Sep 15
Igniting a Desire to Learn STEM*
Watching this video from the NBC evening news will help you understand the post that follows.
Yesterday, we had the privilege to visit the founder and board of the IGNITE program in Fredericksburg, Texas. The high school rocketry program, founded by teacher Brett Williams in the mid-nineties, has spread across the state and is moving across the borders. TSTC is looking for ways to partner with the IGNITE/SystemsGo program as it grows.
The learning is entirely project-based. Students work in teams to design working hybrid rockets that meet the specifications for each part of the curriculum. It has been very successful. To quote Mr. Williams:
This is a whole new way of teaching. We really are working on not just educating our students, but developing them for the workforce. Coming out of this high school program, these students will understand design and development, testing, analysis, and program management - all things the industry needs in the workforce of tomorrow.
Here are some pictures from our trip (warning - low quality iPhone snaps ahead):
Brett Williams (right) in his classroom discussing rocket science with TSTC System Chancellor Dr. Bill Segura.
Another view of the Fredericksburg High School “rocket room.” TSTC Waco President Elton Stuckly is pictured facing the camera next to Dr. Segura. You can see from here that the room is part of an old auditorium which has been divided into rooms.
Redbird 10, designed by high school students, which will be launched at White Sands. They are hoping for 100,000 feet.
Redbird 10 fin detail. The legs behind give you an idea of scale. This a big metal bird.
The nosecone, designed and built by the students, will likely carry a university research payload.
Access to valve area where the N2O (nitrous oxide) oxidizer will be released to facilitate the burning of the otherwise inert solid fuel. This system is much safer than a standard solid fuel rocket in which the fuel and oxidizer are permanently mixed together.
Failure IS an option! These are the remains of a rocket that crashed at White Sands, possibly due to a failure in the system which releases the oxidizer. The students have been doing a failure analysis.
All of the technologies required to build a rocket are vital to the United States as a world power. Here we see an increasingly rare sight - a real machine shop in a high school. A consortium of local machine shops also help the students with their projects.
Some thoughts about the program:
- It works. The students involved are going on to study engineering and engineering technologies in college
- There was a lot of inspiration and determination to do the impossible on the part of Brett Williams
- The Fredericksburg Independent School District and the entire community had great courage and confidence to make this possible
- It can be, and is being replicated
As Mark Long of TSTC Publishing said while we were there, “It would have been a good idea anywhere, but it happened here first for a reason.” Kudos to those visionaries who were willing to put hard work behind their visions. Lives are being changed because of it.
*STEM is Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math
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