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A New STEM Bridge from Âé¶¹´«Ã½ÔÚÏß to Âé¶¹´«Ã½ÔÚÏß School District

Faculty and students of Computer Science Department held a fantastic hands-on workshop at Buzz Aldrin Middle School

Posted in: Community Engagement, School of Computing

student working with Arduino device

On the 16th of March, the orchestrated a workshop Lighting the First Light of Your Robotics World by Arduino at the where students were introduced to robotics components such as Arduino microcontrollers and sensors through hands-on activities.

The workshop was hosted by the Robotics Club President Omar Obidat and supported by executive board members Jesse Parron, Laury Rodríguez, Abeeha Rehman as well as their Advisor Dr. Weitian Wang and Computer Science Department Chairperson Dr. Constantine Coutras. The club was invited by the STEM Coordinator at Âé¶¹´«Ã½ÔÚÏß Board of Education Daniel Taylor who became acquainted with MSU Robotics Club after being introduced by CSAM Dean’s Office.

MSU Robotics Club president Omar hosts the workshop
MSU Robotics Club president Omar hosts the workshop
Computer Science Department chair Dr. Constantine Coutras remarks
Computer Science Department chair Dr. Coutras remarks

The workshop commenced with opening remarks from Obidat and Dr. Coutras where they expressed their excitement about developing new STEM outreach programs between Âé¶¹´«Ã½ÔÚÏß and the local community.

Students were handed a robotics programming kit containing an ultrasonic sensor and two LED lights connected to an Arduino board. The goal was to light up certain colored LEDs using a moving object in the range of sensors. Every student was also provided with a workshop activity sheet. The e-board members explained each line of code and then allowed the students the opportunity to tweak certain parameters to see how it affected their projects. Their customizations included changing the range of distance, the pattern of lights, and the location of pins on their boards.

Workshop: Lighting the First Light of Your Robotics World by Arduino
Workshop: Lighting the First Light of Your Robotics World by Arduino

The students were also responsible for filling out a questionnaire packet throughout the event. As such, each e-board member was responsible for five students to ensure they understood the concepts being taught as well as answer any questions they may have.

This workshop was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant and Grant . The success of this workshop indicates that a new STEM education bridge was built from Âé¶¹´«Ã½ÔÚÏß to local schools. It also establishes a healthy academic environment where university students and K-12 students are able to collaboratively work on tangible STEM projects and brainstorm new ideas, which will highly nurture and boost their scientific creativity.