Contact: Linda Topoleski, 412-281-2345 School Phone: 601-825-5998
Brandon Middle School Students Named Finalists in National Competition
Team Wins Trip to Walt Disney World® For Putting the Brakes on Runaway Shopping Cart
WASHINGTON, D.C.—April 23, 2002—A team of four Brandon Middle School students from Brandon, MS, today became one of just 10 teams in the nation to be named finalists in the Bayer/National Science Foundation Award, a cutting-edge program that challenges middle school students to use science and technology to make their community a better place to live.
Runaway shopping carts are a common site at most grocery and large chain stores. Seventh-graders Patricia Rincon, Lauren Rushing, Joel Anderson and Patrick Hall hope to change that with their new invention: a set of brakes. Along with their coach, teacher Joe Ann Clark, the team interviewed NASA scientists, engineers from Mississippi State University, chain store managers and average customers to devise their solution. An assistant manager at Home Depot said that the chain paid out an average of $5,000 per store in their 1,600 stores nationwide for runaway carts that damaged customers’ cars. She said the store would use the braking system if the students developed it into a useable braking device that would also easily disengage for staff to round up carts and return them to the store. The team did that with its "Stopping Cart," and now advances to the finals in the Bayer/NSF Award for a chance to win the $25,000 Columbus Foundation Community Grant, seed money to help the team bring its idea to life in the community.
The students began developing their entry last fall. They conducted research and worked with community leaders and other mentors to develop and test their solutions, then submitted an entry comprised of written and visual components. A national panel of judges selected their proposal as one of the top 10 from among more than 600 entries submitted nationwide. Nearly 2,500 students participated.
Teams to Compete for $25,000 Grant, Savings Bonds at Walt Disney World®
As finalists, each team and their coach have won an all-expenses-paid trip to the Walt Disney World® Resort from June 14-21, where they will compete in the Bayer/NSF Award’s National Championship. The first-, second- and third-place teams will receive up to $20,000, $12,000 and $4,000 in savings bonds, respectively. One finalist team will win the $25,000 Columbus Foundation Community Grant.
While in Orlando, the students will present their projects to a prestigious panel of national judges and attend
the Christopher Columbus Academy, a custom-designed educational experience that explores the science and technology of the theme park as well as the Space Shuttle at the Kennedy Space Center.
The 2002 Bayer/NSF Award National Championship judging panel includes: Renee Wilkerson Anderson, Teacher, Grant High School; Steve Culbertson, CEO, Youth Service America; Greg Hale, Vice President Design & Engineering and Regulatory Compliance, Walt Disney Company; Dr. William Warren, CEO, SCIPERO, Inc.; Dr. James Youniss, Life Cycle Institute, Catholic University.
Other finalists include: "Quiet Car Alarms," from San Diego, CA; "Baby Beepers for Cars," from Las Vegas, NV; "Going Buggy for Amish Roadway Safety," from Sullivan, OH; "Pendulum Braking System for Wheelchairs," from North Wales, PA; "Ladder Maniacs," from Summerville, SC; "Plateau Preservation," from Crossville, TN; "Project Red Arroyo," from San Angelo, TX; "Comfort Quest," from Manassas, VA; and "Milfoil Master," from Minocqua, WI.
Attracting Kids to Science and Community Service
Sponsored by Bayer Corporation as part of its Making Science Make Sense program, the National Science Foundation, and the Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation, the Bayer/NSF Award was created after studies revealed that middle school is the stage where U.S. students fall behind their peers around the world in science achievement.
Now in its sixth year, the program is endorsed by the National Middle School Association and incorporates many of the recommendations of the National Science Education Standards, emphasizing teamwork, inquiry and real-world settings to attract students to science, technology and community service.
For more information, visit http://www.christophercolumbusawards.com or call 1-800-291-6020.
###