Willeka Stone

Georgia Teachers Initiative Grant Winner

Using the Teacher Grant for Innovation, Ms. Stone will give her students the opportunity to act as engineers, tasking them with designing water filtration systems and encouraging them to think critically as they tackle the challenge of purifying “dirty water.” The engineering design process—ranging from research and brainstorming to testing, redesigning, and documenting—cultivates a growth mindset and emphasizes iterative learning. By engaging with a range of activities, including a guest engineer presentation and group collaboration, students gain an understanding of how innovative solutions are created and refined. Additionally, the project highlights the real-world issue of water quality, demonstrating how innovation can address critical global challenges, such as the need for clean water on Earth and in space. 

Innovation in my classroom is demonstrated daily, and plays a key role in fostering creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills. Through hands-on projects like the water filtration challenge, students are encouraged to think outside the box, experiment with new ideas, and learn from failure. By engaging in the engineering design process, students develop a mindset that values continuous improvement and creative solutions to real-world problems. Innovation empowers students to engage in challenges with a variety of challenges, preparing them to adapt and succeed in an ever-changing world, both in STEM fields and beyond.

- Willeka Stone

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2,026 students commit to teaching profession at second annual Teach in the Peach Statewide Educator Signing Day