Game, experiments bring ‘100 percent fun’ to city schools students

Murfreesboro City Schools€™ coordinators Caresa Brooks, front left, and Kristina Maddux celebrate successful “€œBalloon Kabobs” during Education Day Dec. 4 in Murphy Center. (MTSU photos by Andy Heidt)

Above the noise of thousands of children talking and doing what youngsters do at a college basketball game, 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 Murphy Center Tuesday morning.

A first-time visitor to the 11,000-plus-seat facility, Burke said he was having “lots of fun watching the basketball” on Education Day, a partnership between the Murfreesboro City Schools and MT Athletics, where the MTSU Lady Raiders met in-state rival Austin Peay in a basketball game and the students attended on a field trip.

Minutes earlier, Burke, his fellow students and their teachers in grades K-6 and administrators from 10 city schools witnessed science, technology, engineering and mathematics 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 pushed a wooden stick completely through a balloon without bursting it, and the second brought Alka-Seltzer tablets and water together in a small film canister to 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 activity led by Dr. Judith Iriarte-Gross, an MTSU chemistry professor and director of the MTSU WISTEM Center.

College of Basic and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer and chemistry department chair Dr. Greg Van Patten assisted Iriarte-Gross with the experiments, along with senior anthropology major Kellum Everett and freshmen Sierra Shipley, a criminal justice major, and biology major Caleb Hough.

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 estimated 7,500 students in attendance.

Members of the Scales girls’ basketball team and their coaches also were part of the high-five tunnel for the Lady Raiders as the university team ran onto the floor of Hale Arena. Other fun activities during the game included a “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 Educational Days to bring area schools’ students to campus.

— Randy Weiler (Randy.Weiler@mtsu.edu)

MTSU freshmen Sierra Shipley and Caleb Hough perform the “Balloon Kabob” science experiment in front of several thousand Murfreesboro City Schools students Dec. 4 during the Education Day basketball game between the Lady Raiders and Austin Peay.

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.

STEM event creates career options for 400-plus girls

At least one high school student — and likely many others — added a potential career path to her list of choices during the 16th annual Expanding Your Horizons in Math and Science Conference Sept. 22 at MTSU.

Dr. Rich Rhoda, executive director of the Tennessee Higher Education Commission, left, joins MTSU professors Kaylene Gebert and Judith Iriarte-Gross, keynote speaker Jennifer Hill, Basic and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer and MTSU professor Greg Van Patten cheer along with students during the opening of the 2012 Expanding Your Horizons in Math and Science Workshops at MTSU Sept. 22. (MTSU photos by Andy Heidt)

Attending the conference for the third year, Central Magnet School 10th-grader Audrey Darnbush said she now is adding astronomy to her mix, along with the possibility of teaching middle school history after graduating from college.

“After today, I will consider a career in astronomy because we saw the planetarium,” said Darnbush, referring to the 16-by-10-foot portable dome brought by the Arnold Air Force Base STEM Center.

“It happens all the time,” conference director Dr. Judith Iriarte-Gross said of all the science, technology, engineering and math workshop opportunities the girls have at Expanding Your Horizons.

“Girls change their minds,” Iriarte-Gross added. “Most of our college students change their minds, too. It’s just part of growing up.”

Expanding Your Horizons, or EYH, is a hands-on science and math conference that helps girls investigate careers and talk with women in the STEM fields, attend math and science workshops and meet other girls interested in science and math.

More than 400 girls attended — including groups from Memphis and Chattanooga — and nearly 200 volunteers supported the daylong event. It also meant ordering 145 pizzas, 500 to 600 drinks and hundreds of cookies to be consumed by the busy attendees.

La Vergne High School senior Jaelyn Todd, who attended EYH for the first time, spent four weeks with event keynote speaker Jennifer Hill at Nissan North America’s summer enrichment program.

“It helped me realize what I want to do and follow my path,” said Todd, who is considering MTSU, Tennessee Tech and the University of the South as college options for her potential engineering career.

Hill, manager of process control engineering at Nissan and a former Tennessee Titans and Nashville Predators cheerleader, provided an energetic and inspiring talk on “LOL” — telling the girls not to just laugh out loud but to “Live Out Loud.”

“Never give up on your dreams,” Hill said. “Find your passion, your niche. You are on a path toward success.”

“Jennifer’s amazing,” Iriarte-Gross said. “She was thanking me for the opportunity to speak. I said, ‘No. We ought to thank you for speaking.”

Hannah Lannom, 13, a seventh-grader at Girls Preparatory School, was among a contingent of Chattanooga students who attended EYH 2012.

“I like how you can experience how things work and how they take into consideration girls in engineering, not just boys,” Lannom said at the Schneider Electric-led “Electrifying Fun with Circuits” workshop in the Davis Science Building.

MTSU archaeology students Jenette Stearns, front left, and Kellum Everett, back left, point out artifacts to students durng the Expanding Your Horizons in Math and Science Workshops at MTSU.

Dr. Rich Rhoda, Tennessee Higher Education Commission executive director, was an invited guest and speaker, noting how much fun the potential scientists were having.

“This is very important,” Rhoda said of EYH. “It will be interesting to track how many of these girls wind up at MTSU or any university in the STEM fields. It definitely makes an impression on them.”

First-year MTSU College of Basic and Applied Sciences Dean Bud Fischer also spoke briefly. He drew a loud round of applause when he told the students MTSU’s long-awaited new science building would open in spring 2015, when some of them will be entering college.

For details on the 2013 EYH conference, visit www.mtsu.edu/wistem/eyh/index.php.

— Randy Weiler (Randy.Weiler@mtsu.edu)