Final Robotics Challenge
In the final robotics challenge, teams were required to navigate their Boe-Bots towards a target and knock it over using any programming skills and resources from the entire week. Volunteer Judge Rishanta Trundles presided over the final challenge. Winner: Team MasterMinds
Day 5: Final Boe-Bot Challenge
Day 5: "CONNECT" Challenge Re-cap
"CONNECT" Challenge Re-cap
In one of the last challenges of the week, teams developed ideas for a product of the future that would utilize Internet connectivity and presented their ideas in front of a panel of judges. Teams were critiqued based upon clear articulation of product function, target audience and promotional agenda. Effective presentation delivery was also scored. Winner: Cajun Coders.
| Judges (left to right:) Rishanta Trundles CenturyLink, Mille Atkins CenturyLink, Brandon Foster Dow, Ashlee Bell West Monroe High School, Joey Higuera Engineering Student @ LA Tech |
| Technocircuits |
| Geek Squad |
| Knowledge |
| Mad Dogs |
| Master Minds |
| Sonic |
| The Burning Matrices |
| Silent But Deadly |
Day 4: Robotics Challenge # 3
Robotics Challenge #3: Avoid the Road Blocks!
In today's challenge, campers utilized information from the morning's lesson and infrared technology to navigate a series of roadblacks. Volunteer judge Varner Rencher of CenturyLink presided over today's challenge. Team Geek Squad was the challenge winner.
Day 2 : Robotics Challenge #1
Robotics Challenge #1: Follow the Line
STEM Summer Boot Camp Day 1
STEM Kick-off
- Be Proactive
- Begin with the End in Mind
- Put First Things First
- Think Win-Win
- Seek First to Understand, Then to be Understood
- Synergize
- Sharpen the Saw
Ms. Collins expounded upon all of the habits, giving the students valuable guiding principles to employ during the camp and throughout life. The lesson culminated in a group exercise revolving around the third habit, "Put First Things First", where campers were challenged to combine two full bowls of multi-colored stones into just one of the bowls. The first bowl held the largest rocks, representing the most important things one should tend to in life. The other was filled with tiny pebbles, representing those things that tend to distract us from the more important tasks. With some thought, all campers were able to successfully combine the stones but only after fully understanding the guiding principle of the lesson.
After lunch, corporate strategist Brian Heath of CenturyLink introduced students to the wide open world of the "Internet of Things (IoT)". Through examples including a dog collar that alerts owners through SMS of its temperature and risk of exhaustion, to sensors placed on cows that report their location and vital signs, Mr. Heath illustrated that anything that can be connected to the Internet will indeed be connected at some point in the future. The data gathered from technologies like these can be very useful and he encouraged all students to peer into the future and envision the next great invention utilizing Internet technology. The students are to present their ideas and marketing plan at the end of the week.
To cap off a full day of learning and experimentation, liberal arts instructor Ashlee Bell, English instructor at West Monroe High School, engaged the students in a thought provoking talk on the benefits and pitfalls of technology. Her timely talk reminded the students that as they try to solve the the challenges of the future, they must also be mindful of the negative fallout the technologies may produce. She then segued into an overview of a relatively new zooming presentation technology, Prezi.
In all, campers had a full day of discovery and exploration. More to come on Day 2...




















