Posted: 7:00 a.m.
Thursday, Dec. 11, 2014
IN OUR SCHOOLS
Hamilton Career Tech project
benefits elementary students
By
Vivienne Machi
Staff Writer
HAMILTON —
Some Hamilton Career Technical Education
seniors have chosen to benefit their school district by creating a box of
alphabet blocks for every first grade classroom in the district.
And creating a set of 75 dual-face blocks
and a box to carry them in for 39 classrooms is no easy feat, say the students
and their teachers, but when you’re doing it for your younger siblings or for a
fondly remembered teacher, it makes the job more fun.
Students in engineering design, carpentry,
and art club are each taking responsibility for steps in creating the blocks,
which have a letter on one side and a number or math symbol on the other.
It
was the students that came up with the idea, says CTE engineering design
teacher Mike Smith, and it’s the students who are creating and surveying the
blocks’ creation from cutting the blocks out of wood, shaping them, designing
the letters, and painting them.
“Some of the students have siblings in
first grade, and a lot of the students had some of those teachers when they
were that age, so it’s a very personal project for them,” he said.
Kathy Christen, language arts teacher for Hamilton High School, has twins in first grade,
and served as a liaison between Smith and his students and the first grade
teachers.
“They made a list of how many letters and
numbers were needed for each set, then we put them into a program to coordinate
which colors to paint them,” he said, explaining how vowels were painted red,
for example, so that the students learned to recognize not only the letter
itself, but its phonetics.
“We added plus and minus signs so they
could do math too,” Smith said.
The carpentry students cut the blocks and
sand them down, then use a router table to shape the letters and designs into
the wood. Those designs were created and sent over to the router table by
engineering design students via a computer program. They then go back to the
engineering students to inspect the blocks for splinters or any mistakes.
Once the bare blocks have passed
satisfaction levels, they’re ready to be painted, and only after a final
inspection are they deemed ready for delivery.
Justin
Dawson, 18, is a senior who worked on programming the letter, number, and math
function designs for the carpentry students to place onto the blocks, and said
he wants to bring a set of blocks to a teacher who was helpful to him in his
younger years.
Matt Strobl, 18, worked on the sanding and
finishing of the blocks, and plans to present a set to Brookwood Elementary,
where he attended back when it was Cleveland Elementary.
According to Smith, a standard one-sided
letter block would cost about $1.50 each; to purchase similar sets for all of
its classrooms, the district could pay up to $5,800. The students’ project cost
under $800.
He called the project a learning
opportunity for the students to see how to stage production and learn the order
of operations, as well as deal with issues during production, while benefiting
the school district.
“These are real-life scenarios they’re
learning to deal with,” he said.
THUMBS UP FOR THIS GREAT PROJECT