Texas A&M Student Competition Tackles Issues in STEM Ed
        
        
        
        Texas A&M University (TAMU) recently held Aggies  Invent, a two-day initiative set to go nation-wide that, this year, asked students to  come up with solutions to challenges in K-12 STEM education.
Sixty students, divided into six teams, participated in the  event and tackled problems such as student engagement, minority and gender  gaps, teacher preparation and classroom digitization with the aid of university  and industry mentors and the resources of the school's 20,000-square-foot rapid  prototyping lab.
"I had an idea to hold an Aggies Invent centered around  education and we worked with the College  of Education and our industry sponsors to come up with problem statements  for our students," said James Wilson, Engineering  Innovation Center facility manager, in a prepared statement. "We have  students designing apps for teachers and children with special needs, hardware  to monitor behavior and stress levels of children, modular furniture to  accommodate the needs of a modern classroom and virtual college tours for high  school students."
The winning team's project was "Veggie Roll," a  device designed to teach agricultural principals to students in developing  countries.
"We built a portable seed-plant assisting device that  could help conduct training sessions on how to properly space and plant seeds  and plugs in the field," said Carlos Rios, mechanical engineering  sophomore, in a news release.
The team won $1,000, promises of grant money and access to  the Engineering Innovation Center to further develop the project.
This year's event also saw an increase in women participating, making up half  of all students taking part for the first time in the events history.
The evet's leadership is looking to expand the initiative  beyond the TAMU campus.
"Rodney Boehm, director of Aggies Invent, is aiming to  take this event to schools and community colleges nationally," Wilson said  in a prepared statement. "We will have an event themed around first  responders in April which will be our biggest ever. We will also have a  super-Aggies Invent in the summer wherein winners from previous events will get  together for a bigger challenge."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].