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CSPDWeek 2026
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Tuesday, August 4
 

10:00am EDT

Design-a-Civic Center: From Community Blueprint to Digital Build A Modular Cross-Curricular PBL Journey Through Civics, Engineering, Coding, and Community Design
Tuesday August 4, 2026 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
What does a community need, and who gets to decide? In this hands-on, modular workshop, educators experience a full cross-curricular PBL arc anchored in the design of a community civic center. We start with a tech-free engineering and civics challenge, then layer in CAD-style design tools and coding to create a digital version, and finally explore a wide range of ways to extend the project into math, literacy, social studies, and technology based on your teaching goals and classroom context. You will leave with a replicable PBL framework, ready-to-use tools, and a cardboard civic center of your own design.

"In this highly interactive, modular workshop, educators experience a rich cross-curricular project-based learning journey anchored in a question that is as civic as it is creative: what should a community civic center include, and how do you design a space that serves everyone? The session is grounded in research-informed pedagogy drawing on constructivist learning theory, Universal Design for Learning (UDL), and the science of learning, and is structured around the principle that the most powerful learning experiences are those in which students are not just recipients of knowledge but active co-designers of their own understanding.

The workshop is built on a low-floor, high-ceiling, wide-walls framework: every entry point is accessible regardless of prior
knowledge or skill, every learner can contribute meaningfully and authentically from the start, and the ceiling for depth, creativity, and complexity is open. This is not an accident of design, it is the design. Research in learning science consistently demonstrates that tasks structured to invite agency, collaboration, and co-design produce stronger intrinsic motivation, more durable learning, and greater transfer than tasks with a single correct path or outcome.

The session is also intentionally scaffolded to build educator capacity alongside student outcomes. Each segment is structured so that participants experience the activity first as learners, then step back to examine the instructional decisions embedded in what they just did, the sequencing, the constraints, the choice points, and the ways the task was designed to be accessible to all while remaining challenging for each. This reflective, dual-lens approach is grounded in findings from professional development research suggesting that teachers who experience high-quality, learner-centered instruction firsthand are measurably more likely to implement it with confidence, consistency, and fidelity in their own classrooms.

The first forty-five minutes are intentionally tech-free. Participants engage in a fast-paced, team-based engineering and civic design challenge using simple materials to research, plan, and prototype a community civic center. Grounded in civics, the engineering design process, and spatial reasoning, this challenge asks participants to think simultaneously like community members and designers, considering who uses the space, what the community needs, and how a building's layout and features reflect values and priorities. The challenge is structured to manage cognitive load deliberately,
introducing information and constraints progressively so that learners can engage deeply at every stage without becoming overwhelmed a principle drawn directly from the Cognitive Load Theory and its applications in project-based and maker-centered learning environments. Because the task is open-ended by design, every participant, regardless of learning profile, background knowledge, or unique skill set can find a meaningful role and co-design a solution that reflects their individual strengths. Woven throughout the build are authentic connections to the wide range of careers involved in designing and running a civic space, from architects and civil engineers to city planners, accessibility specialists, and community advocates, making this a natural entry point for career awareness alongside engineering and social studies standards.

The second forty-five minutes shift into technology integration, exploring how the same civic center design challenge can be extended using CAD-style design tools and coding to create a digital version of the building. This transition from physical to digital prototyping functions as a natural cognitive scaffold, students arrive at the technology already grounded in the core concepts, which frees working memory to focus on acquiring new digital skills rather than processing new ideas from scratch. Participants are introduced to accessible, classroom-ready tools that allow students to translate their
physical prototypes into digital blueprints, connecting computational thinking, digital design, and engineering in a cohesive and meaningful learning arc. The potential for 3D printing is also explored, deepening students' understanding of iterative design and the relationship between physical making and digital fabrication in real-world professional contexts.

The third segment opens into a broad exploration of cross-curricular extension pathways, giving educators a clear and flexible framework for making this project their own. We model how the civic center PBL experience can reach into financial literacy through calculating construction costs and budgeting for community spaces, into geometry through scale, measurement, floor plan design, and area calculations, into digital literacy and communication through presentation tools like ChatterPix, Book Creator, stop motion animation, and Canva, and into persuasive writing and civic voice through the proposals and community pitches students create to justify their design choices. These extensions are not add-ons, they are natural, standards-aligned entry points that reflect the wide-walls design of the project and allow teachers to connect a deeply engaging, hands-on experience to the academic goals already living in their curriculum. The modularity of the framework ensures that a second-grade teacher and a seventh-grade social studies teacher can both find an entry point that is authentic, rigorous, and right-sized for their students.

The session closes with an open Q&A where participants can explore implementation questions, share ideas across grade levels and content areas, and think through how the framework applies to their specific teaching context. Participants will leave with ready-to-use activities, a replicable cross-curricular PBL framework, and practical strategies for facilitating student-centered, hands-on learning that is both deeply engaging and academically rigorous. Most importantly, they will leave with the confidence that meaningful, community-connected learning does not require a perfectly equipped makerspace, it requires a good question, a sense of civic purpose, and the belief that every student, regardless of background, ability, or experience has something.
Speakers
avatar for Dr. Marci Klein

Dr. Marci Klein

Curriculum and Product Designer, 3DuxDesign
Marci Klein, M.D. is a clinical and academic pediatrician with over 25 years of experience in early childhood development, education, and social-emotional health. She transitioned into education to create more engaging, deeper, and authentic learning experiences that support all learners... Read More →
avatar for Kimberly Smith

Kimberly Smith

CS & Design Thinking/STEAM Teacher | Instructional Innovation Coach | Systems Administrator |, Saint Rapahel School
Kim Smith is a STEAM, computer science, and design thinking educator with more than 25 years of experience helping students and teachers use technology to create, design, and solve real-world problems. Her work focuses on making computer science, engineering, and STEAM learning accessible... Read More →
Sponsors
Tuesday August 4, 2026 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Virtual

2:00pm EDT

Design-a-Zoo: From Cardboard Enclosures to Digital Blueprints
Tuesday August 4, 2026 2:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
What does the typical zoo experience look like and what could it become? In this hands-
on, modular workshop, educators experience a full cross-curricular PBL arc from the
ground up. Start with a tech-free design sprint as teams use simple machines to
engineer solutions to a variety of unique challenges in animal enclosures at a
community zoo, then layer in CAD-style design tools and coding to construct a digital
version of the final zoo design. Finally, we’ll explore a wide range of ways to extend the
project into math, literacy, science, and technology based on your teaching goals and
classroom context. You will leave with a replicable PBL framework, ready-to-use tools, a
wide range of ideas on how to any PBL experience into your classroom in a meaningful
and impactful way.

In this highly interactive, modular workshop, educators experience a rich cross-
curricular project-based learning journey anchored in the design and reimagining of a
community zoo. The session is grounded in research-informed pedagogy. Drawing on
constructivist learning theory, Universal Design for Learning (UDL), and the science of
learning, This session is structured to honor the reality that meaningful learning
happens when students are active participants in the design of their own experience.
The workshop is built around a low-floor, high-ceiling, wide-walls framework: every entry
point is accessible, every learner can contribute meaningfully from the start, and the
depth of exploration is limited only by curiosity. This design is intentional. Research
consistently shows that open-ended, maker-centered tasks that invite co-design and
student agency produce stronger engagement, deeper conceptual understanding, and
greater retention than prescriptive, single-pathway instruction.

The session is also scaffolded explicitly to build educator capacity, not just student
outcomes. Each segment of this workshop is structured so that teachers experience the
activity as a learner first, then step back to examine the instructional design choices
embedded in what they just did. This dual lens, learner and designer, is central to the
workshop's pedagogical approach and reflects findings from teacher professional
development research suggesting that educators who experience high-quality PBL
firsthand are significantly more likely to implement it with fidelity and confidence in their
own classrooms.

The first forty-five minutes are intentionally tech-free. Participants engage in a fast-
paced, team-based engineering challenge using simple materials to design and build
enclosures for five different animals at a community zoo. Grounded in life science, the
engineering design process, and 3D spatial reasoning, this challenge asks participants
to think carefully about each animal's biological needs, behavioral patterns, and habitat
requirements as they prototype their designs. The structure of the challenge is
deliberately designed to manage cognitive load, introducing constraints and information
progressively so that participants can engage deeply without becoming overwhelmed, a
principle supported by the Cognitive Load Theory and its applications in STEM
education. Because the task is open-ended by design, every participant regardless of
prior knowledge, learning profile, or skill set, can contribute authentically and co-design
a solution that reflects their unique strengths. Woven throughout the build are natural,
authentic connections to the wide diversity of careers found at a real zoo, from animal
nutritionists and enclosure engineers to educators, veterinarians, and gift shop
managers, making this a powerful entry point for career awareness and community
connection alongside science and engineering standards.

The second forty-five minutes shift into technology integration, exploring how the same
zoo design challenge can be extended using CAD-style design tools and coding to
create a digital version of the zoo. This transition from physical to digital prototyping is a
natural scaffold, students arrive at the technology with conceptual grounding already in
place, reducing extraneous cognitive load and allowing working memory to focus on
new skills rather than new concepts. Participants are introduced to accessible,
classroom-ready tools that allow students to translate their physical prototypes into
digital blueprints, bringing together computational thinking, digital design, and
engineering in a cohesive learning arc. The potential for 3D printing is also explored,
connecting the physical and digital design processes in a way that deepens student
understanding of iterative design and real-world engineering workflows.

The third segment of the workshop opens into a broad exploration of cross-curricular
extension pathways, giving educators a clear and practical framework for making this,
and any other pbl experience project their own. We model how the zoo PBL experience
can reach into financial literacy through calculating the cost to build each enclosure, into
geometry through scale, measurement, and spatial design, into digital literacy and
communication through presentation tools like ChatterPix, Book Creator, stop motion
animation, and Canva, and into storytelling and descriptive writing through the
narratives students build around their animal characters and zoo designs. These
extensions are not add-ons, they are natural, standards-aligned entry points that reflect
the wide-walls design of pbl and allow teachers to connect a deeply engaging hands-on
experience to the core academic goals already living in their curriculum. The modularity
of the framework means that a kindergarten teacher and a seventh-grade science
teacher can both find an entry point that is authentic to their context, their students, and
their goals.

The session closes with an open Q&A where participants can dig into implementation
questions, share ideas, and think through how the framework applies to their specific
teaching context. Participants will leave with ready-to-use activities, a replicable cross-
curricular PBL framework, and practical strategies for facilitating student-centered,
hands-on learning that meets every learner where they are. Most importantly, they will
leave with the confidence that deep, meaningful, cross-curricular learning does not
require a perfectly equipped makerspace — it requires a good question, a cardboard
box, and a willingness to let students build something worth being proud of.
Speakers
avatar for Dr. Marci Klein

Dr. Marci Klein

Curriculum and Product Designer, 3DuxDesign
Marci Klein, M.D. is a clinical and academic pediatrician with over 25 years of experience in early childhood development, education, and social-emotional health. She transitioned into education to create more engaging, deeper, and authentic learning experiences that support all learners... Read More →
avatar for Kimberly Smith

Kimberly Smith

CS & Design Thinking/STEAM Teacher | Instructional Innovation Coach | Systems Administrator |, Saint Rapahel School
Kim Smith is a STEAM, computer science, and design thinking educator with more than 25 years of experience helping students and teachers use technology to create, design, and solve real-world problems. Her work focuses on making computer science, engineering, and STEAM learning accessible... Read More →
Sponsors
Tuesday August 4, 2026 2:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Virtual
 
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