What’s not so easy to see, though, is all the hard work that went into getting it to where it is now.
The process began two summers ago, when, Director of Technology Justin Curtis explains, the technology faculty in the Upper School began to think about how to make better use one of the two Upper School computer labs, which housed large Apple desktops set up in traditional rows. “What we found was that because of our 1-to-1 program the desktop computers were getting in the way,” Curtis says. “Our students were using their laptops to do the work and the desktops were blocking collaboration and group work.” So, the department decided to redesign the space, moving the computers to the exterior walls and creating a flexible, fun space at the center of the room that featured whiteboard tables and desks. There was also a small tool wall with an area for soldering and 3D printing.
The redesign was a hit. “Instantly, students started gravitating more and more to that environment,” Curtis says. “It was a comfortable environment, it was fun, and we made sure that students realized that it was a place to get great work done but to enjoy themselves too.”
However, with that popularity came a problem: it was hard for the space to accommodate the number of students who wanted to use it, especially when it was also serving as a regularly-scheduled classroom. Plus, it simply wasn’t big enough to house the kinds of equipment that Curtis had in mind. So during the summer of 2015, a major building redesign took place, with the faculty room moving to the first floor of Howell and the new Innovation Lab taking up residence in the second-floor space. Now, the Lab is a flexible, unscheduled space that is always staffed by a member of the technology team. Upper School students can come and go as they please, and once they have turned in the required waiver and gone through safety training, they can use the different pieces of equipment.
For Curtis, one of the best parts of the new space has been watching students exercise their creativity and stretch themselves. “We’re finding that our students are coming up with some really creative solutions to real problems that they’ve identified,” he says. “They’re learning to fail forward, because they are always hitting obstacles before they get something right, whether they’re programming or building something or what have you. What they’re learning is to take something that doesn’t work and instead of considering that a failure, to build upon that piece. They are developing this ingenuity they didn’t have before.”
And while the Innovation Lab is currently just for Upper School use, Upper School students are not the only ones benefitting from Bryn Mawr’s expanded commitment to technology and innovation. In the Lower School, Technology Integrator Alisha Caruso oversees the new Creation Station, which features age-appropriate technology such as 3D printers, a “take it apart” station, a Tinker Wall, and a giant Lego wall. “I think the most important thing they are learning here is risk-taking – that there’s no right or wrong answer,” says Caruso. “If your Gingerbread Man trap fails, that’s OK, you can make it again, you can improve it – and the same thing with any of their projects. [The outcome is] not always what they thought it was going to be, and that’s just fine.”