Post by Natoshia Anderson, Ed. D.

STEM Program and Partnership Strategist | Practitioner-Consultant | 5M+ Partnerships | Helping Schools & Nonprofits Build Scalable, Funded STEM Programs

One of the biggest myths in education is that more technology automatically creates better learning. It doesn’t. I’ve walked into classrooms with state-of-the-art equipment collecting dust because teachers never received meaningful professional development. I’ve also seen classrooms with limited resources create incredible STEM experiences because educators understood how to engage students through inquiry, problem solving, and real-world connections. Technology is a tool. Teachers are the strategy. If we want students to become innovators, engineers, entrepreneurs, and critical thinkers, we have to invest in the people leading the learning. That means ongoing professional development, leadership support, and systems that allow great teaching to thrive. The best STEM programs don’t start with buying more. They start with building educator capacity. Where do you think schools should invest first, people or technology? #STEMEducation #TeacherLeadership #ProfessionalDevelopment #EducationLeadership #FutureOfLearning #STEM #EdLeadership

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