For release: Dec. 4, 2012
News and Media Relations contact: Randy Weiler, 615-898-5616 or Randy.Weiler@mtsu.edu
MT Athletics contact:
Josh Calbaugh, 615-494-7825 or Josh.Calbaugh@mtsu.edu
Murfreesboro City Schools contact: Lisa
Trail, 615-893-2313 or Lisa.Trail@cityschools.net
MURFREESBORO — Above the noise of thousands of children talking and
doing what youngsters do when they attend a college basketball game (some for
the first time), Cameron Burke said he was having “100 percent fun.”
Burke, 9, a fourth-grade
student at John Pittard Elementary School in Murfreesboro, was having a grand
time inside 11,000-plus-seat Murphy Center Tuesday morning. He said it was his
first time to be in the arena.
He said he was having “lots
of fun watching the basketball” (activity) on Education Day, a partnership
between Murfreesboro City Schools and MT Athletics, when the MTSU Lady Raiders
would meet in-state rival Austin Peay in a women’s basketball game and the
students attended on a field trip.
MTSU, now 5-3 on the season,
beat the Lady Governors 70-56 before 10,107 people, the second-largest crowd in
the program’s history.
Minutes earlier, Burke, his
fellow students and their teachers in grades K-6 and administrators from 10
city schools witnessed STEM in action in two science experiments, “Balloon
Kabob” and “Alka-Seltzer Bottle Rockets.”
“It was cool. I wish I could
do that,” Burke said after watching both experiments, the first where a wooden
stick was pushed completely through the balloon without it bursting. In the
second experiment, Alka-Seltzer tablets and water together in a small film
canister create a gas. With the lid on tight and canister turned upside down,
the combustion blows the canister into the air.
All of the children were
amazed by the STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) activity
led by Dr. Judith Iriarte-Gross, chemistry professor and director of the MTSU
WISTEM Center.
In addition to College of Basic
and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer and chemistry department chair Dr. Greg
Van Patten, Iriarte-Gross was assisted by Georgia native and senior
anthropology major Kellum Everett and freshmen Sierra Shipley (criminal justice
major/chemistry minor) of Palmer, Tenn., and Caleb Hough (biology major) of
Murfreesboro.
Students from two sixth-grade
classes at Siegel Elementary and students from Scales Elementary also
participated in the on-the-court exercises.
Later, Murfreesboro City
Schools’ personnel performed math and letter-writing drills for the anticipated
7,500 students in attendance.
Also, members of the Scales
girls’ basketball team and their coaches were part of the high-five tunnel for
the Lady Raiders. Other fun activities included during the game included
chicken toss, mummy game, musical chairs and dizzy bat race.
Other schools attending
included Black Fox, Bradley and Cason Lane academies, Hobgood,
Mitchell-Neilson, Northfield and the Discovery School at Reeves-Rogers.
Josh Calbaugh, MT Athletics
director of marketing, said he hopes this will be the first of many Education
Days in bringing school children to campus.
###
Photo captions
Balloon Kabob success.jpg
Murfreesboro City
Schools’ coordinators Caresa Brooks, front left, and Kristina Maddux share in
the joy of successful “Balloon Kabobs,” poking the wooden stick through the
balloon without it bursting during Education Day Dec. 4 in Murphy Center.
(Photo by Andy Heidt/MTSU Creative and Visual Services)
Balloon Kabob.jpg
MTSU freshmen Sierra
Shipley and Caleb Hough perform the “Balloon Kabob” science experiment, poking
a stick all the way through a balloon without it bursting, in front of several
thousand Murfreesboro City Schools students Dec. 4 during the Education Day
basketball game between the Lady Raiders and Austin Peay. (Photo by Andy
Heidt/MTSU Creative and Visual Services)
2nd largest
crowd.jpg
Nearly 7,500
Murfreesboro City Schools students enjoy a field trip to MTSU’s Murphy Center
for the Lady Raiders’ Dec. 4 Education Day game against Austin Peay. Attendance
was 10,107, the second largest crowd in the program’s history. (Photo by Andy
Heidt/MTSU Creative and Visual Services)
MTSU is
committed to developing a community devoted to learning, growth and service. We
hold these values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I
am True Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue. For MTSU news any time,
visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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