
Contact: Linda Topoleski, 412-281-2345 Or:
Hesperia Junior High School
ltopoleski@dymun.com Teacher
Barbara Jacobs, 760-244-9386
Special Needs Students from Hesperia
Junior High School Named Finalists in National Science/Community Service Competition
Win Trip to Walt Disney World®
Students Develop Wrist Band
Phone Holder
to Enable People of All Abilities to Communicate Easily
AUBURN, NY,—April 19, 2006—Bright ideas, solid
research and teamwork won a team of students from Hesperia, CA, spots as finalists in the Christopher Columbus Awards,
a nationwide program that challenges middle-school students to explore
opportunities for positive change in their communities. Eighth-graders Kattie Greene and Emilee
Landon, seventh-graders Eric Coldwell and David Perez, and their coach, Special
Education Teacher Barbara Jacobs, had made it to the semifinals earlier this
month and now are one of eight teams in the country to compete for the grand
prize—the $25,000 Columbus Foundation Community Grant.
With disabilities that include three
of their team members in wheelchairs, one with cerebral palsy and one with a
hearing impairment, this group of students knows all too well the barriers they
face in trying to access a telephone.
Issues such as the location and portability of the phone or the design
of the earpiece can prevent people with disabilities from effectively accessing
a phone.
After researching current products
on the market for access and portability, and conducting a survey of students
to gauge needs, the team developed an idea for a wristband cell phone holder
which allows hands-free functioning and portability. Current products on the market require hands-on involvement to
remove the phone from the holder, which the team saw as an obstacle for people
who have limited fine motor skills, those in wheelchairs who need their hands
to navigate, and people who are blind.
Other products require an earpiece which does not work for people with
hearing impairments.
The students hand-sewed their
prototype out of denim and Velcro and tested it with team members with positive
results. The holder is flexible
enough to attach to an arm or anywhere on a wheelchair.
A panel of community leaders,
scientists and experts in science education judged this idea as one of the top
eight entries in the U.S. Over 1,200
students and coaches participated nationwide.
Teams Win a Trip to Walt Disney World®
The team and their coach win an all-expense-paid
trip to the Walt Disney World® Resort, where they will compete in the Christopher
Columbus Awards' National Championship Week, May 28-June 2, 2006, plus a $200 grant for each
team to further develop their project.
Each member of two Gold Medal
winning teams will receive a $2,000 U.S. Savings Bond,
and one team will receive the $25,000 Columbus Foundation Community Grant as seed money to help bring its
idea to life in the community. The
Grant winning team will receive support from the Christopher Columbus Awards staff
and continued guidance from their coach and community leaders.
The
finalists will also attend the Christopher
Columbus Academy, a
custom-designed educational program. Conducted by scientists, engineers and educators, the program reveals the science and
technology behind the thrills and excitement of Epcot® and the Magic Kingdom.®
Positive Community Change
The Christopher Columbus Awards challenge teams of
middle-school students to explore and discover opportunities for positive change in their communities using
science and technology. The
program is now in its tenth year and has attracted nearly 14,000 students from
diverse backgrounds all across the U.S. The program is sponsored by the
Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation (www.columbusfdn.org) with support
from the National Science Foundation and it is endorsed by the National Middle
School Association. Past winners
have included: a group of Native American girls who built a study hall out of
straw on the Crow Indian Reservation in Montana, and a group of students from
Pennsylvania who developed a video/motion sensor device for school buses that
deters motorists from trying to pass illegally.
Strong Participation from
Girls, Minorities
The program attracts many students
who may not typically enter a science competition. More than half of the
entrants are girls, and more than a fourth are from diverse ethnic and cultural
backgrounds, statistics that are higher than those of most science
competitions. The Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation believes the
teamwork aspect and community focus draw a broader range of students to enter.
About
the Sponsor
The
Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation is an independent Federal government
agency created by Congress in 1992 to encourage and support research, study and
labor designed to produce new discoveries in all fields of endeavor for the
benefit of mankind. The Foundation has established Frontiers of
Discovery–Work in Progress and Discover the Future, programs that recognize Òcutting
edgeÓ innovations, innovative ideas of AmericaÕs youth, and honor teachers.
These programs include the Homeland Security Award, Christopher Columbus Awards, National Gallery for AmericaÕs
Young Inventors and
the $10,000 Freida J. Riley Teacher Award.
For more information, call 1-800-291-6020 or visit www.christophercolumbusawards.com.
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