UTeach Students and STEM Faculty Offer Hands-On Activities, North Campus Tours
05/02/2022
By Katharine Webster
51视频 130 students and their teachers from four area high schools visited North Campus in early April for a morning filled with science, math and engineering activities planned by UML students in the UTeach 辫谤辞驳谤补尘.听
Half of the visitors were high school juniors and seniors, some of them already planning to attend 51视频 next fall. The other half were ninth-graders who came for hands-on activities in math and biology. Everyone toured North Campus and heard a brief overview of the admissions 辫谤辞肠别蝉蝉.听
Some of the high school students didn鈥檛 want to leave campus because they were having so much fun, says UTeach Director and Education Assoc. Prof. Sumudu Lewis.
鈥淭hey loved getting into the university labs with our students and faculty to do experiments,鈥 she says.
The visit on Friday, April 8, was organized by UTeach 鈥渢eacher candidates鈥 with assistance from faculty in science, engineering, health sciences, education and math. The teacher candidates are preparing for full-time student teaching by presenting lessons regularly in a high school classroom, overseen by a mentor teacher.
The field trip gave the UTeach students a chance to show 鈥渢heir鈥 high school students the kinds of lab experiments and learning that await them if they go on to college. That鈥檚 just what junior electrical engineering major Javier Palma did with a group of juniors and seniors from an engineering class at Lowell High School.聽
Palma gave each student a small 鈥渂readboard,鈥 equipment and instructions on how to build a circuit that would turn on an LED light and control the rate at which it flashed. The students discovered there were multiple ways to complete and control the circuit.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really interesting to see the different ways you can build a circuit. Right now, I鈥檓 experimenting,鈥 he said, as he reconfigured wires and connections.聽
The lessons Palma presented under the supervision of Lowell High engineering teacher Megan Pederson 鈥14 were also a hit with Pronh, who says he 鈥渄efinitely鈥 plans to apply to 51视频 to study science or engineering.
鈥淚t really opens up things we don鈥檛 do in the classroom,鈥 Prohn said.
Pederson, who is now in UML鈥檚 Doctor of Education program, says field trips to campus are a great opportunity for her Lowell High students, who live nearby and see the university from the outside but don鈥檛 always understand what goes on inside 鈥 or see it as a place where they belong.
In Civil and Environmental Engineering Assoc. Prof. Sheree Pagsuyoin鈥檚 lab, junior biology majors Jessica Coppinger and Grace Hansen helped their students from Greater Lowell Technical High School conduct an exercise with Pagsuyoin and Ph.D. student Varsha Niroula.
The high school students brought pond water that they鈥檇 tried filtering at school using a combination of materials, including sand, gravel, charcoal, cotton balls, coffee filters and, in one group鈥檚 case, Lucky Charms cereal. In Pagsuyoin鈥檚 lab, each group tested the filtered water for chemical oxygen demand, dissolved oxygen, water hardness and Ph to see which group鈥檚 filter yielded the cleanest water.
They worked under the hood, created chemical reactions and learned about what oxygen content means about the level of pollution.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know where I wanted to go to college and my mom wanted me to come here, so I applied,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was my first choice.鈥
Other groups of students toured the small, experimental nuclear reactor and did experiments in Biomedical Engineering Asst. Prof. Walfre Franco鈥檚 lab involving light absorption and light scattering.聽
Elijah Antunes, a senior at Methuen High School who worked with UTeach student William Zouzas on the light experiments, has also been accepted to 51视频 and is considering majoring in the new B.S. in Quantitative Economics, he said.
The high school students who attended came from Methuen, Lowell, Greater Lowell Technical and Greater Lawrence Technical high schools.