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Episode: 2641
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Title: HPR2641: Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Rachel from the MicroBit Foundation
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2641/hpr2641.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:56:43
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---
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This in HP are episode 2641 entitled Liverpool Makefast 2018,
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Interview with Rachel from the microgrid foundation and is part of the series,
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Interview. It is hosted by Tony Hume, aka Tony H1212 and is about nine minutes long
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and carrying a clean flag. The summary is this is a short interview recorded at this
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year's Liverpool Makefast with Rachel from microgrid.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org
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forward slash donate.
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Hello, this is Tony Hume, thanks for having a public radio and I'm still at Liverpool
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Makefast and I've got with me. Rachel Lancaster and what are you doing here, Rachel?
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I've come here today to a support Josh, who's of Edgebox and also I'm teaming up with
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Les Pounder and we're doing a bit of a microbit hands-on activity.
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Yeah, just getting kids engaged. You actually work for the microgrid foundation?
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I do, that's right, yeah, I joined them about nine months ago now.
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My official title is Head of Product and Channel so I spend a lot of time out in the community,
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events like this, talking to educators, learning what it is that we need to do as a foundation
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to support them in their teaching. Could you tell us a little bit for the listeners who may
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have never heard of the microbit a little bit about what it is?
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Yeah, of course, so the microbit board was kind of born, it was made up by a team at BBC Learning.
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They recognised that there was a huge shortage of engineers and BBC, along with 29 founding
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partners, created the board and they distributed the microbit to every year seven student in the UK.
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It was just short of a million pieces. They thought that this was a fantastic way of getting kids
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interested in programming and to unleash their own creativity. So the idea was we would give the
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microbit to the schools and the schools would then distribute them to the students and the students
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would take them home and have their own learning and creativity at home and they could perhaps bring
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it back into the school to inspire other students. So the foundation was born after that, so the
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foundation is about 18 months old now and the aim of the foundation now is to kind of spread
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spread the microbit further and as far as we can by with particular focus on girls and disadvantaged
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groups. So our main aim, our number one goal is just to ensure that kids can have their best
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digital futures. You said the original distribution of over a million micro bits to schools,
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did it actually work in the way it was envisaged? I don't think it worked 100% in the way but it was
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certainly a huge success. I think having spoken to hundreds of teachers in my nine months at the
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foundation I've learnt that the teachers originally didn't have maybe the support that they needed
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to be able to take the micro bits out of the box and have the confidence to deliver a session
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on microbit in the classroom. So we've worked really hard over the last year certainly
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on producing more sound resources, being more involved in the community and helping support
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teachers. So that's where things like Joshy's project with the edu blocks comes in because it
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can link into the microbit. Yeah so all these editors are a fantastic help because
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edu blocks especially because that's a lovely transition tool so a lot of kids in primary school
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will be learning how to scratch from sort of yeah for onwards so kids are going into high school
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with a bit of basic knowledge on scratch and making new edu blocks with the microbit
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and make the transition from the block based programming into a text based program which is like
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Python so it's a perfect tool to sort of help guide the students through that without it being
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too intimidating. Could you tell us a little bit about your own background? Yeah it's quite boring
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really. I worked for an electronics company for 17 years before joining the microbit foundation.
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That's been my only job so I didn't go to college, I didn't go to university. I just decided
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that I really wanted to do work and earn money when I left school so I kind of popped into the shop
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at CPC and said to Dawn who was the manager at the time of the trade counter I said hey give
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us a job and she asked me to come back for an interview and I kind of was there ever since
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and I sort of worked through various different departments within CPC and eventually I became the
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product manager for education and maker so I was in charge of sourcing new products and sort of
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negotiating on contracts and things like that and then that wasn't enough so I then took on the
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business development role as well which meant that I went into schools and kind of sold my
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products into schools to say you know you need this in your computer science lessons you need
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these tools in order to help you deliver that part of the curriculum so I was in delivering
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sort of workshops for the teachers and the sales staff that would speak to the teachers as well
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how to use a Raspberry Pi and Microbit and codebook and so yeah I already had a good relationship
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with the Microbit Foundation and I was looking after the UK distribution for Premier Farnell
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who actually manufactured and distributed the board anyway so I kind of a new of the foundation
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and I thought the Microbit for me was a kind of whiteboard moment I kind of thought yeah I can
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really see kids going for this product and it was really easy to use I've not got any coding
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background or engineering background but I thought actually if I can do it and the kids are bound
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to be able to do it so yeah I got hooked at that point and I started attending events like
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the one that we're at today and going on to Raspberry Jam and getting more involved in the
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community and when I was off the job at the Microbit Foundation I jumped at that opportunity to
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have even more involvement in this myself and we're just getting a public service announcement
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personally you can get around better also in 12 to 1 we've got an e-textiles workshop
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first floor and around that block that's what we're going to have a glass flowing out to the front
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so I see all sorts of awards starting out and coding conference e-textiles until about four
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and all the first floor and glass flowing is that to do? It's kind of amazing, absolutely
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I'll probably edit that out I know I've seen some of your own personal stuff around fabrics
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in electronics do you want to talk a little bit about that? Yeah I mean like I said previously I've
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not got much of a technical background and so for me using electronics with fabrics or craft
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materials is such a simple but fun and engaging activity so you know just learning how to make
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an LED light up using a coin cell battery the kids in primary school that's amazing and so why not
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add a craft project around that? Why not add a bit of conductive thread and get kids learning
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how to sew something and then take it a step further and you know have a have a center on
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that as well it's so simple you start off with something really straightforward and you can easily
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add to it yeah so the learning skill of electronics but they're also learning skills around
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repairing clothes and things at the same time yeah absolutely you know I don't think I mean when
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my mum was young she this taught how to sew you know I wasn't necessarily taught those same
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skills so kind of it's almost like bringing those skills back and then adding more to it so all
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these sort of after school workshop activities that I do at my children's school always involves
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LED conductive thread and a bit of felt we'll make it we'll make it animal and we'll add a switch
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if we want to we'll add the light sensor or a motor you know if you feel a little bit more energetic
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is there any links that we can go to where we could find these on the web? Oh none for my personal
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stuff of course there's lots of ideas and tutorials and resources on the my commit website and that
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involves a lot of craft activities as you know as well as sort of traditional electronics so
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yeah just advice you just go on some my commit website the ideas page it's fantastic
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so what what's the web address for that? So that's just mycrabbit.org and then it's forward slash ideas
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thank you very much
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