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For release July 28, 2006
PUBLIC INVITED
FOR PRESENTATIONS
AREA STUDENTS TO PRESENT RESEARCH PROJECTS
AT CONCLUSION OF UTSI COMPUTATIONAL COURSE
Fifteen area high school students and three
Franklin County teachers are learning technologies, techniques,
and tools of computational science during a two-week session at
The University of Tennessee Space Institute.
The two-week workshop, taught by scientists from the Shodor
Center for Computational Science Education in Durham, N.C.
opened July 24 and will conclude Aug. 4 with a special
presentation by the participants.
“Students are developing a small computational research project
of their own choosing,” said Robert Gotwals, senior
computational science educator with Sodor. “Presentations will
be made at a research colloquium at 2 p.m. Aug. 4 in the UTSI
auditorium. The public is invited.”
Computational science is the area of scientific research that
merges science, mathematics, and computing to produce computer
models and simulations that allow users to study complex and
challenging scientific behavior.
In the workshop, students are learning how to use models, modify
existing models, and create models from scratch, Gotwals said.
Topics being studied include computational astrophysics,
meteorology, agriculture, genomics, epidemiology,
pharmacokinetics, and drug design and quantum chemistry.
Students have an opportunity to write their own computer
programs, using languages such as gnuplot, perl, and NetLogo.
Dr. Bill Hofmeister, director of the Center for Laser
Applications at UTSI, and Dr. Alan Clark, member of the Franklin
County School Board, organized the workshop.
Funding for the project was provided by the Center for Laser
Applications and the Jacobs Engineering Group.
Teachers taking part in the workshop are Ellen Jackson and Stacy
Brown from Franklin County North, and JoLynn Schultz from
Huntland High School.
The students, rising ninth and tenth-graders and the schools
they will attend are Brittany Kriz, Ryan Qualls, Justice
Wenzlick, and Chris Yockey, Coffee County Central High,
Manchester; Tommy Forest, Huntland High School; Troy Allison,
Callie Dixon, Chloe Davenport, Katherine McConnell, Benjamin
Fults, G. Chandler Hodges, Mercedes Tiedemann, Kelsey Sutton,
and Shelby Stewart, and Rebecca Hofmeister, Martin Luther King
magnet school, Nashville.

Kelsey Sutton, left, Mercedes
Tiedemann, both of Franklin County High, work on
an assignment in the computer workshop. -Photo
by Bob Gotwals

Justice Wenzlick, left, CHS,
and Chloe Davenport, FCHS, work on a computer
assignment.-Photo by Bob Gotwals

Shelby Stewart and Ben Fults,
right, both of FCHS, concentrate on an
assignment in the workshop. -Photo by Bob
Gotwals

Ryan Qualls of Manchester gets
help from JoLynn Schultz of Huntland High while
Chris Yockley also of Manchester, and Rebecca
Hofmeister of Nashville, right, work on their
projects. –Photo by Bob Gotwals

Robert Gotwals uses rope trips to
introduce a computational workshop at UTSI. Fifteen
Students are seated while three Franklin County
teachers, from left, JoLynn Schultz, Huntland High,
Ellen Jackson and Stacy Brown of Franklin County North
stand with UTSI’s Carole Thomas, who helped coordinate
the workshop. – UTSI Photo
Writer: Weldon Paye (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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