Tomorrow's Innovation Comes From Today's Young Minds. Exploravision Awards 2010

Teacher Resources

Introducing ExploraVision / Motivating Your Team / ExploraVision Ambassador Program
Classroom tips: Elementary / Middle and Junior High / High School

Students with globe

Motivating Your Team

One of the crucial roles of the coach is to provide motivation at the appropriate times. Whether you're offering constructive criticism or cheering them on, you have an important role in keeping your team on track and enthusiastic. So remember:

Do:

  • Help the team determine a schedule and timeline and monitor its progress. Older students will need less support here, but younger students will need you to oversee them.
  • Coach students on being a team. If one team member is slacking, it affects everyone's morale. Remind your team to work together, and ask the team members' parents to get involved to provide additional support.
  • Give students feedback, but allow them to work independently. The teams will need you to be available to listen to their ideas and to help resolve any discouraging problems. Respect what they do so that they retain their sense of ownership of the project.
  • Make them famous. Praise the team publicly. If possible, set up a bulletin board of past and present entries or put them on your school's Web site. After all, ExploraVision requires real effort and commitment. Your students deserve recognition!
  • Provide them a little freedom from other school and homework, if possible. Most teachers provide some in-class time to work on ExploraVision entries. This work can take the place of regularly designated classwork.
  • Remind your team that every student who enters ExploraVision is a winner and will receive a recognition gift and certificate. The top winners receive savings bonds and a trip to Washington, D.C. for themselves and their parents. Regional winners receive a special gift; their schools receive a Toshiba laptop computer. Let them know that recognition for being an award winner in a science competition will go with them for the rest of their lives and may open doors in the future.
  • Encourage, encourage, encourage!

Don't:

  • Forget that ideas (and egos) are fragile. Keep your students upbeat by offering criticisms in a constructive way, tempered with praise, and never ever laugh at ideas.
  • Ignore the obvious. Winning ExploraVision entries are not always glitzy. When looking for project ideas, have your team members look carefully at the tools and technologies they use every day. Have them think about tasks they do every day — are there ways to do them better?

CALENDAR

Learn a little about science and keep track of key dates for the Exploravision Awards.

Color Key

  • Cool moments in science history
  • ExploraVision key dates
  • Current events in science

Key Dates

  1. Feb 2

    Entry Deadline
  2. Feb 26

    Regional Winners Announced
  3. Apr 30

    National Winners Announced
  4. Jun 9 – 13

    ExploraVision Awards Weekend

A Word From Our Alumni

"ExploraVision was one of the most meaningful parts of my life. ExploraVision confirmed for me that science and creativity are fun and that being smart was great!"
Eleanor
Stanford University
1995 Award Winner