MURFREESBORO — Spring
break for Murfreesboro City and Rutherford County schools meant it was another
opportunity for Homer Pittard Campus School teacher David Lockett to hold Camp
STEM at MTSU for children drawn to science.
Learning and fun were the main agenda for March 30-April 2
Camp STEM, which is held at MTSU several weeks during the summer and spring and
fall breaks. For more on future camps and registration, visit http://www.campstem.us/register/.
Camp STEM is a Middle Tennessee-based option for children
with interests in science, technology, engineering and math. It is founded on
the principle that students want exciting, challenging and life-impacting STEM
experiences. The camp is committed to demonstrate how STEM works in the real
world by providing hands-on activities, including:
• Gabriel “Gabe” Peebles-Ross, 7, of Smyrna, Tennessee, and
his 20 other camp mates riding individually on the back seat of the MTSU
Experimental Vehicles Program’s lunar rover. He and camper and older sister,
Nora, 11, are homeschooled.
• Christina Hill, 7, a first-grader at McFadden School of
Excellence, and the others visiting the Discovery Center at Murfree Spring, and
learning about plants and how to sew;
• For Michael Williams, 8, of Smyrna, Tennessee, a Thurman
Francis Arts Academy student, it was “getting to go outside and play, make
things (flowers, circuits and magnet things he had to sew),” he said;
• The students hearing about recycling from Stephanie Roach,
education director with Murfreesboro-based All in One Recycling; and
• The students making a rocket out of Alka-Seltzer and
water.
Darius Williams, 16, Michael’s older brother and a Smyrna
High School junior, assisted as a teacher’s helper.
“It’s a blast — a very humbling experience,” he said. “I
always wondered how a teacher does his or her job. Some of the things kids got
to do in camp I’ve never seen before. It was very eye-opening.”
A first-grade teacher at Barfield Elementary School in
Murfreesboro, Natalie Russell is in her third year of being a Camp STEM
teacher.
Beth Moore, a K-5 arts teacher at Millersville Elementary
School in Goodlettsville, assisted with crafts April 1-2.
A California-based video crew for Click2Science filmed two
days of the teachers leading the camp and the Discovery Center field trip. It
is expected to be available on the website, www.click2sciencepd.org,
in three to six months.
Click2Science is an interactive professional development
site for trainers, coaches, site directors and frontline staff and volunteers
working in STEM programs serving children and youth when they are out of school.
For more information, call Lockett at 615-569-5904 or email David.Lockett@mtsu.edu.
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