Ķvlog

Classroom Technology

How One Teacher Built a STEM and Robotics Program on a Shoestring Budget

By Alyson Klein — September 04, 2025 4 min read
070125 ISTE KD 22 BS
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

Jennifer Watkins believes in the power of robotics to make math and science come alive for students.

But robots don’t come cheap, and Watkins doesn’t have any dedicated funding for her STEM program for 3rd through 8th graders in her rural Arkansas district.

So, with support from her administration and in partnership with her colleague, Emily Crabtree, who teaches gifted education, Watkins has figured out how to give her students hands-on engineering and robotics experiences on a very tight budget.

“I want for them to see that the science [concepts] that they’re learning about are things that they can hold in their hands,” said Watkins, who teaches in the Fouke School District, in southwestern Arkansas. “The electricity that they’re learning about is something they can produce.”

Watkins added: “I want for them to see that they have the power to create the video games they love to play. I need for them to understand that that’s coding and that somebody, some programmer somewhere, made that sound and that graphic and that response and all of those things happen and that they—my kids—could also do that.”

To give her students those learning opportunities, Watkins has had to figure out how to stretch very limited dollars by finding inexpensive—or free—tech tools that can help her students see coding, electrical circuits, and augmented reality in action.

Here are some of her favorite, relatively inexpensive tech tools and classroom approaches, which she shared with fellow Ķvlog in a session at the ISTE+ASCD national conference in San Antonio this summer:

3D printed cubes to see and feel science

One ed-tech product, , combined with a device such as a Chromebook, gives students the chance to interact with virtual simulations of the earth’s core, the solar system, the inside of a frog’s body, and other science concepts. Each cube retails for about $30 on Amazon.

Educators can sometimes get cubes for free at conferences like ISTE, produce them using a 3D printer, or get samples from the using cardstock, and then have their students put them together. The app that powers the cubes has both paid and free versions.

“Sitting in a desk learning about the Earth, [students] don’t care, but whenever they can hold it and see it firsthand, it makes it relevant to them,” Watkins said.

Making devices to teach how electrical circuits work

Makey-Makey devices, which retail for around $50, allow students to use a circuit board, clips, and a USB cable to make just about anything—a banana, a potato—into a makeshift keyboard.

Watkins uses it to teach how electrical circuitry works. At the ISTE+ASCD conference session, she had four oranges hooked up to it and demonstrated how she could create a closed circuit by putting her hand on one of the oranges and turning the others into a piano.

070125 ISTE KD 21 BS

They’re also helpful for teaching coding. Watkins will have her students use Scratch—a student-friendly coding language—to create a game. The Makey-Makeys can turn just about anything—cardboard, Play-Doh—into a gaming console. Students can then play the game they’ve created without ever touching a traditional keyboard, even though they are playing it on a computer.

That takes design thinking, Watkins said.

“I want my kids to be able to mess up,” she emphasized. “I try really hard not to tell them how to do it. I try to kind of throw it in front of them and let them play around. I tell them all the time, ‘I really hope you get it wrong the first time, because then you’ll get to improve upon it.’”

Teaching elementary and middle school kids how to code

BBC micro:bits, a small device, which retails for around $30, is also great for teaching coding, Watkins said. She will pre-program it for younger students and let them play a class-wide, digital version of rock, paper, scissors. She lets middle schoolers do the coding on their own, using tutorials on a free website.

She’s used it to let students code information about themselves as an icebreaker and made herself a micro:bit nametag to get students excited about using the device.

Building things to learn engineering skills

A building kit—which can be purchased for about $20—is great for younger students building creations with cardboard and can help introduce engineering skills without a digital component, Watkins said. There’s a saw for cutting cardboard that’s safe for even small kids, a screwdriver that can help students connect two pieces, and a perforating tool to make folding easy.

“Kindergarten can use these,” Watkins said. “It’s not going to cut them. It’s very safe.”

How to use STEM products to raise money

Watkins and her colleagues also found some creative ways to generate money.

For instance, Watkins bought a 3-D printer and filament (a type of plastic) for around $1,000.

Then she used those products to create small figurines her students and their families could buy, with prices ranging from about 50 cents to around $8. She created small panthers (the school’s mascot), dragons, and dragon eggs, and sold them at events like Field Day. The endeavor ultimately helped generate about $6,000 over two years. Watkins pumped those profits back into the district’s STEM program.

The district also funded a week-long STEM summer camp at a low cost per family. A local parent organization helped finance scholarships available for needy students. Watkins used part of the tuition money to purchase tools she could include in the camp and then repurpose for the classroom.

Most recently, the district secured a $10,000 grant from the Arkansas STEM coalition to help purchase other supplies.

A version of this article appeared in the November 01, 2025 edition of Education Week as How one teacher built a STEM and robotics program on a shoestring budget

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Teaching Webinar
Maximize Your MTSS to Drive Literacy Success
Learn how districts are strengthening MTSS to accelerate literacy growth and help every student reach grade-level reading success.
Content provided by 
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar How High Schools Can Prepare Students for College and Career
Explore how schools are reimagining high school with hands-on learning that prepares students for both college and career success.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School Climate & Safety Webinar
GoGuardian and Google: Proactive AI Safety in Schools
Learn how to safely adopt innovative AI tools while maintaining support for student well-being. 
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Classroom Technology Opinion Do Cellphone Bans Really Fix Student Engagement?
Can schools offer a more compelling alternative to social media or AI?
5 min read
The United States Capitol building as a bookcase filled with red, white, and blue policy books in a Washington DC landscape.
Luca D'Urbino for Education Week
Classroom Technology Q&A One Teacher's Take and Research on the Screen-Time Debate
New report addresses concerns about kids' screen time in school.
5 min read
A collage of photos showing a diverse range of elementary students. The first photo shows two boys in a classroom setting working on laptops. Second photo on top right shows a young girl looking at something on her cellphone, the next photo is a young boy at home on his living room floor, wearing headphones and looking at his tablet. The last photo in the bottom right corner show the back of a young girl in her home watching tv. The tv screen is blurred.
Getty
Classroom Technology How Teachers Can Talk to Students About Charlie Kirk's Assassination
Avoiding discussion of difficult topics in school is a missed learning opportunity.
6 min read
People look at a photo of Charlie Kirk, the CEO and co-founder of Turning Point USA who was shot and killed, at a vigil in his memory, Sept. 11, 2025, in Orem, Utah.
People look at a photo of Charlie Kirk, the CEO and co-founder of Turning Point USA, who was shot and killed, at a vigil in his memory, Sept. 11, 2025, in Orem, Utah. Talking in class about incidents like Kirk's assassination takes careful planning.
Lindsey Wasson/AP
Classroom Technology Most States Won't Keep Funding Pandemic-Era Tech. Is That a Problem?
School districts bought laptops and WiFi hotspots during the pandemic. Now many wonder how they will replace them.
3 min read
Mobile phone and laptop with financial concept on blackboard
iStock/Getty