Published:

Adelphi professors are combining “A" for Arts with STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) to create innovative learning experiences.

 

While the STEM acronym (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) has been in use for several decades, STEAM is a way of integrating the arts with STEM to encourage student inquiry, critical thinking and dialogue.

“STEAM places a high value on creativity and innovation,” said Cindy Maguire, Ph.D., associate professor of arts and design education, acting associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and director of Adelphi’s undergraduate art and design education program. “It’s about how artists and designers incorporate technology, engineering and science into their art making. We invent to learn rather than learn to invent.

“In a rapidly changing world,” she continued, “it is important that we educate well-rounded global citizens who have the imagination and skills to conquer new challenges, such as climate change and poverty. There are kids in elementary school today who will have jobs that haven’t even been imagined yet. STEAM helps to prepare them for those jobs.”

In 2014, Dr. Maguire began to collaborate with three Adelphi science educators. Two years ago, they launched the STEAM Consortium, an effort to promote the infusion of STEAM into course content across the Adelphi curriculum.

A result is the University’s STEAMLab, a community makerspace equipped with a range of materials—from 3-D printers, laptop computers, microprocessors and sensors to sewing machines, scissors, paint and cardboard—where the Adelphi community can explore and invent using a variety of tools and materials.

“The STEAM Consortium aims to break down traditional academic silos and engender a broader spirit of creativity,” said Clinical Associate Professor Mary Jean McCarthy, one of Dr. Maguire’s collaborators.

The four professors have reached out to their colleagues across a wide range of disciplines to promote STEAM at Adelphi, and now professors on both sides of the STEAM equation are incorporating STEAM into their classrooms.

Harnessing the Power of STEAM

Here’s how three Adelphi professors are jumping into STEAM

Louise Geddes, Ph.D., assistant professor of English and a Shakespeare scholar, collaborated with Valerie Fazel, Ph.D., an Arizona State University professor, on a study of online Shakespeare fan fiction published in the journal Shakespeare. The two professors are currently co-editing a book that will explore the wide range of digital platforms a vast, variegated audience of Shakespeare aficionados are using to reinterpret the Bard’s words.

John Drew, assistant professor of communications, acquired a small, camera-equipped drone so that students can partner with Operation Splash, a nonprofit dedicated to cleaning up Long Island’s waterways, to use the device to produce a video. He envisions utilizing the drone in future classes to produce documentaries and videos about issues like drought and meteorological devastation.

Lee Stemkoski, Ph.D., associate professor of mathematics and computer science, developed a video game design minor that addressed both sides of the STEAM equation: the arts-related visual and narrative aspects of games’ stories and the technical components that bring those stories to life.


For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director 
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu

Contact
Phone Number
More Info
Location
Levermore Hall, 205
Search Menu