Class of 2024: Cap and gown pickups begin April 15 at the Harriman and Oak Ridge bookstores. Bookstore hours are 8am-4:30pm ET Monday-Thursday. Visit the commencement ceremony webpage for additional info.

Skip to Main Content
Menu
Roane State Community CollegeRoane State Community College

Roane State Community College

News
  1. RSCC HomeRSCC Home
  2. About Roane State
  3. Public Relations
  4. News
Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now! Register for online or traditional classes.Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now!. Register for online or traditional classes.
Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.
Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.

News: Lab-in-a-Box program continues through donations, Roane State help

Left: Coalfield School teacher Kristan Headrick with students during a recent Lab-in-a-Box activity. Right: Lab-in-a-Box activity photo from Petros-Joyner School.

Left: Lab-in-a-Box activity photo from Petros-Joyner School.
Right: Coalfield School teacher Kristan Headrick (far left) with students during a recent Lab-in-a-Box activity.

 

August 17, 2020

By Bob Fowler
Roane State staff writer

Teachers in three Morgan County schools have fascinating new tools to add to their educational arsenals, thanks in large part to Roane State Community College.

The large plastic bins have been dubbed “Labs-in-a-Box,” and this version of the popular kits holds fossils that tell tales of life eons ago. Also included are magnifying glasses, handbooks and other items.

"The kits provide much needed hands-on engagement for students, are put together well and include exceptional products,” said Kristan Headrick, a teacher at Coalfield School. “They are a resource that, if purchased by teachers, would be a large out of pocket expense. I am thankful for the kits and the training provided by Roane State."

With pandemic safety precautions in effect, Morgan County educators from Coalfield, Sunbright and Petros-Joyner schools were recently given two-hour overviews of how to use the hands-on kits. Coalfield and Sunbright are pre-K-12 schools, each with around 500 students, while Petros-Joyner has about 150 students in pre-K through eighth grade.

Providing the instruction were two long-time Roane State professors, Dr. Arthur Lee, who teaches geology, and Dr. Sylvia Pastor, an assistant professor of chemistry. She has overseen the rollout of the Lab-in-a-Box workshops for four years. The nonprofit Roane State Foundation administers contributions to the program.

Watching the lessons, held in a Wartburg Central Middle School classroom, was Jeanne Richardson. Jeanne, a retired botanist, and her husband Neal, a retired architect, have been longtime benefactors to Morgan County schools and Roane State. They have contributed funds to provide Lab-in-a-Box robotics kits to all five of the county’s middle schools. The third type of kit delves into the physics of friction.

The Morgan County couple has also underwritten the Neal and Jeanne Richardson Scholarship, which goes every year to non-traditional Roane State students who live in Morgan County. They’ve also given every third-grader in the county their own encyclopedic dictionary.

The Lab-in-a-Box program was launched by the East Tennessee Economic Council in 2010 as part of the Rural Communities STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) Initiative.

The program is for rural school districts that lack the resources to provide students with robust, hands-on experiences in science classes. Roane State quickly became involved, with faculty members designing the first kits and hosting workshops for teachers.

The program serves 27 schools with sixth through eighth-graders in the rural counties within the Roane State service areas. Over the last four summers, more than 50 kits have been distributed. The kits are for the respective schools and remain there even if the teachers who received the initial training relocate.

Additional information on the Lab-in-a-Box and Rural Communities STEM Initiative is available online at roanestate.edu/labinabox.

 

The not-for-profit Roane State Foundation provides financial support for Roane State students and programs. It also seeks to enhance community awareness of the college, to secure private contributions and bequests, and to manage monies or properties given to the Foundation. For more information or to make a gift to support Roane State students, visit the Foundation website at roanestate.edu/foundation, email Foundationdept@roanestate.edu or call (865) 882-4507.

Connect with us

Twitter / XFacebookInstagramThreadsYoutube
© Roane State Community College

Roane State Community College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, ethnicity or national origin, sex, disability, age, status as protected veteran or any other class protected by Federal or State laws and regulation and by Tennessee board of Regents policies with respect to employment, programs, and activities.​​​​​​​ View full non-discrimination policy.

Tennessee's Community Colleges

Report Fraud, Waste and Abuse

Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998