For release July 7, 2006
Elated over the success of
week-long camp for 18 area young people, a
University of Tennessee Space Institute
professor is gearing up for two other camps
aimed at young people this month.
“We are very pleased with our first ASM
Materials sm Camp,” said Dr. Bill Hofmeister,
director of UTSI’s Center for Laser
Applications. “The instructors worked hard to
create learning challenges, and the students
really responded well. We are creating new ways
to learn about science and having fun with the
process.”
Hofmeister opened various CLA labs for the
youths during the materials camp June 26-30, and
two representatives of the ASM Materials
Education Foundation -- Jeane Deatherage, ASM
administrator, foundation programs, and Scott
Giesler, ASM Society program coordinator --
participated.
“Our most ambitious program,” Hofmeister said,
“is the Computation Science Camp” sponsored by
CLA July 24-Aug. 4 for 16 students and four
teachers.
“Eighth, ninth, and tenth-grade students will
learn science through the use of very
sophisticated computer programs similar to ‘The
SIMS.’ Both students and teachers will be amazed
at their own abilities when they learn to use
some of the computational tools. This program is
on the cutting edge of science education.”
The Shodor Foundation will facilitate the
Computation Science Camp.
A “Mad Science Camp” is scheduled July 17-21
with 50 fifth and sixth-graders registered from
Franklin County and Tullahoma schools. It is
co-sponsored by CLA and UTSI, Sverdrup, Good
Shepherd, and the ARES Corp.
“This Mad Science Camp is designed to interest
young kids in math and science,” Hofmeister
said.
Deatherage pointed out that the ASM Materials
Education Foundation introduced the ASM
Materials Camp program in 2000 with one camp and
30 high school students. This camp was held at
ASM Headquarters in Materials Park, Ohio.
“Thanks to our volunteers, such as the mentors
and organizers of the UTSI camp, the program has
grown at a rapid rate. We now have more than 40
camps (for students and teachers) throughout the
United States, Canada, and camps in India and
Kuwait.
Youths attending UTSI’s Materials camp were
Lina, Lora, and Ziad Aboulmouna, Samatha Bartee,
Kelly Carter, Adam Cox, Karimeh Moukadden,
Larissa and Jesse Wenren, all from Tullahoma
High; Kaley Babilon, Blake Bruce, Eric Daniel
Francisco, Sarah Fried, and Nathan Slone, Coffee
County High; Connie Menako, Coffee County Middle
School; Veronica Scarlett, Franklin County High;
Ashley Duncan and Daniel Sherrouse, Manchester,
home school.
Dr. Trevor Moeller, research associate
professor, one of those assisting in the recent
camp, also supervised competition in launching
water rockets and other projects.
Three CLA post-doctoral research associates –
Drs. Lino Costa, Xiaoxuan (Shaun) Li, and Yelena
White -- supervised various hands-on lab
activities demonstrating learning principles of
applied math, physics, and chemistry.
For example Costa led his group in learning how
changes in atmospheric pressure affect the
melting and boiling temperatures of water – and
how they might use this information to obtain
drinking water on the planet Mars.
White and her charges worked on a water
undercooling experiment while Li used ping-pong
balls (mimicking atoms) to help students
calculate the maximum atomic packing density in
materials with so-called “close-packed”
structure. Also working with the students was
Pavlina Pike, UTSI research associate.
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Under the guidance of Dr. Lino Costa and UTSI intern Paul Sherrouse of Manchester, left, participants learn women are, from left, Kelley Carter, THS, Lora Aboulmoura, THS, Larissa Wenren, THS, Veronica Scarlett, FCHS, and Ashley Duncan, Manchester, Home School. |
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Will Vick and Natasha Gupta adjust a theodolite, a device for measuring altitude, prior to water rocket competition. With them are Dr. Trevor Moeller, and from left, Larissa Wenren, Karimeh Moukadden, Lina and Lora Aboulmouna, all from THS. |
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-- UTSI Photos |
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Writer: Weldon Payne (931)
393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu