FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 17, 2012
Danielle McNamara
(510) 987-0230
Press Release
Isbell Middle School students are California champions of a competitive engineering contest.
After months of designing, creating and competing, a team of Isbell MESA students were named middle school state champs of the Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement (MESA) National Engineering Design Competition.
The group beat out thousands other students at preliminary and regional competitions, to triumph at the championship at UC Santa Barbara on May 12. The 4-student team came out on top by designing the best wind energy device.
They now move on for a chance to claim the national title held June 22-24 at the Boeing Assembly Facility in Renton, WA.
The wind energy design competition falls in line with MESA’s goal to stay current with science, engineering and technology trends. The project teaches students to understand design principles such as torque, generating and storing wind energy as well as how to think like environmental scientists.
The team members are 6th graders Tobin Fincher, Nathan Rabago, Carlos Gomez and Carson Gray. Isbell students are served by the MESA center housed at University of California, Santa Barbara College of Engineering.
The wind energy project is part of MESA Days, a yearly showcase of students’ math and science know-how. Through MESA and MESA Day competitions, students can explore future careers in science, engineering and other technical fields.
MESA is an academic preparation program that serves more than 21,000 California pre-college, community college and university students who are educationally disadvantaged.
Seventy-four percent of MESA high school students go to college after graduation compared to 41 percent of all California students. Sixty percent of MESA high school graduates go on to college as math, engineering or science majors.
For more information about the students, contact UCSB MESA director Mario Castellanos atmario.castellanos@mesa.ucsb.edu or 805-893-4026.
For more information about MESA visit mesa.ucop.edu