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Students Excel in 'Mind' Games - Get Good Help
April 2, 2004
Greenville Herald Banner
Editorial Board
Melva Geyer, Editor
Brad Kellar, city reporter
It's not
a new idea and it's a subject you've read about in
our local opinion columns on several occasions.
But, we're afraid it falls on deaf ears all too
often.
This
weekend groups of Greenville students have left town
to participate in some rather challenging
competition, dealing with topics many of us adults
have a hard time fathoming.
One
group is made up of GHS students competing for state
honors in Destination ImagiNation, a contest
challenging students to use not only textbook
knowledge, but also imagination and creativity to
solve problems.
The DI
teams of which there are five, will go up against
some of the other brightest minds in the state in an
effort to advance to the world meet at the
University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
FIRST
team members are off to Houston and by the time you
read this will be in the middle of their bid for a
trip to nationals in Atlanta, GA., later this month.
This
group of youngsters, known to the state judges
unremarkably and simply as Team 148, will be putting
to the challenge their robot that has a much more
sophisticated moniker, "Lone Star." It will be
going up against robots from 44 other FIRST (For
Inspiration and Recognition of Science and
Technology) teams from across Texas.
In the
crowd cheering these teams on will be their coaches
and sponsors, the real unsung heroes of DI and
FIRST.
These
people are examples of the high standards of
academic competition that results when the community
and business and industry become involved with the
educational dimensions of a town or city.
In this
case, it is engineers from L-3, teachers, parents
and interested parties volunteering their time,
expertise and energy to the projects.
Sponsors
of the programs can never say enough about these
people who add those extra facets of learning,
leadership and development that will be put to work
by the students as they enter adulthood and become
members of the community.
We wish
the best of luck to our "teams," but the fact that
they are competing is the real reward for them,
their support groups and for Greenville. |