And on World Teachers Day, there’s no better time to highlight passionate, job-ready teachers who have the expertise needed to tackle STEM skills shortages across Australia.
Robotics and automation are in huge demand across multiple industries, yet, despite the need, very few education initiatives are preparing students with these future skills.
As the only university in Australia and Southeast Asia to incorporate VEX Robotics as part of its digital electronics undergraduate course, UniSA’s pre-service teachers are ensuring the future workforce is not only skilled, but passionate about robotics and STEM.
UniSA Education Futures course developer and robotics expert, Emil Zankov, says it’s vital for universities and schools to embrace robotics as part of their students’ learning experience.
“Robotics is a fantastic way to introduce and get students excited about STEM and computer science,” Zankov says.
“Yet many teachers struggle to embrace new technologies because they’re not familiar with them and didn’t learn about them at uni.”
Through the VEX educational robotics program, UniSA pre-service teachers graduate with the skills to teach robotics confidently and creatively in schools.
“It’s so important for universities to educate teachers with these sorts of technical skills; not only because we have a responsibility to deliver professional, job-ready graduates, but also because these teachers will be the ones to inspire students to consider STEM pathways as an exciting area to pursue,” Zankov explains.
Globally there is a STEM talent shortage, with nearly half of businesses struggling to recruit people with the STEM skills they need.
In Australia, school students’ interest and performance in STEM subjects is stagnating or declining, with the Australian Government calling for a collective effort to initiate change.
An ACARA report earlier this year revealed student science literacy in Australia has barely improved in almost 20 years.
The data found only 57 per cent of Year 6 students attained the science proficiency standards in 2023 – that’s compared to 54 per cent of Year 6 students in 2006.
Zankos says the program embraces strategy, teamwork, resilience, automation, documentation and report writing and problem solving, so there are numerous transferable skills that come into play.
Zankov says VEX is the program of choice because it can deliver robotics education across the school continuum, from Reception through to Year 12.
“This is a platform that we can use all the way from five-year-olds through to our high school and tertiary students.
“That’s what makes it so exciting – we have this resource rich environment, and very robust program that allows lots of different aspects of robotics any pre-service teacher to engage in,” he says.
“Through the VEX program teachers support their students to plan, design, code and construct a working robot, with the option of entering it into a competition at the end of the module.
But it’s not just about technical or engineering skills. Zankos says the program also embraces strategy, teamwork, resilience, automation, documentation and report writing, problem solving and more. So, there are a lot of transferable skills that come into play.
“Ultimately, being involved in this program inspires students to want to go into STEM through an authentic, hands-on approach they’ve had at school," he says.
“When you hear students audibly excited about what they’re doing in class, there’s no better satisfaction.
“Seeing students learning because they want to learn; seeing them passionate, high fiving each other, and saying, ‘Yes, it’s working!’ and their robot is doing what they wanted it to do after they’ve programmed it… that’s what really puts such a buzz in a teacher. That’s pure magic.”
Meanwhile, to celebrate World Teacher’s Day, Samsung has announced its inaugural STEM Teacher of the Year Awards.
New research commissioned by Samsung shows that 59 per cent of Australians agree that STEM teachers should be getting more recognition than what they currently receive.
In response, Samsung has launched its nationwide call-out to find Australia’s best STEM teachers and recognise them for their hard work and positive impact on young Aussie minds.
Students, colleagues, parents or anyone in your school community can nominate the teacher they think deserves the title by sharing in 50 words or less why that teacher should be crowned the STEM Teacher of the Year 2024 via the competition website.
Nominations are open until November 19, and entries will be judged by a panel of industry experts, including astrophysicist and STEM advocate Dr Kirsten Banks.