \\n\\nThroughout these three years the 5th grade students at Carver have become ambassadors of the program and have modeled the different Makerspace activities to lower grade levels and families during our open house community events. Other grade levels K-4 also have the opportunity to experience the \u201cmaker mindset\u201d at maker pop-ins scheduled throughout the year in the library. The Partners in the Arts Engaging Creative Thinkers generous award definitely went a long way in kick-starting and helping to sustain the maker movement at Carver, but as individuals are now realizing all over our country . . . we are a nation and world filled with creativity and making. As challenging and scary as this pandemic is, it has brought out originality and resourcefulness in our communities and given our children real world opportunities to apply their creativity too. Creating, making and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination and imagination is free! \\n\\nOne of the beautiful resources that every student at Ruby Carver Elementary received from the Partners in the Arts award was a sketchbook that they kept throughout the school year. These sketchbooks were used for planning, creating and dreaming. Students were encouraged to draw out their thoughts and ideas. Each classroom is given the opportunity to write a prompt for the whole school and at the beginning of each new week of school a new prompt is read on the morning announcements. Prompts range from designing a new flag for a new country, to redesigning the library, to creating a new type of tree or character costume, etc. Students are given the freedom and permission to stretch their imagination to the limit. \\n\\nAlthough Carver received a generous award to start their Makerspace, Makerspaces can be made at home on a budget or even for free with things you already have! Our schools and homes are shaping the next makers and inventors of the future. Just as the Carver library serves as a safe space for this exploration, homes and communities everywhere can encourage our next generation to dream, create, explore and find what they are passionate about! \\n\\nHome Activity:\\nWant to make your own Makerspace at home? \\nDesignate an area where the making can happen! Or if you rather that your Makerspace be portable find a big box to collect and store your items in.\\nStart collecting plastic and cardboard containers and tubes from the recycling bin, bits of yarn and ribbon left from gifts, old wrapping paper or birthday bags. It helps to have tools like scissors, a stapler, a hole puncher and things to draw with. Bits of wire, beads, buttons, and construction paper are great items to add to your collection.\\nTry expanding your Makerspace by adding a sewing, carpentry, or tech element. \\nSewing: Gather needles, thread, scissors and fabric. Could you find something reusable to use as stuffing? Maybe old plastic bags!\\nCarpentry: Scraps of wood, some nails, screws make for a lot of fun. With a parents permission add a hammer and screwdriver to your Makerspace. \\nBuilding: We love building with blocks, legos, K\u2019Nex, magnet tiles, dominos\u2026 don\u2019t have these? How about canned goods, rocks, recycled containers!? \\nTech: Some of the tech toys we love most at Carver include Makey Makey\u2019s, Ozobots, Spheros, and Code and Go Mice. \\nDo you have a place to gather your ideas? Make a homemade sketchbook to dream up your ideas and draw models. \\nDo this by taking a stack of printer paper and folding it in half. Use a stapler to staple the sides. Make a fancy cover and label it with your name!\\nNow, that you have all your stuff, get organized so you can find all your stuff you need for your ideas. Find some big cups or containers for your tools and boxes or plastic bags for your supplies. \\nMake a sign and label this area or box. What do you want to call your creative space? Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here! \\nNow the most important part\u2026 What are you going to make? If you need help getting started make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.\\n\\n&quot;}\" data-sheets-userformat=\"{&quot;2&quot;:513,&quot;3&quot;:{&quot;1&quot;:0},&quot;12&quot;:0}\">Make a sign and label this area or box. <strong>What do you want to call your creative space?<\/strong> Big ideas and cool stuff is going to be made here!<\/span><\/li>\n<li>Now the most important part\u2026<strong>What are you going to make? <\/strong>If you need help getting started, make a list of questions you have on the first page in your sketchbook. Then make a list of problems you can think of. Try to think of some solutions! Can you make something better? Draw out your plan in your sketchbook first and then start to work with the materials you collected.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><em>Read more about Ruby Carver&#8217;s school-wide sketchbook project and see prompts <a href=\"http:\/\/rubycarverart.weebly.com\/sketchbooks-in-school\">here<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-1201 aligncenter\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"Thank you banner on a wall\" width=\"439\" height=\"329\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-scaled.jpg 2560w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-768x576.jpg 768w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-2048x1536.jpg 2048w, https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6741-400x300.jpg 400w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 439px) 100vw, 439px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>This is a guest post by Julz Suder and Deanna Hamlin of Ruby Carver Elementary School, three-time Engaging Creative Thinkers Award grant recipients.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><span class=\"s1\"><a href=\"http:\/\/spcs.richmond.edu\/arts\"><i>Partners in the Arts<\/i><\/a><\/span><i> (PIA) awarded Engaging Creative Thinkers (ECT) grants to teachers from 1994 to 2021. These grants made possible over 200 innovative, interdisciplinary projects in Richmond area schools. Since then, the PIA consortium has supported both educator professional development and in-school project implementation through the Joan Oates Institute for Integrated Learning.<\/i><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><i>The ECT Awards provided opportunities for teachers to reach all students across content areas, while developing critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, communication, and citizenship. ECT projects engaged a class, grade-level or, whole school, and connected teachers, students, families, and the community.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Creating, making, and problem-solving can begin anywhere there is imagination, and imagination is free. In early 2020, you may have noticed rainbows hanging in windows of houses in your neighborhood. Maybe you saw posts about masks being made by novice sewers, raised garden beds being [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5092,"featured_media":1202,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[238236],"tags":[222308,1305,222344],"class_list":{"0":"post-1200","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","6":"hentry","7":"category-school-projects","8":"tag-ect-awards","9":"tag-henrico-county-public-schools","10":"tag-ruby-f-carver-elementary-school","12":"post-with-thumbnail","13":"post-with-thumbnail-large"},"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/files\/2021\/06\/IMG_6734-scaled-e1664920606822.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1200","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5092"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1200"}],"version-history":[{"count":17,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1200\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1551,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1200\/revisions\/1551"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1202"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1200"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1200"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.richmond.edu\/pia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1200"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}