Loading…
CSPDWeek 2026
Type: Digital Tools clear filter
arrow_back View All Dates
Tuesday, August 4
 

8:00am EDT

Beyond the Prompt: Hands-On AI Storytelling for the K–5 Classroom
Tuesday August 4, 2026 8:00am - 11:00am EDT
What if students didn’t just use AI—but directed it? In this hands-on session, educators will learn how to guide K–5 students in creating 3D-style characters and stories using simple, accessible AI tools. This approach blends creative writing, storytelling, and computer science in a way that’s engaging, developmentally appropriate, and aligned to NJSLS-CS standards. Participants will leave with a ready-to-use lesson they can implement right away.

AI is quickly becoming part of everyday life, and elementary students need early, meaningful experiences that help them understand how it works and how to use it responsibly. This session introduces a classroom-tested, “creative first” approach to AI literacy that makes complex ideas accessible for young learners.

Using a simple, structured workflow, participants will learn how students can use AI tools (text, image, and voice) to create 3D-style characters and short story scenes—connecting naturally to skills in writing, design, and computational thinking.

Throughout the session, we will focus on practical strategies teachers can bring directly into their classrooms, including:
Prompting as a process
Teaching students that prompts are clear, step-by-step instructions—helping build early understanding of algorithms and logical thinking

Storytelling through design
Supporting students in developing characters, settings, and narratives while using AI as a creative tool—not a replacement for thinking

Human-centered AI use
Helping students understand their role as the creator, with an emphasis on decision-making, ownership, and responsible use

This is a highly interactive session where participants will experience the lesson as learners, then reflect as educators. Time will be built in for discussion, adaptation across grade levels, and planning for classroom use.

Participants will leave with:
A ready-to-use lesson plan
A clear, repeatable workflow
Strategies for integrating AI into existing curriculum without needing advanced tech skills or materials"
Speakers
AS

Ashley Sullivan

K-6 Educator, KidzPrep
Ashley Sullivan is a New Jersey-based educator, STEM specialist, and founder of KidzPrep, where she designs innovative, hands-on learning experiences that bring technology to life for young learners. With over 15 years of experience in education, she specializes in making complex... Read More →
Sponsors
Tuesday August 4, 2026 8:00am - 11:00am EDT
Virtual

8:00am EDT

Coding Stories & Games with AI Lesson Design (Elementari) Session 1
Tuesday August 4, 2026 8:00am - 11:00am EDT
This virtual two-session professional development helps K–12 educators integrate computer science (CS) into their existing curriculum through interactive storytelling and AI-supported lesson design. Teachers explore how students can create and share projects such as choose-your-own-adventure stories, escape room games, and app-style experiences that combine writing, visuals, audio, and interactivity to deepen content learning across subjects.

Educators begin by experiencing a student-facing project and then use the Elementari AI lesson generator to create a standards-aligned lesson tailored to their grade level, topic, and instructional time. Each lesson includes a structured student writing organizer, built-in scaffolds (such as sentence starters and word banks), and assessment tools to support multilingual learners and diverse student needs. In the second session, teachers test and refine their lessons through peer feedback. By the end they will leave with a tested, classroom-ready lesson and a free upgrade to use Elementari will all their students.

This virtual 2-day (6-hour) professional development helps K–12 educators integrate computer science (CS) and artificial intelligence (AI) into their existing curriculum through interactive, cross-curricular lesson design. Using Elementari, teachers design lessons where students create and publish projects that connect coding with writing, storytelling, and content learning. The focus is on making CS integration practical, accessible, and aligned to diverse student needs, including multilingual learners.
By the end of the PD, educators will create a tested, classroom-ready Elementari lesson. Each lesson includes a standards-aligned plan, a student writing organizer with built-in scaffolds (such as sentence starters and word banks), assessment tools, and a clear strategy for classroom implementation.

Session 1: Experience Learning and Generate a Classroom Lesson
Educators begin by working through a guided Elementari activity from a student perspective. This experience demonstrates how coding supports writing and storytelling while introducing key CS concepts such as sequencing, events, functions, interactivity, and debugging.
Participants then explore how students create interactive projects such as choose-your-own-adventure stories, escape room games, and app-style experiences. These projects combine writing and coding with built-in supports such as structured organizers, scaffolded prompts, illustration libraries, and options for recorded voiceovers, music, sound effects, and multiple story paths. They will also review a range of student published projects from multilingual learners to students with diverse needs to see how all students can succeed and express themselves through writing and coding.
In the second half of the session, educators transition from learner to designer. Using the Elementari AI lesson generator, they input their grade level, topic, and instructional time. The tool generates a complete lesson, including writing supports, organizers, assessment materials, and standards alignment.

Session 2: Test, Refine, and Plan for Implementation
Educators review and analyze their AI-generated lessons, focusing on clarity, alignment, and accessibility. They evaluate how effectively the lesson supports student writing, content learning, and differentiation, and identify areas for refinement.
Participants also examine how the AI lesson generator works, including prompting strategies, how structured lesson components are generated, and how to evaluate outputs for accuracy, bias, and alignment to instructional goals.
Through peer feedback and collaborative testing, educators revise their lessons and strengthen scaffolds, differentiation, and student supports. They also explore classroom strategies such as peer feedback routines, group roles, and collaborative structures.
The session concludes with implementation planning. Educators determine where the lesson fits within their curriculum, how it will be delivered, and how it will support their students. Teachers leave with a tested, classroom-ready lesson and a clear plan for implementation.
Speakers
avatar for Nicole Li

Nicole Li

Co-founder, Elementari
Nicole Li is the co-founder of Elementari, an MIT Alum, and a STEAM Educator
Elementari is an AI-creative engine with self-guided lessons where K–12 students learn coding by creating stories, games, and apps across the curriculum. The drag-and-drop interface makes it as easy as building a presentation, and students can code animations and interactions to... Read More →
Sponsors
Tuesday August 4, 2026 8:00am - 11:00am EDT
Virtual

11:00am EDT

Working Smarter Not Harder with Apple Intelligence
Tuesday August 4, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
A hands-on look at how teachers can use Apple Intelligence to reclaim hours lost to planning, grading, and email each week.

Ever finish a school day and wonder where it went? Between planning, grading, and emails home, teachers are stretched thin. In this session, I'll share how I use Apple Intelligence Writing Tools, Siri, and Notes to claw back time during the week. Bring your iPad and follow along.
Speakers
RP

Robert Porche

Informational Literacy Specialists, Thomas Jefferson Intermediate School
Rob Porche is an Information Literacy Specialist and Apple Distinguished Educator at Thomas Jefferson Intermediate School in Trenton, NJ, championing student-centered learning.
Tuesday August 4, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Virtual

1:00pm EDT

Intro to JuiceMind’s AP Cybersecurity Course
Tuesday August 4, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
An overview of JuiceMind's AP Cybersecurity, including course structure and classroom implementation.

The session introduces JuiceMind's AP Cybersecurity curriculum aligned with College Board standards and designed to help teachers teach real-world security concepts in an engaging way. As cybersecurity continues to grow in importance within computer science education, teachers need resources that are both structured and flexible enough to fit different student needs.

The session will include an overview of how the curriculum is structured, including editable lessons, built-in assessments, and exercises. We’ll also walkthrough how teachers can easily track student progress, give feedback, manage student work without jumping between multiple tools and prevent cheating to maintain classroom integrity. The goal of the session is for teachers to have a clear sense of how the curriculum can support both effective teaching and strong student engagement in AP Cybersecurity.
Speakers
RD

Ryan Dehmoubed

Co-founder, JuiceMind Inc.
Ryan Dehmoubed is the co-founder of JuiceMind (www.juicemind.com), a comprehensive, web-based coding platform that provides computer science curricula for K-12 education. He was recognized on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list in 2025 for his work in education.
Sponsors
Tuesday August 4, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Virtual

1:00pm EDT

A Brief Introduction to Java
Tuesday August 4, 2026 1:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
This course will introduce learners who have little to no text-based programming knowledge to java syntax and concepts via a hands-on workshop. Topics include the history of java, the structure of a java program, basic syntax, primitive data types, mathematical operators. Conditional expressions and loops may be introduced as time permits. The goal is to create confident novice java programmers!
Speakers
avatar for Lora Santucci

Lora Santucci

Teacher of Computer Science & Mathematics, Morris Hills High School
Lora Santucci teaches math and computer science at Morris Hills High School in Rockaway, NJ where she resides with her husband and children. She studied mathematics, computer science, and music at Rutgers University and began teaching in 1998. Over the years she has presented at NCTM... Read More →
Tuesday August 4, 2026 1:00pm - 4:00pm 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
 
  • Filter By Date
  • Filter By Venue
  • Filter By Type
  • Company
  • Timezone


Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.
Filtered by Date -