Superintendent Joseph Mastrocola
250 Pawtucket Boulevard,
Tyngsborough, MA 01879
For Immediate Release
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019
Contact: Kelsey Bode
Phone: 617-993-0003
Email: kelsey@jgpr.net
Greater Lowell Tech Students Participate in STEM Week Activities
TYNGSBOROUGH — Superintendent Joseph Mastrocola is pleased to announce that Greater Lowell Technical High School students explored the science, technology, engineering and math fields last week during STEM Week.
GLTHS participated in the Massachusetts STEM Week Challenge 2019 from Oct. 21-25, as part of the statewide effort to boost the interest, awareness and ability for all learners to envision themselves in STEM education and employment opportunities.
The theme for the second-annual statewide STEM Week was “See Yourself in STEM.”
“We need more young people to see themselves in STEM careers, and last week’s activities gave students terrific experience in these fields,” Mastrocola said. “It was great to see so much hands-on learning, as well as students taking part in special projects that will benefit the entire school community and residents of Lowell.”
Instructors participating in STEM Week included Coordinator of STEM Outreach and Academic Success Lorrie Campbell, history teachers Jennifer Parkhurst and Karen Washington, science teachers Kelly Griffin and Nate Howe, and math teachers Judy Moran, Stacey O’Keefe, Devin McInerney, Helen Sullivan and Andrea Collins.
In history classes, students considered how integrated electronics have become in peoples’ lives, how dependent people have become on technology and how electronics help us. They defined what an electronic is, and described the typical components of common electronic devices.
Science students participated in a two-day laboratory experiment, setting up a simulation of the copper etching process for creating circuit boards found in many electronic components. They were shown that this manufacturing process creates e-waste that requires proper disposal. The students considered the pros and cons of various disposal methods for the virtual water created in their circuit board simulation.
In math classes, students defined e-waste and discussed the high volume of the e-waste problem. They identified familiar examples of common products designed with planned obsolescence versus those designed to last. Students evaluated trade-offs associated with the usage of electronics.
Several special projects were also undertaken by students during the week, including Information Technology students in Paul McNeil and Steven King’s classes. Students were chosen to present the projects to school administrators and other staff members who visited classrooms to observe STEM Week activities.
McNeil’s students installed a KVM (keyboard, video and mouse) switch and additional cables to the new Windows computers and a new Apple Mac mini computer. The switch allows students to use a single workstation to control multiple computers with the touch of a button.
Students can use the workstation to learn about building iPhone and Apple apps. More advanced students can explore the curriculum developed by Apple for the Advanced Placement Computer Science Principles with Swift that the Greater Lowell School Committee sent McNeil to Austin, Texas this past summer to learn. The curriculum is used to prepare the students for the AP Computer Science exam and the App Development with Swift Certification Level 1.
The presenter for the project was Information Technology sophomore Abbey Gingras, of Dracut.
King’s student’s worked on a GLTech AR app, which uses Augmented Reality to display a video representing Greater Lowell Tech programs on posters that can be hung anywhere in the school. To use the app, students point their iPhone at one of the technical program posters and the poster turns into a video for the appropriate shop.
DVC (Design & Visual Communications) students created the posters. The app is currently in the Apple beta testing and review process, and the school hopes to have it available for all to download from the App Store within the next two weeks.
Presenters for the project included Information Technology senior Andrew Seak, of Lowell.
Engineering teacher Susan Youens has also been working with her students, including senior engineering student Shayla Som, of Lowell, on the design of a multi-function building to support youth sports at Shedd Park in South Lowell.
The building will serve as Som’s Term 1 project. She is serving as the main drafter/designer of the plans for the building, which is expected be open for the summer and spring sports seasons.
The project is based off a community service idea to create a new concession stand with bathrooms for the park, which Som said she chose as a way to gain real-world experience in architectural and civil engineering.
Now that STEM Week activities have concluded, students will participate in a real-world problem to solve in the form of a cell phone recycling program. It will allow students to receive hands-on experience with reducing e-waste. Boxes within the school will be set up to collect old cell phones, preventing them from ending up in a landfill.
The program is being run by Carol Chisolm’s math and science cluster departments. It will conclude on National Recycling Day, which falls on Friday, Nov. 15.
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