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This wall hanging celebrates all 4 parts of STEM; Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math. The word STEM is spelled out using elements that represent each subject, and are then surrounded by a selection of micro-models relating to the subject.
Science is made of two attracting magnets, and has a microscope, test tubes, a cell, a brontosaurus skeleton, some plants (botany), and a rocket. Technology is made of a circuitboard, and there are some cell phones, a play button, a computer, and a radar dish. Engineering is made from a crane, and contains a bridge, a skyscraper, and a selection of tools. Finally, Math is a quartic function, and there is a pencil, a drawing compass, a calculator, and a ruler.
There are also three locations on the back for easy and stable attachment to a wall, and the whole thing comprises of just under 800 pieces.
This was built for a celebrating STEM contest on LEGO IDEAS which you can view here: ideas.lego.com/challenges/02763053-59d1-40e1-8941-cc1b26a...
These students from Kashmere, North Early College, and Wheatley High Schools worked in cooperative groups to solve a real world problem. Each group of 3 to 4 students posed as an engineering firm that would submit a robotics solution to a geophysics problem. Teams used the LEGO Mindstorm NXT robot to design a vehicle that could climb to the top of a Mountain to retrieve rocks that stored energy. Their vehicle should be able to climb the mountain and continue its motion as the slope of the mountain increased. The team whose robot climbed the highest would win the bid with my company.
Twenty-two high school students with visual and hearing disabilities participated in a STEM Wars camp at Auburn University April 21.
Mike doing full body stemming to avoid a pool. Your photographer carried the rucksacks/backpacks and trudged through the thigh deep water. Avoided the indignity of a full face plant by getting it wrong of course!
Canyoneering in Utah, Zion National Park Area, Dixie National Forest near St George, Yankee Doodle Canyon.
26th April 2009
At the Greenhouse: Presenters at Ignite STEM include Brian Shiro, Robert Mann, Sam Gon III, Kim Binsted and Christie Wilcox
The School of Science, Engineering, and Technology at Penn State Harrisburg hosted a STEM Program for high school juniors and seniors.
The School of Science, Engineering, and Technology at Penn State Harrisburg hosted a STEM Program for high school juniors and seniors.