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Kaunakakai student goes to Space (Day)

Kaunakakai student goes to Space (Day)

“During Women in Technology’s Space Day program I learned about motorized robotic machines called Scribble Bots. I made one and it scribbles!”
— Kristen Santiago, 5th grade student, Kaunakakai Elementary School, Molokai

Maui Waena Intermediate students learn teamwork

Maui Waena Intermediate students learn teamwork


Maui Waena Intermediate School’s Technology Club recently traveled to Oahu to compete in the state Botball tournament held at Hanalani School in Mililani. There were 10 teams, both high school and intermediate, from Oahu. “We were the 11th team and the only one from a neighbor island,” said Jennifer Suzuki, STEM and Digital Media teacher, and advisor for the Maui Waena Intermediate School Technology Club. “We had a group of 17 students.” The goal of the competition was to build two robots that could accomplish the assigned tasks. One robot had the job of placing foam balls and blocks, called poms, into a raised basket in the middle of the field.

The second robot was programmed to run an intricate course that took it under the raised elements to move the poms around. “However, when we arrived at the competition, we realized that we misread the field map and that there were obstacles in our way that we could not get around,” Suzuki said. “Because of this, one of our main programmers, Misty Dela Cruz, had to reprogram her robot to do an entirely different function, right there at the competition.” “It was stressful,” said Dela Cruz. “I was so sad when we found out we had the field set up wrong, but then I realized that I could either cry or do something. I chose to fix the robot and I am so proud that I did.”

After the on-the-spot reprogramming, Maui Waena ended up 2nd in the seeding rounds and came in 2nd overall as well. “We also received the Judge’s Choice award for robot design,” said Suzuki. The head builder, John Fabella, commented, “Even though it was hard and things did not go as planned, we worked as a team and did not give up. That is the most important thing I learned while doing Botball.” “If not for the generosity of the Maui Economic Development Board and their Ke Alahele grant, our students would never have had this opportunity,” Suzuki noted. “MEDB offers the support our local students need to excel and compete in a larger community. They give them the chance to prove their self-worth and to challenge their minds, patience and maturity in real life situations.”

STEMworks™ lab serves as key learning resource

STEMworks™ lab serves as key learning resource

King Kekaulike High School students credited a STEMworks™ lab as a key component in their third consecutive Program Impact Assessment award at the 2015 STEM Conference. “There are so many students in STEMworks™ lab across the state doing amazing work, so it is truly an honor to receive this award,” STEM teacher and Kekaulike STEMworks™ Facilitator Emily Haines-Swatek said.

Kekaulike picked up three wins at the 2015 STEM Conference: On-Site Hackathon, Web Design and the Program Impact Assessment Competition. The three students behind the PIA award were Maya Ooki, Alesha Menor and Jeremie Amano. The trio gave a presentation on their school’s STEMworks™ lab and how students use it to create and collaborate on community service projects. Amano and his teammates, Gabriel Rayburn and Wyatt Roan, were a part of the winning On-Site Hackathon team. Their project featured a proposed mobile phone app users would tap to send a picture and a geo-spatial coordinate to the Maui Invasive Species Committee. The team behind the Web Design award – Dylan Franco and Andrew Rezac – designed a Web site for Kekaulike’s Digital Media class, using videos, graphics, music and photography.

Amano and Ooki are 11th-graders who have attended the STEM Conference for three years in a row. “The STEM Conference is my favorite time of the school year,” Ooki said. She said she enjoys meeting STEM industry professionals and likes the chance to practice her public speaking skills. For Amano, the STEM Conference is a chance to get more insight into STEM careers. “I get to learn from these professionals about what they do in their career and what they have done that got them where they are,” he said. The annual STEM Conference is presented by Maui Economic Development Board’s Women in Technology Project. WIT’s STEMworks™ program provides hands-on access to the most current, high-end technologies to produce community service learning projects. Students in STEMworks™ labs are afforded the opportunity to work with local industry partners and gain skills ranging from animation to computer-aided design to engineering design and GPS/GIS. STEMworks currently offers free summer Software Camp Series for students; for information visit http://www.womenintech.com/category/workshops/ or phone Lalaine Pasion at 875-2341.

Girls’ team extracts solution to seaweed invasion

A team of Molokai High School girls sought a solution to eradicating “the largest current threat” to Hawaii’s reefs and earned fourth-place in biochemistry at the 2015 INTEL International Science and Engineering Fair in Pittsburgh, PA. The win on an international stage for 16-year-olds Kea’a Davis, Alexandria Simon and Amber “Momi” Afelin was impressive.

“Science has never been my favorite subject,” Davis acknowledged. “It was always something that’s been hard for me to stay interested in.” But that has since changed and Davis said she’s now seriously considering a science-related career. Afelin, the group leader and a junior who’s graduating a year earlier than her classmates, said she learned the value of determination. “You had to be incredibly self-motivated and dedicated in order to pursue this. For us, science was about solving a problem and we worked really hard to find a solution,” Afelin said. Simon said each of the girls had specific tasks yet all of them supported each other whenever needed. “We became each other’s closest friends, consultants and partners.”

Their project, “Investigating Agar Extraction as a Method of Gracilaria Salicornia Eradication,” attempted to find a solution to eradicate the invasive seaweed also known as “Gorilla Ogo” on Hawaii’s coral reefs. Together they developed a process to extract parts of the seaweed that could be sold as agar, a substance similar to gelatin. Remaining plant material not used in the agar could serve as fertilizer, according to the team’s research. “Essentially we’ve taken a very negative aspect of our reef life,” Afelin said, “and turned it into a product that can be sold in stable markets, creating an economic incentive to fund the seaweed’s own eradication efforts with money left over to pay for manpower.” The three girls were able to conduct their research and experiments with the help of former teacher Scott Hemenway. Financial backing for the girls to travel to the international competition was supported in part through MEDB’s Women in Technology grants from the Office of Naval Research and the County of Maui.