March Madness is upon
us. From my point of view, it’s already hit
Licking County. Three days of STEMfest!
at The Works recently took place in downtown Newark and really brought a
spotlight to how much STEM learning is part of our day to day.
STEMfest! has always been
the science equivalent of a basketball tournament. Fueled by the energy of our
kids learning about the value of science, technology, engineering, and math
skills in a hands-on way, the 2024 edition didn’t disappoint.
Over 1,000 people went
through the doors at The Works coupled with demonstrations by a dozen local manufacturers. There were 100 teams from four counties,
including students from public and private schools from most of Licking
County’s school districts competing in industry challenges.
Our Licking County version
of STEM learning has the greatest value because of local relevance. There are places to learn STEM skills and
there are places to work that need those STEM skills.
Our industries crave STEM
skills. I’m glad to share just three
examples on the Port Authority campus in Heath how STEM ties into their day,
though it was really hard to stop at just three.
Kaiser Aluminum’s hot
rolled aluminum is a niche process that provides the strength essential to
aircraft. The metallurgical science
involved is unique to Kaiser in Heath.
MISTRAS Group sees all of
the metal for Space X rockets stream through their doors. Ultrasound,
submersion, and x-ray techniques are the technologies behind their material
testing processes.
Boeing inertial guidance
systems require the precision ability to hit the equivalent accuracy of a
pencil point on a football field.
Engineering aided by decimal point levels of math is what make their
gyroscopes work.
STEM learning is what makes
STEM careers happen.
Though inspiration for a
STEM career can come from just about anywhere—that next door neighbor who
tinkers in his garage to that aunt who leads a local manufacturer--it’s the
school experience that counts.
That’s why I’m impressed
by Newark City Schools and their approach.
For more than a dozen years, Newark has embraced STEM in all
grades. Pre-engineering and robotics hit
middle schools 10 years ago. Advanced
classes in engineering, math, computer science, and physics are now
commonplace. Newark’s STEM summer camp
offerings are icing on the curriculum cake.
Par Excellence STEM
Academy is all-in on STEM too. The
school rebranded with STEM in a big way this school year. Par has embraced engineering and project-based
learning approaches that are already gathering attention. National attention. Later this month, Par’s elementary school students
will meet one of our local company leaders to learn about brain tissue
research. Yes, brain tissue research is happening
in Licking County and, now, it’s being demonstrated to fourth graders.
It’s important we keep
introducing the next generation to the value of STEM learning and STEM
careers. The Works STEMfest! is a
vehicle for that and has been for 15 years.
March Madness has already
come to Licking County.
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This column is a regular development column for the Newark Advocate.