On Tuesday, July 22, 2025, at 19:00 MSK, please join the American Center in Moscow for a live conversation with Sylvia Martinez, co-author of Invent to Learn and a leading voice in the classroom maker movement. She will explore how hands-on, minds-on STEAM learning can equip students with the creative, interdisciplinary thinking needed for a rapidly changing world. Students in today’s classrooms will inherit a world where traditional academic boundaries are disappearing and new fields emerge faster than ever before. Consider what’s already happening: artificial intelligence is transforming every industry, biotechnology is creating living materials, autonomous systems are changing transportation, and virtual reality is creating new ways to experience our world. Materials science is producing self-healing concrete and mushroom-based plastics. Clothing is becoming responsive to environmental conditions, and robots are becoming collaborative partners. These aren’t science fiction concepts—they’re emerging realities requiring a new kind of thinking. Success in tomorrow’s world will demand students who can work across disciplines, think creatively about complex problems, and adapt quickly to rapidly changing fields. The Educational Challenge: This raises fundamental questions: Are we giving students tools for jobs that don’t yet exist? How do we balance foundational knowledge with emerging technologies? When scientific understanding advances so rapidly, how do we ensure the curriculum stays relevant? Integrating arts and design with traditional STEM subjects—creating STEAM education—isn’t just about adding creativity to technical subjects. It’s about recognizing that tomorrow’s breakthroughs will come from people who can imagine new possibilities, communicate complex ideas effectively, and design solutions that work for real people. Our students deserve an education that prepares them not just for the world as it is, but for the world they’ll help create. *** Sylvia Martinez is the co-author of Invent to Learn: Making, Tinkering, and Engineering the Classroom, known around the world as the “bible of the classroom maker movement.” She advocates for student-centered hands-on, minds-on learning with an emphasis on STEAM for all. She is president of CMK Futures, creating books and professional development to help educators invent the future of learning. Sylvia is principal advisor to the Columbia University FabLearn Fellows, a research group of global educators sharing hands-on, minds-on projects and curriculum. She also led educational non-profits and headed product development for consumer software, video games, and educational games at several software publishing companies. Martinez started her career as an electrical engineer designing high frequency receiver systems and software for the GPS navigational satellite system. She holds a masters in educational technology and a bachelors in electrical engineering. For more information, visit .
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