iExploreScience: STEM in Elem

Nicole VanTassel

iExploreScience: STEM in Elem is for upper elementary teachers — especially grades 3–5 —who want to make elementary science and math more engaging, without adding more prep or overwhelm to their day. If you’re looking for practical ways to bring STEM and hands-on learning into your classroom while still meeting standards like NGSS, this podcast is for you. Each week, you’ll get (ideally) short, (always!) actionable episodes (about 15–30 minutes) filled with classroom-tested ideas you can actually use. From simple STEM challenges and low-prep science activities to math routines, lab management, and neurodivergent-friendly strategies, everything is designed to help you keep students thinking, moving, and engaged—especially during the most challenging times of the year. You’ll also hear honest reflections from real classroom experiences, with a focus on what works (and what doesn’t) in my 5th grade science and math classroom — no perfection required. I’m Nicole, and I share practical, hands-on science and math ideas designed specifically for upper elementary teachers who want engaging, rigorous lessons without the overwhelm.

  1. 1 day ago

    14 Vertical Whiteboards In Science & Math

    Vertical whiteboards are all the buzz in math circles -- and whether or not you subscribe to the whole BTC framework, the boards themselves? Golden!! The good news is, it works just as well in science as it does in math. In this episode, Nicole breaks down exactly how she uses vertical whiteboards in both her math and science classroom: what they are, why they work, and the specific ways she uses them for everything from complex word problems to building food webs to analyzing data in real time. In This Episode: why vertical whiteboards let you see everything — who's stuck, who's off task, who's making the same mistake — all at once, without hoveringhow the erasability of a whiteboard lowers the stakes and gets reluctant students actually participatingNicole's step-by-step math problem solving sequence at the whiteboard — and how it builds habits that transfer to independent workscience applications for vertical whiteboardshow to start without spending a ton of money and without overhauling your whole classroomIf you've heard of Building Thinking Classrooms by Peter Liljedahl, this connects to that — but we're not doing a book review here. This is Nicole's unique strategy, evolved over four years of figuring out what actually works for her upper elementary math and science students! 📝 Want to go deeper? Building Thinking Classrooms by Peter Liljedahl is worth your time even if you're primarily a science teacher. 📬 Grab the Vertical Whiteboards Expectations Poster to support positive behaviors at the boards in this week's Substack post:  https://iexplorescience.substack.com/ 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    27 min
  2. 22 Jun

    13 How To Get Students Asking The Questions (Instead Of Just Answering Yours)

    What if the most powerful thing you could do for student engagement wasn't a flashy lab or a big project — but just getting kids to ask the questions instead of you? Questioning is one of the most underused tools in upper elementary science. Not teacher questions — student questions. In this episode Nicole walks through the exact practice she uses to get students generating real, relevant science questions, why observations always come first, and the simple move that takes the whole experience to the next level. In This Episode: Why student curiosity starts to wane by upper elementary — and what we can do about itThe phenomenon-first sequence: observations before questions, volume before judgmentHow to help students identify which questions are relevant without shutting down their curiosityThe abbreviated warm-up version you can use every single day in five minutesThe "call out" move: how to use student-generated questions to launch your lessons and why it builds buy-in fast Links Mentioned: 📬 iExploreScience Substack — free weekly newsletter, resources, and the phenomenon prompt list for this episode: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/ 📝 What Do You Look For When Selecting Science Phenomena? 📝 Four Ways To Actively Engage Students With Anchor Phenomena 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    24 min
  3. 8 Jun

    11 The Engineering Cycle: What It Actually Looks Like in a Real Classroom

    You've seen the circle graphic. Define, design, build, test, improve. But if you're treating it as a linear checklist, you're missing what actually makes engineering work — and why iteration keeps getting cut. Real engineering isn't a straight line, and it doesn't (always) require a glue gun. In this episode Nicole breaks down the three things most teachers misunderstand about the engineering design cycle, makes an honest confession about her own pollinator challenge, and gives you a clear picture of where you are as a teacher-engineer — and one thing you can do differently next year. IN THIS EPISODE: Why the engineering design cycle is non-linear from the very first step — and what we lose when we treat it like a checklistEngineering doesn't have to mean building a physical thing — and why that misconception limits what we do with studentsThe most commonly skipped part of authentic engineeringWhy iteration is where the real learning happens — and two practical ways to protect time for it even when your schedule fights youBite-sized ways to practice engineering thinking without a full buildA honest self-assessment: where are you as a teacher-engineer, and what's one thing worth changing next year?LINKS MENTIONED: 📬 iExploreScience Substack — free weekly newsletter and resources for grades 3–5 teachers: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/ 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    23 min
  4. 25 May

    09 3 Science Topics That Make Kids Forget It's June

    The last few weeks of school are when even your most engaged students start mentally checking out. In this episode Nicole shares three science topics that consistently pull kids back in — space scale, invasive species, and extreme weather — with specific entry points, project ideas, and the framing that makes each one actually land. Plus a quick-start guide for each topic in this week's Substack. ----- When the year is winding down and kids are coasting, you need topics that do the heavy lifting for you. In this episode Nicole walks through three science topics she keeps coming back to because they work — even in June. Space scale that makes kids go completely quiet and then explode with questions. Invasive species framed as a villain story that pulls in research, writing, and Canva. And extreme weather and natural disasters that connect science to things kids are already seeing in the news. For each topic: the entry point that hooks them, what to do from there, and how far you can take it. IN THIS EPISODE: he YouTube video that makes every class go silent within two minutes — and the space rabbit hole that followshow to frame invasive species as a villain story — and why the wanted poster format works so well for upper elementarytracking real weather events live and why kids develop a personal investment when they watch something unfold in real timeCanva as a technology integration that doesn't feel forced Kiddle — a kid-safe search engine Nicole just discovered and is now recommendingthe invasive species project (middle grades version) available in the TpT storea quick-start guide for all three topics with an entry point activity for each, free in this week's Substack LINKS MENTIONED: 🎥 KLT Universe Size Comparison — Kids Learning Tube on YouTube: search "KLT universe size comparison" 🔍 Kiddle — kid-safe search engine: https://www.kiddle.co 🛒 Invasive Species Project (middle grades) — iExploreScience TpT store 📬 Quick-Start Topic Guide — entry point activity for each of the three topics covered, free for iExploreScience Substack subscribers: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/ 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    15 min
  5. 18 May

    08 How To Make Every Kid Feel Seen Before Summer

    The last week of school doesn't have to be survival mode. In this episode Nicole shares the end-of-year traditions she keeps coming back to — student word clouds, summer science kits, class awards that actually fit each kid, and two letter-writing activities that connect students across time. These are low-cost, low-prep, and genuinely meaningful. Stay for the freebie: a 22-idea checklist across four categories to help you make the most of your final days. ----- The last week of school is its own thing — academically winding down but emotionally still very much alive. In this episode Nicole walks through her favorite end-of-year traditions: the ones that are personal, low-cost, and actually land with kids. From a word cloud that shows students how their classmates see them, to class awards where every single kid gets recognized for something true to them, to a letter-writing tradition that connects fifth graders to their future senior-year selves — these are the ideas worth keeping in your back pocket year after year. IN THIS EPISODE: the student word cloud — how to collect words from every classmate, add your own, and give kids a snapshot of who they are in fifth grade through the eyes of the people around thema summer science kit that travels home with themwhy class awards matter more than school awards for a lot of kids — and how to make sure every student gets recognized for something specific and true to themthe Challenge 24 tournament and why even the kids who don't make the finals get investedtwo letter-writing activities: letters to next year's students and letters to their future senior selves — and the school tradition that delivers them at graduationa 22-idea end-of-year checklist across four categories, free for Substack subscribers 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    15 min
  6. 11 May

    07 5 STEM Challenges Using Only Paper, Tape, and Cardboard

    Tallest towers. Egg drops. Marble runs. These five challenges use nothing but paper, tape, and cardboard — and they're some of the most engaging engineering activities you can run in the final weeks of school. Listen in to get all five challenges with their criteria and constraints, understand why iteration is the part you can't skip, and hear why building kids' experiences with engineering — even outside your standards — is never wasted time. No budget. No specialty supplies. No excuses. In this episode Nicole walks through five paper, tape, and cardboard STEM challenges you can run in the next few weeks, explains what makes each one real engineering (not just a fun build), and makes the case for why end-of-year activities that fall outside your curriculum standards still matter more than you might think. IN THIS EPISODE: All five challenges — Tallest Tower, The Bridge, Marble Run, Egg Drop, and Windproof Wall — with criteria, constraints, and what kids are actually figuring out in each oneWhy criteria and constraints are what separate a real engineering challenge from just building somethingThe one challenge you should protect extra time for — and why the iteration loop is where the real learning happensWhy the Egg Drop is actually a great entry point for talking about engineering in the real world (think: NASA, limited resources, and what it means when you can't just test again)Why activities outside your standards still build something valuable — and how background knowledge shows up in unexpected places 📬 Stay Connected 📰 Substack: https://iexplorescience.substack.com/🛍️ TpT Store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/iexplorescience📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iexplorescience/👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iexplorescience/💻 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolevantassel/

    21 min

About

iExploreScience: STEM in Elem is for upper elementary teachers — especially grades 3–5 —who want to make elementary science and math more engaging, without adding more prep or overwhelm to their day. If you’re looking for practical ways to bring STEM and hands-on learning into your classroom while still meeting standards like NGSS, this podcast is for you. Each week, you’ll get (ideally) short, (always!) actionable episodes (about 15–30 minutes) filled with classroom-tested ideas you can actually use. From simple STEM challenges and low-prep science activities to math routines, lab management, and neurodivergent-friendly strategies, everything is designed to help you keep students thinking, moving, and engaged—especially during the most challenging times of the year. You’ll also hear honest reflections from real classroom experiences, with a focus on what works (and what doesn’t) in my 5th grade science and math classroom — no perfection required. I’m Nicole, and I share practical, hands-on science and math ideas designed specifically for upper elementary teachers who want engaging, rigorous lessons without the overwhelm.

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