| Seventh
and Eighth Graders Gear Up for 2005 Competition
What’s
on the mind of a typical American seventh- and eighth-grader: Sports?
Hip-Hop? Using crushed stone, sand and gravel to improve and modernize
transportation systems?
It could
happen – especially
for the thousands of middle school students set to participate in the National
Engineers Week Future City Competition ™ , which each year invites
young people to create a city of tomorrow. What began in 1992 as a
modest project to encourage math and science skills and lay the foundation
for a career in engineering has become the nation’s largest engineering
education program, this year expected to reach 30,000 students in 1,100
schools.
First-place winners from 37 regional competitions held in January will
receive an all-expense-paid trip to the Future City National Finals in
Washington , D.C. , February 21-23, 2005 , during Engineers Week. Grand
prize is a trip to U.S. Space Camp in Huntsville , Alabama .
The competition asks students, working in teams and under the guidance
of a teacher and a volunteer engineer mentor from the community, to design
a city of the future and include a plan that helps meet a particular
social need.
Students build their cities first on computer using SimCity 3000 software,
donated to each school by Maxis, a division of Electronic Arts, and
then in large three-dimensional scale models. They must also write
an abstract describing their city, and an essay in which, this year,
they must answer, "How
can futuristic transportation systems efficiently use aggregate materials
as a basic construction product?" The challenge
to use aggregates – crushed stone, sand and gravel – in
imaginative and efficient transportation systems may sound far-fetched
at first, but Future City purposely directs participants to incorporate
real engineering challenges into their plans and this year is no different.
With thousands of roads, bridges, and railways in need of repair and
increased traffic straining budgets, the effective use of basic transportation
construction materials will become a pressing topic. Students can create any kind of city or transportation system, but
as they devise monorails, people movers, bike paths, or freeways, they
will be giving extra scrutiny to urban expansion, environmental issues,
and sustainability with achievable, measurable results. “Asking middle school students to wrestle with the complexities
of roadbeds, crushed rock, and all the rest may sound difficult, and
it is,” says Carol Rieg, Future City 's National Director. "But,
it’s that very complexity that makes this program so popular. Whether
it’s in the class curriculum or an after-school project, kids clamor
to be part of Future City because they’re drawn to the challenge.”
If a student’s
interest in engineering is piqued, then all the better, say the professionals
from every engineering discipline who praise the program for reaching
young people at a critical time in their education. The hands-on lessons
in practical math and science can prove critical in maintaining studies
through high school, giving students the skills they need to pursue
engineering in college.
Registration deadline for the 2005 Future City Competition is October
15. For more information, visit www.futurecity.org or
call 1-877-636-9578.
The National Engineers Week Future City Competition is sponsored in
part by the Engineers Week Committee, a consortium of professional and
technical societies and major U.S. corporations, dedicated to increasing
public awareness and appreciation of the engineering profession and to
encouraging pre-college interest in math, science, and engineering as
a career option. Engineers Week 2005 is co-chaired by the American Society
of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) and BP p.l.c. Heading the Future City
Competition Leadership Council is Bentley Systems, Inc., and sponsor
of the 2005 Future City Essay question is the National Stone, Sand and
Gravel Association.
# # #
IN BRIEF : The National
Engineers Week Future City Competition TM each
year invites middle school students nationwide to create cities of tomorrow.
The competition encourages interest in math, science and engineering
through hands-on applications. This year's challenge includes using construction
aggregates – crushed stone, sand, and gravel – to increase
transportation efficiency. Registration deadline for schools is October
15, 2004 . For more information, visit www.futurecity.org or
call toll-free 1-877-636-9578.
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