The Oak Ridge School district is the February Featured District on the ISTE STEM PLN site

https://sites.google.com/view/iste17stempln/home

Oak Ridge Schools (ORS) is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. ORS offers a holistic, STEM-based experience to students to ensure preparation for future lives and careers. The district has re-branded their STEM acronym to stand for "Students and Teachers Energizing Minds." This was created with the idea that the all-inclusive learning that occurs in STEM-based classrooms involves not just Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math subject matter, but also the essential elements of collaboration, communication, creativity, and critical thinking. These are commonly called “The 4 Cs” and are widely recognized as workplace skills that increase productivity. By focusing on the 4Cs, teachers have taken ownership of our STEM-based model for engaging with students and energizing their minds, coming up with problems and solutions that were unforeseen. This ownership of STEM-based learning was recently validated by AdvancED, an accreditation body who recognized Oak Ridge Schools as the first district in Tennessee and second in the world to achieve AdvancED STEM certification in every school in the district!

Dr. Borchers has been the superintendent of Oak Ridge Schools in Tennessee since 2013. Dr. Borchers earned a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota, master’s degrees from Wayne State College and the University of South Dakota, and a bachelor’s degree from Morningside College.

Cube Satellite

Students from Robertsville Middle School will be sending a Cube Satellite into space in October of this year! Students named the satellite "RamSat." Frank Brogan, the US Department of Education Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education heard about this project and paid a visit to the school.

Students talked about the creation of their mission to track regrowth of vegetation after the devastation of the Gatlinburg fires. While RamSat is orbiting Earth, students will capture images from an onboard camera and audio signals communicating to a ham radio station in their classroom.

Read more about it and view more photos here: https://www.ortn.edu/assistant-secretary-frank-brogan-visits-robertsville-middle-school/

Drones and Aeronautics Career Exploration

Students in James Mitchell’s 7th and 8th grade Aeronautics Career Exploration course at Jefferson Middle School are learning how to build and fly drones. The Oak Ridge school district administration and staff have recognized the importance of aviation to our city's future, and want to expose our students to a multitude of career possibilities within this field. We have begun this journey by introducing a new Career Exploration in Aviation course at Jefferson Middle School. In this course, students are introduced to aviation career options in the field such as air traffic control, private and commercial airline pilots, craft design, and a host of applications for unmanned aircraft. This course can seamlessly articulate into a STEM Engineering, Transportation/Automotive Maintenance, and/or our brand new Navy JROTC program courses.

The importance of unmanned aircraft has increased in daily applications as well as in our nation's military. Some descriptions of needs for unmanned aircraft technology include jobs that are too dangerous, dirty, dull, demanding, or different. Dangerous applications are those involving a high potential for death or injury to a human crew. Dirty applications include operating in situations with chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear materials. Dull applications are repetitive tasks need to be automated to save costs and human energy. Demanding applications include high-endurance applications for either the flight crew, the aircraft performance, or both, with the ability of eliminating weight and volume of flight crew and provide freedom in aircraft design. Different applications are those that are not feasible for manned aircraft, such as getting organic intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance in the military field.

Cyber Security

Our competitive Cyber Patriot Team received a banner from the US Air Force Academy for the 2019 Open Division Gold 3rd Place Award. Oak Ridge High School first participated as a team in the 2016-2017 CyberPatriot program competition, and have received top honors each year. Oak Ridge High School computer science instructor, Keith Jackson and community member, Mike Hylton are the mentors. Cyber Patriot is the National Youth Cyber Education Program whose mission is to spark the interest of our nation’s youth in the area of cyber security and other STEM education and career paths. This year (2019-2020), the number of Oak Ridge High School teams expanded to include an all-female team and an all-NJROTC team!



Union County Students Become Certified Nursing Assistants Before Graduating High School

https://www.wbir.com/article/news/health/union-county-students-become-certified-nursing-assistants-before-graduating-high-school/51-61c0b8f7-f69d-4e20-aa31-dd9f1a6b966a

Across the country there's a need for more nurses.

About half of registered nurses in the U.S. are 50 years old or older, according to the National Council of State Boards of Nursing and The Forum of State Nursing Workforce Centers.

The nursing workforce is not expected to grow fast enough to meet demands.

East Tennessee high school students are trying to help that need by getting healthcare certifications before they even graduate.

Union County High School seniors will get their diplomas in May, but some students are already working as certified nursing assistants thanks to a class they took at school.

One of those seniors is Bethany Buller. This time last year she didn't like school.

"I had a really rough junior year," she said. "I struggled really hard with academic classes."

Then she took an anatomy class at Union County High School.

"I passed the class with an A," she said.

Buller's teachers encouraged her to take the next step by enrolling in the certified nursing assistant (CNA) program at school.

"I think it's good for them to learn early. That way they know what path they want to go into when they're picking a college and they're picking a career," said course instructor Debbie Sharp, RN.

Sharp started the CNA program at Union County High School six years ago.

She has a full class every semester.

"This year they did exceptionally well. All 12 passed their CNA test," said Sharp.

Twelve seniors are certified nursing assistants and they haven't even graduated high school.

"A lot of them already have job offers," said Sharp. "I have one student that's actually starting her job tomorrow as a CNA."

Students learned how to take vital signs, change bed pans, and generally care for patients of all ages.

They all have to complete 150 hours in the classroom and with patients at a local nursing home.

"The CNA class really showed me how physically demanding it is, mentally demanding it is," said Buller.

It's hard work that she and her classmates are finding a passion for."It's just the joy of making someone else happy," said Buller.

These CNAs are working to make nursing their career."It actually pushed me to go to college and to get my RN and to go further in helping people and being successful in life," said Buller.     

Several schools offer the CNA program, including seven Knox County high schools: Halls, Gibbs, Powell, Karns, South Doyle, and others.

The newest is Austin-East High School. The CNA program just started there this year.