MURFREESBORO — A video
projected on screens in the crowded ballroom of MTSU’s Student Union Thursday
showed footage of the Invention Convention through the years, capturing young
inventors earnestly explaining and demonstrating their creations for the
camera.
Those
scenes were mirrored on the ballroom floor as more than 300 young Midstate
creators attending the 22nd annual Invention Convention earnestly
explained and demonstrated their innovations to play games or “make life
easier.”
There was
a “Lunch Box of the 21st Century” on the screen, an “Ant Annihilator” live on
the ballroom floor and a “Paper Airplane Launcher” both on screen and live. One
observer joked that the only way to determine whether what was on screen was
live was to look at the hairstyles.
“The best
part is that you are here
because of your inventions,” Dr. Tracey Huddleston, a professor in MTSU’s Department
of Elementary and Special Education and the creator and organizer of the
Invention Convention, told the excited fourth-, fifth- and sixth-grade
participants from public and private schools in Coffee, DeKalb,
Franklin, Robertson, Rutherford, Sumner and Wilson counties.
“This is a
very favorite time of year for a lot of people on this campus because of your
being here.”
Participants
submit written, detailed descriptions of their inventions, which can cost no
more than $15 and be no larger than 2 feet high, long and wide. The top
entrants in each category — inventions that are games or inventions that make
life easier — are invited to attend the Invention Convention at MTSU and to
demonstrate and describe working models of their creations to judges.
Dr. Kathy
Burriss, elementary education department chair, said she was proud to “be in
the midst of some very great thinkers today” and challenged the conventioneers
to support each others’ ideas and come up with even more useful, helpful
inventions.
“I went to
an Invention Convention when I was in sixth grade, and they talked about
talking phones and talking cars. How many of you have a GPS now? They talked
about 3-D TVs. What if somebody had laughed at those ideas then?” she said.
Burriss
also used a personal challenge to seek the young thinkers’ help with a
solution, explaining that visiting her family in New York is difficult because
the drive is 12 hours one way.
“Can you
invent a train that goes 200 miles an hour? That would cut our 12-hour drive to
four hours. And if it goes underground, we’d never have to worry about the
weather!” Burriss said as the children laughed and nodded in agreement.
Savannah
Seay, a fifth-grader at Lebanon’s Castle Heights Upper Elementary School,
developed her invention to “make life easier” after a trip out west last fall.
“We
visited Colorado in October and it was almost in the negatives out there!” she
recalled. “They almost had a blizzard while we were there, and I thought about
needing something to keep warm around your head and neck.”
The result
was “Scarfios,” a hood-and-scarf combo of colorful, lightweight fleece fabric
that’s not as easily lost — or as cumbersome — as traditional two-piece head-
and neckwear.
“It’s a
scarf, and then the hood looks like the letter O, so … Scarfios!” Seay
explained. “People at school have asked me a lot of times to make one for them,
but I’ve told them I have to ask my mom first, because it can take a lot of
money to make a lot of Scarfios.”
Melissa
Graves of Lebanon, whose son, Daniel, is one of Savannah’s classmates, said
she’s fascinated by the excitement and interest that the Invention Convention
evokes in the youngsters.
“He
watches ‘Shark Tank’ a lot,” Graves said, referring to the reality show that
pits inventors against each other to seek investors’ funding and support to
bring their creations to market.
“There’s
great interest among the kids in the inventions, and it’s a lot of fun for all
of them. It’s very exciting for them to get to do this.”
Huddleston
established MTSU’s Invention Convention in honor of her mother, a fifth-grade
teacher at a private school who conducted Invention Conventions for her
students. When her mother retired, Huddleston said, “I decided to do it on a
bigger scale.”
The event,
sponsored by State Farm Insurance, regularly draws parents, grandparents,
siblings, teachers, administrators and other interested folks to celebrate the
young inventors’ creativity. It also features a special guest speaker and a
focus on a unique yet everyday object, including Play-Doh,
chocolate, sunglasses, Frisbees and ChapStick. This year’s invention was the
golf ball.
Thursday’s
guest speaker was Grammy-nominated country singer/singer Jamie
O’Neal, whose No. 1 singles “There is No Arizona” and “When I Think About
Angels” showcased her own creativity and innovative ideas. O’Neal has
started her own record label and is releasing a new album later next month.
“I grew up with a dream of creating music, and I guess I was
inventing songs,” said O’Neal, who was accompanied on guitar for her two hits
by producer/engineer
Rodney Good, her husband and an admitted childhood inventor himself.
“It’s incredible
to know that you can do anything if you put your mind to it. It’s incredible
that you all have come up with so many great individual ideas out here today,”
O’Neal told the youngsters. “My motto is ‘Don’t give up, don’t give up on
yourself, and don’t let anybody give up on you.’
“Remember
that somebody has to be the next big thing, somebody has to be the next big
inventor. Remember that if you believe in your dream, you can do anything.”
You can
watch a video from the 2014 Invention Convention at MTSU at http://youtu.be/pgilpe7odyk. A list of
this year’s winners is available at http://ow.ly/ukncU.
No comments:
Post a Comment