During National Science Week, our small K–12 school of approximately 70 students will participate in a whole-school STEM investigation using programmable microcontrollers. Students will use micro:bit devices and environmental sensors to collect real-world data from the local environment and explore how coding and technology can be used to understand the world around us.
Students across all year levels will collaborate in mixed-age teams to design and build simple monitoring devices that measure environmental conditions such as temperature, light, humidity and soil moisture. These devices will be programmed using block-based and Python coding environments and deployed around the school grounds and nearby natural areas.
Students will investigate questions such as:
How does temperature vary across different locations in our school environment?
How does soil moisture change after rainfall?
Students will analyse their collected data, identify patterns and present their findings during a whole-school Science Week showcase.
This project will allow students to experience how digital technologies, coding and scientific investigation combine to help scientists understand real-world systems.