Thursday, May 23, 2013

Fifth Grader Takes Home Top Prize in Build It Better Contest


Earlier this week, Raytheon's MathMovesU announced the winners of the Build it Better contest, a competition encouraging students to put on their engineering hats, pick anything (large or small) from school life and describe how it could be redesigned for a better school experience. The response was incredible. Across the United States, students were submitting videos and diagrams detailing their project ideas. From all of the submissions, just 10 finalists were selected. Their project ideas were posted to Facebook and open for public voting. The three winning teams reflect the creativity, ingenuity and innovation that MathMovesU is all about. 

Needham High School student Liam Walsh's proposal to redesign bike racks that would protect bicycles from vandalism and precipitation, and make the bikes more convenient to the school's entrance earned him third place honors. In second place were three high-schoolers from New Jersey - Lanre Danmola, Jordan Donald and Charles Dowd from Columbia High School. The trio came up with a "one-swipe whiteboard eraser" that would save time in the classroom for teachers and enable student's to have more learning time. 

In first place, though, was Ohio fifth-grader Jonathon Drawford from Tri-Village Elementary. The young student developed a plan to alleviate long lunch lines - an iPad app

The creators of the winning ideas took home classroom grants. The contest was run by Raytheon's MathMovesU, as part of their larger mission to engage students in STEM subjects through hands-on activities, educational outreach and social interaction.

Check out all of the finalist project videos - including the top three - here!