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Posts Tagged ‘steam education’

Community STEAM Academy Hosts Laughter Lab with comedian John Branyan

In Children and Family, Education, Entertainment, Theatre, Uncategorized on March 12, 2026 at 8:41 am

XENIA — Students at Community STEAM Academy (CSA) will trade textbooks for punchlines later this month as the school hosts a unique event combining education, performance, and fundraising. “Laughter Lab” will give students hands-on experience in comedy writing and performance while raising funds to support the school’s programming.

The program consists of a one-day comedy workshop, followed by an evening showcase featuring nationally touring comedian John Branyan on Thursday, March 26, 2026. The program will culminate in a public performance called “Laughter Lab LIVE” at 6 p.m. at Bethel Community Church in Xenia.

Comedian John Branyan will lead the laughter lab at Community STEAM Academy in Xenia, then showcase the students’ work at a live, public show that evening.

“Our students learn best when they are engaged in authentic experiences, and the Laughter Lab is a great example of that philosophy in action,” said Dr. Jeremy Ervin, founder and chief administrative officer. “Through humor and storytelling, students will practice communication, creativity, and performance—skills that connect directly to our project-based learning model. It’s another example of how CSA approaches education differently by blending creativity, collaboration, and real-world application. It’s a STEAM thing!”

Branyan, known nationally for his clean and family-friendly comedy, has gained widespread recognition for his Shakespeare-style retelling of “The Three Little Pigs,” a routine that has attracted millions of online views. He has also been featured on Dry Bar Comedy and is known for humor that highlights joy and perspective even in life’s challenges.

His approach to comedy, organizers say, makes him an ideal partner for working with students and engaging audiences of all ages. The evening performance is open to the public and family-friendly. Tickets are $25 each, and proceeds from the event will support the school and its programs.

The student workshop will take place earlier in the day at the Community STEAM Academy campus, while the evening showcase will be held at Bethel Community Church, located at 1020 Lower Bellbrook Road in Xenia.

Community STEAM Academy describes its educational approach as intentionally different from traditional teacher-centered classrooms. The tuition-free independent public school currently serves students in grades 4 through 11 and emphasizes project-based learning and personalized education.

The school is Ohio’s only STEAM-designated independent public school and one of just eight independently designated STEM or STEAM schools in the state, according to the academy.

School leaders say events like Laughter Lab demonstrate how creative experiences can help students build confidence, communication skills, and self-expression while connecting their learning to real-world experiences.

For tickets or more information about the event, visit www.communitysteam.com or contact the school at info@communitysteam.com.

Square Kids, Round Desks

In Opinion, Health, Education, Children and Family on February 22, 2026 at 6:11 am

Deer In Headlines

By Gery Deer

For decades, we have told ourselves a comforting story about education. If we standardize it, measure it, test it, rank it, and repeat it often enough, we will somehow produce better students and, by extension, better adults. It sounds reasonable. It feels orderly. It also happens to be deeply flawed.

If the system worked as advertised, we would be surrounded by confident graduates who understand their strengths, know how they learn, and are excited to apply their talents to the world. Instead, many students leave school disengaged, uncertain, and convinced they are “bad at learning,” when the real problem is that learning was never designed with them in mind.

Somewhere along the way, we stopped teaching the A, B, C’s and started teaching to a test. Those tests promise clarity and accountability, but their ability to predict a student’s future success is questionable at best. Believing a standardized exam can forecast a child’s career potential is like believing the tea leaves at the bottom of your cup can tell you who will win the next Super Bowl. The charts look official. The conclusions feel authoritative. The accuracy is another matter entirely.

What these measurements consistently ignore is the single most important factor in learning: individuality. Every student arrives with a unique mix of curiosity, aptitude, temperament, and interest. Some think spatially. Some think musically. Some learn best by doing, failing, and doing again. Others need time, reflection, and quiet focus. These differences are not inconveniences. They are early indicators of where a student might thrive.

This is why education models that emphasize science, technology, engineering, arts, and math point in the right direction. When done well, they recognize that creativity and logic coexist, that problem-solving is rarely linear, and that imagination is not the enemy of rigor. Hands-on experimentation, design challenges, and interdisciplinary projects allow students to see relevance in what they are learning, not just requirements.

Still, even these programs can fall into the same trap if they are forced into rigid pacing guides and uniform assessments. When curiosity is scheduled and creativity is graded into submission, engagement disappears. Students become compliant rather than curious, efficient rather than inventive.

Traditional public school systems were not designed around individual learning styles. They were built for efficiency and uniform outcomes. That made sense in an industrial era that valued standardization. It makes far less sense in a world that rewards adaptability, specialization, and original thinking. We continue asking students to sit still, move together, and absorb information the same way, then wonder why so many tune out.

There are alternatives, and they are no longer fringe ideas. Some learning environments emphasize individualized study plans that allow students to move at their own pace, diving deeper into subjects that capture their interest. Others use project-based education, where students learn math, science, communication, and critical thinking by solving real problems and building tangible outcomes. In these settings, a student’s natural curiosity is not a distraction; it is the engine.

Non-traditional environments often replace rows of desks with collaborative spaces, mentorship with lectures, and progress portfolios with letter grades. Students learn how to manage time, pursue questions, and reflect on their work. They fail safely, revise often, and understand why their learning matters. These experiences mirror the real world far more closely than memorization ever could.

The goal is not to eliminate traditional schools or abandon standards. The goal is to expand the definition of what school can be. Public education should adapt by offering flexible pathways alongside conventional ones, giving families and students real options instead of one-size-fits-all solutions.

When we stop forcing square kids into round desks and start honoring natural gifts, education becomes preparation instead of endurance. That shift does not weaken schools. It strengthens students. And that is the outcome worth measuring.

Adapting these options requires courage, policy support, and a willingness to trust educators and students alike. It means valuing progress over uniformity and recognizing that success can look different without being lesser. When schools evolve to meet students where they are, learning stops being something done to them and becomes something they actively claim as their own. That shift benefits communities, employers, families, and democracy itself long term.